Sir Jinx | |
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Birth name | Anthony D. Wheaton |
Also known as | Jinx |
Born | Los Angeles, California, U.S. | June 3, 1970
Genres | |
Occupations |
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Years active | 1986–present |
Labels | |
Formerly of | C.I.A. |
Anthony D. Wheaton (born June 3, 1970), [1] professionally known by his stage name Sir Jinx, is an American hip hop record producer and rapper from Los Angeles. He is a cousin of multi-platinum producer Dr. Dre. He began his career as a member of the C.I.A. in the mid-80s with Ice Cube and Kid Disaster. [2] He produced tracks for the likes of Dazzie Dee, Westside Connection, Too Short, Yo-Yo, Tone Loc, Kool G Rap, CeCe Peniston, Xzibit and Kurupt among others, and also remixed songs for Rage Against the Machine, Public Enemy and Toni Braxton.
Anthony "Sir Jinx" Wheaton began his career in the mid-80s as a part of hip hop duo the Stereo Crew with fellow rapper Ice Cube. They were signed with Epic Records and released their debut single "She's a Skag" in 1986, which was produced by Wheaton's cousin Dr. Dre and Dre's World Class Wreckin' Cru bandmate Alonzo Williams. Poor single sales caused them to be soon dropped off of the label. Joined by fellow rapper Kid Disaster, they were picked by Kru-Cut Records and changed the group's name to C.I.A. In 1987 the trio released their single "My Posse" and appeared on the cover of N.W.A. and the Posse . [3] Cube and Dre have been focused on forming N.W.A, which led to disband the C.I.A. Wheaton produced fellow rapper Dazzie Dee's first extended play Turn It Loose, released in 1989.
When Cube left N.W.A and Ruthless Records over a financial dispute, all the former C.I.A. members along with several other artists formed the Lench Mob posse on Cube's founded Lench Mob Records label. Wheaton and Cube in collaboration with Chilly Chill and New York-based hip hop production team The Bomb Squad produced Ice Cube's debut solo studio album AmeriKKKa's Most Wanted and the follow-up Kill at Will EP, both released in 1990. Both these projects were certified Platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America. Same year Wheaton produced "Ain't Nothin' but a Word to Me", the only song from Too Short's Short Dog's in the House album that has a featured guest appearance (by Ice Cube).
In 1991, Wheaton produced a significant number of songs on Yo-Yo's Make Way for the Motherlode , WC and the Maad Circle's Ain't a Damn Thang Changed , and Ice Cube's Death Certificate , including NWA diss track "No Vaseline". He also produced "How to Survive in South Central", a Cube's song from Boyz n the Hood soundtrack, and Tone Lōc "I Adore You". Continuing into 1992 with Cube's The Predator and Yo-Yo's 1992 Black Pearl , Wheaton stepped onto East Coast hip hop scene producing the majority of Kool G Rap's final studio album with DJ Polo Live and Let Die , and also managed to provide additional production on two tracks for George Clinton's son Trey Lewd's Drop the Line, and to produce the title track for Music from the Motion Picture Trespass . Sir Jinx created remixes for rap-rock outfits such as Rage Against the Machine's "Guerrilla Radio (Sir Jinx Edit)", "Bullet in the Head (Sir Jinx Remix)", and the unreleased "Bombtrack (Remix)", all of which were recorded in 1992.
After producing a couple of tracks on Ice Cube's 1993 album Lethal Injection , Wheaton stopped working with Cube and his group Da Lench Mob due to their controversial direction. [4] He moved on to producing for R&B-oriented solo acts such as CeCe Peniston, Gerald Levert, Isaac Hayes, Teena Marie, and former Bell Biv DeVoe member Ricky Bell.
Following a low-profile independent solo album in 1995, Sir Jinx returned to hip hop production on Gooch's 1997 album A Lot on It and Xzibit's 1998 album 40 Dayz & 40 Nightz . He also helped to produce skits on Tash's 1999 Rap Life and helped on Xzibit's 2000 Restless .
Wheaton provided production work on a song from comedian Eddie Griffin's 2003 film Dysfunktional Family soundtrack. Same year he produced a couple of tracks on The Comrads member Gangsta album Penitentiary Chances, as well as a posse cut on Westside Connection's album Terrorist Threats .
Outside of some minor production on Kurupt's 2004 album Originals and 2005 album Against the Grain , Xzibit's 2004 album Weapons of Mass Destruction , and Ras Kass's 2009 project Quarterly, Sir Jinx was relatively low-key during this period.
In 2010, Wheaton produced a song for Sadat X's Wild Cowboys II album, as well as the track "Life in California" from Ice Cube's I Am the West album, which marked the first time Sir Jinx and Cube had worked together on any new material together in several years. In an October 2010 interview for HipHopDX, [4] Wheaton stated that he was going to help produce cousin Dr. Dre's long-awaited release Detox . In spite of his relation to Dr. Dre, this is the first album the two have worked on together.
Sir Jinx collaborated with Tri Star and Dat Boi Hop to form General Population. The group released their album Sir Jinx Presents General Population: Rime Scene in 2011 featuring guest appearances from Butch Cassidy, Roscoe, Devin the Dude, Jayo Felony, Kurupt, Ras Kass. The following year, Jinx produced the entire Tri Star's project Trilogy. Together with Mike & Keys, Jinx produced debut Serial Killers single "First 48". In 2016, he and Dre produced T.I.'s non-album single "Dope", which featured vocals by Marsha Ambrosius.
Sir Jinx has made appearances co-hosting BET's Rap City: Tha Basement. [5]
He has also DJ'ed for various TV shows including Jimmy Kimmel Live! and "The Orlando Jones Show". [3]
In 1993, Sir Jinx had a cameo in John Singleton's romantic drama film Poetic Justice . [5]
Year | Song | Artist | Album | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1988 | "Turn It Loose" | Dazzie Dee | Turn It Loose | N/A |
1989 | "You Better Think" | N/A | ||
"Slipping into Darkness" | N/A | |||
1990 | "Better Off Dead" | Ice Cube | AmeriKKKa's Most Wanted | prod. w/ Ice Cube |
"The Nigga Ya Love to Hate" | prod. by The Bomb Squad; co-prod. w/ Ice Cube | |||
"AmeriKKKa's Most Wanted" | ||||
"What They Hittin' Foe?" | ||||
"You Can't Fade Me" | ||||
"Once Upon a Time in the Projects" | co-prod. by The Bomb Squad | |||
"Turn Off the Radio" | prod. by The Bomb Squad; co-prod. w/ Ice Cube | |||
"Endangered Species (Tales from the Darkside)" | Ice Cube, Chuck D | |||
"A Gangsta's Fairytale" | Ice Cube, Lil Russ | prod. w/ Ice Cube; co-prod. by The Bomb Squad | ||
"I'm Only Out for One Thang" | Ice Cube, Flavor Flav | |||
"Get Off My Dick and Tell Yo Bitch to Come Here" | Ice Cube | prod. by The Bomb Squad; co-prod. w/ Ice Cube | ||
"The Drive-By" | N/A | |||
"Rollin' Wit the Lench Mob" | prod. by The Bomb Squad; co-prod. w/ Ice Cube | |||
"Who's the Mack?" | prod. w/ The Bomb Squad | |||
"It's a Man's World" | Ice Cube, Yo-Yo | prod. w/ Ice Cube | ||
"The Bomb" | Ice Cube | co-prod. by The Bomb Squad | ||
"Ain't Nothin' but a Word to Me" | Too $hort, Ice Cube | Short Dog's in the House | N/A | |
"Jackin' for Beats" | Ice Cube, Del the Funky Homosapien | Kill at Will | prod. w/ Chilly Chill | |
"The Product" | Ice Cube | N/A | ||
"I Gotta Say What Up!!!" | N/A | |||
1991 | "Stand up for Your Rights" | Yo-Yo, Ricky Harris, Tamika Ingram, Threat | Make Way for the Motherlode | prod. w/ Ice Cube |
"Stompin' to the '90s" | Yo-Yo | |||
"You Can't Play with My Yo Yo" | Yo-Yo, Ice Cube | |||
"Cube Gets Played" | Ricky Harris | |||
"Put a Lid on It" | Yo-Yo | |||
"What Can I Do?" | Yo-Yo, Ice Cube | |||
"Dedication" | LA Jay, Ricky Harris | |||
"Sisterland" | Yo-Yo | |||
"The I.B.W.C. National Anthem" | Yo-Yo, Sparkles, Dawn, Diamond | |||
"Make Way for the Motherlode" | Yo-Yo | |||
"Tonight's the Night" | Yo-Yo, Dazzie Dee | |||
"I Got Played" | Yo-Yo | |||
"Girl, Don't Be No Fool" | ||||
"Ain't Nobody Better" | ||||
"Outro" | Ricky Harris | |||
"More of What I Can Do" | Sir Jinx | |||
"How to Survive in South Central" | Ice Cube | Boyz n the Hood (Music From the Motion Picture) | ||
"(Everybody) Get Up" | Roger Troutman | Bridging the Gap | add. prod.; prod. by David Gamson & Roger Troutman | |
"Intro" | WC and the Maad Circle | Ain't a Damn Thang Changed | prod. w/ DJ Crazy Toones | |
"Ain't a Damn Thang Changed" | prod. w/ WC; co-prod. by Chilly Chill & DJ Crazy Toones | |||
"Behind Closed Doors" | WC and the Maad Circle, Dawn Silva, Jackie Simley, M.L. Davis | |||
"Out on a Furlough" | WC and the Maad Circle, Cassanova Jeff, Chilly Chill, Jazzy D, Mike | prod. w/ WC; co-prod. by DJ Crazy Toones | ||
"Caught n a Fad" | WC and the Maad Circle | prod. w/ WC; co-prod. by Chilly Chill | ||
"Fuck My Daddy" | WC and the Maad Circle, Foe Doe Taylor, Lil' Dee | prod. w/ WC | ||
"Get up on That Funk" | WC and the Maad Circle, Jazzy D | |||
"Gettin' Looped / Dress Code" | WC and the Maad Circle | prod. w/ WC; co-prod. by Chilly Chill & DJ Crazy Toones | ||
"Smokers La La Bye" | WC and the Maad Circle, Kaeco | prod. w/ DJ Crazy Toones | ||
"You Don't Work, U Don't Eat" | WC and the Maad Circle, J-Dee, MC Eiht, Ice Cube | prod. w/ Chilly Chill & DJ Crazy Toones | ||
"Grandma Locked Out (Skit)" | WC and the Maad Circle | N/A | ||
"Ghetto Serenade" | WC and the Maad Circle | prod. w/ WC; co-prod. by DJ Crazy Toones | ||
"Back to the Underground" | WC and the Maad Circle | prod. w/ WC | ||
"A Soldiers Story" | WC and the Maad Circle, Dawn Silva, Jackie Simley, M.L. Davis | N/A | ||
"The Funeral (Intro)" | Ice Cube | Death Certificate | N/A | |
"The Wrong Nigga to Fuck Wit" | prod. w/ Ice Cube | |||
"Robin Lench (Interlude)" | prod. w/ Boogiemen | |||
"Look Who's Burnin'" | prod. w/ Ice Cube | |||
"The Birth" | Ice Cube, Khalid Abdul Muhammad | |||
"I Wanna Kill Sam" | Ice Cube | |||
"Black Korea" | ||||
"True to the Game" | ||||
"Us" | ||||
"No Vaseline" | ||||
"I Adore You" | Tone Lōc | Cool Hand Lōc | prod. w/ Tone Lōc | |
1992 | "You Should Have Listened" | Yo-Yo | Black Pearl | N/A |
"I Can't Take No More" | N/A | |||
"Will You Be Mine" | N/A | |||
"Fuck 'Em (Insert)" | Ice Cube | The Predator | N/A | |
"Who Got the Camera?" | N/A | |||
"Say Hi to the Bad Guy" | N/A | |||
"Intro" | Kool G Rap, DJ Polo | Live and Let Die | prod. w/ Kool G Rap | |
"On the Run" | ||||
"Live and Let Die" | ||||
"Crime Pays" | ||||
"Home Sweet Home" | ||||
"Train Robbery" | ||||
"#1 with a Bullet" | Kool G Rap, DJ Polo, Big Daddy Kane | |||
"Operation CB" | Kool G Rap, DJ Polo | |||
"Go for Your Guns" | ||||
"Letters" | ||||
"Nuff Said" | ||||
"Edge of Sanity" | ||||
"Still Wanted Dead or Alive" | ||||
"Two to the Head" | Kool G Rap, DJ Polo, Scarface, Bushwick Bill, Ice Cube | |||
"Trespass" | Ice-T, Ice Cube | Music from the Motion Picture Trespass | N/A | |
"I'll Be Good to You" | Trey Lewd, Dazzie Dee | Drop the Line | add. prod.; prod. by Trey Lewd | |
"Hoodlum Who Ride" | Trey Lewd | add. prod. | ||
1993 | "The Shot (Intro)" | Ice Cube | Lethal Injection | N/A |
"Lil Ass Gee" | N/A | |||
1994 | "Whatever It Is" | CeCe Peniston | Thought 'Ya Knew | N/A |
"Give What I'm Givin'" | N/A | |||
"Maybe It's the Way" | N/A | |||
1995 | "Higher" | Ice Cube | Music from the Motion Picture Higher Learning | N/A |
"Intro" | Sir Jinx | Chastisement (Deez Days) | N/A | |
"All About Money" | Sir Jinx, Isaac Hayes | N/A | ||
"I Putz It Down" | Sir Jinx | N/A | ||
"City Never Sleepz" | N/A | |||
"No Love" | N/A | |||
"Ain't Givin' Up No Love" | N/A | |||
"Right Here" | Sir Jinx, Ray Shawn | N/A | ||
"Pic-A-Nic" | Sir Jinx, Gerald Levert | co-prod. by Craze | ||
"Rally Park" | Sir Jinx, Aaron P., Chuck Daddy, Ray Shawn | N/A | ||
"Insert: Old School Robin Lench Iz Back (With a Twisted)" | Sir Jinx | N/A | ||
"Who'z da Man (Sir Jinx's Theme Song)" | N/A | |||
"Life Stylez" | N/A | |||
"Sho-Nuff" | N/A | |||
"Come Blaze wit Me" | N/A | |||
"Insert: Phone Call" | N/A | |||
"Don't Get It Twisted" | N/A | |||
"Insert: Beaz & Nigz" | N/A | |||
"Beaz & Nigz" | co-prod. by Aaron P. | |||
"Whoz Watching Who" | Sir Jinx, Madd K.D. | N/A | ||
"Free Your Mind" | Sir Jinx | N/A | ||
"The Mindstate" | N/A | |||
"Insert: Power to the People" | N/A | |||
"Power to the People" | N/A | |||
1997 | "Intro" | Gooch, Ike Turner | A Lot on It | N/A |
"Keep It on the Down Low" | Gooch, Faizon Love, Torry Woods | N/A | ||
"Sponsorin' Hoez (Insert)" | Gooch | N/A | ||
"West Coast Playa" | Gooch, Sir Jinx | N/A | ||
"Black Wednesday" | Gooch | N/A | ||
"The Game Ain't the Same" | N/A | |||
"Fifty Wayz" | Gooch, Kool G Rap | N/A | ||
"Night Life" | Gooch | N/A | ||
"Hay" | N/A | |||
"A Lot on It" | N/A | |||
"Come Back to Me" | Gooch, Ricky Bell | N/A | ||
"Where I've Been" | Gooch | N/A | ||
"Wishin' for a Star" | N/A | |||
"Something's Going Down" | N/A | |||
"When It's Late" | N/A | |||
"Put My Hands on You (Insert)" | N/A | |||
"Baby Mama" | N/A | |||
"The Message from Beyond" | 2Pac | N/A | ||
"L.I.F.E." | Gooch | N/A | ||
1998 | "The Last Night (Intro)" | Xzibit | 40 Dayz & 40 Nightz | prod. w/ Xzibit |
"Chamber Music" | ||||
"Chronic Keeping 101 (Interlude)" | N/A | |||
"Shroomz" | N/A | |||
"Jason (48 Months Interlude)" | N/A | |||
"Inside Job" | prod. w/ Pockets | |||
"Outro" | prod. w/ Xzibit | |||
"Don't Let the Money Make You" | Xzibit, King Tee, Soopafly | N/A | ||
1999 | "Cops" (Skit) | Tash | Rap Life | N/A |
"Game Show" (Skit) | N/A | |||
"Goggles" (Skit) | Tash, Danielle O'Donnell, E-Swift | N/A | ||
2000 | "Intro/Restless" | Xzibit | Restless | prod. w/ Thayod Ausar |
2003 | "Dys-Funk-Tional" | Eddie Griffin, Spider Loc | Dysfunktional Family | N/A |
"G.A.N.G.S.T.A." (Intro) | Gangsta | Penitentiary Chances | N/A | |
"On Me" | Gangsta, WC, Kokane | prod. w/ Dae One | ||
"Bangin' at the Party" | Westside Connection, K-Mac, Skoop Delania, Deviossi | Terrorist Threats | prod. w/ DJ Jamal | |
2004 | "Final Testament" | Kurupt, CJ Ginavece, Keitarock | Originals | N/A |
"Bang'n My Amps" | Kurupt | N/A | ||
"L.A.X." | Xzibit | Weapons of Mass Destruction | prod. w/ Tha Real Mystro | |
2005 | "Stalkin'" | Kurupt | Against the Grain | N/A |
"Hustlin'" | Kurupt, Big Tri, Young Tone | N/A | ||
2009 | "Started Sumthin" | Ras Kass, Krondon, Maria | Quarterly | N/A |
2010 | "Pray" | Sadat X, Umi, M-1, Kurupt, Sir Jinx | Wild Cowboys II | N/A |
"Life In California" | Ice Cube, Jayo Felony, WC | I Am the West | prod. w/ Dae One | |
2011 | "(Intro) 3:00 P.M." | Sir Jinx, Tri Star, Dat Boi Hop | Sir Jinx Presents General Population: Rime Scene | N/A |
"Rime Scene" | Sir Jinx, Tri Star, Dat Boi Hop, Jayo Felony | prod. w/ Trevor Lawrence Jr. | ||
"Die Making Money" | Sir Jinx, Tri Star, Dat Boi Hop, Brandi Kane | prod. w/ Tha Futuristik | ||
"Fate" | Sir Jinx, Tri Star, Dat Boi Hop | prod. w/ Thayod | ||
"Oh My God" | prod. w/ Jesse West | |||
"In My Footsteps" | Sir Jinx, Tri Star, Dat Boi Hop, Roscoe | prod. w/ DJ Silk | ||
"Gather My Thoughts (Remix)" | Sir Jinx, Tri Star, Dat Boi Hop, Devin the Dude | N/A | ||
"Bump Bump" | Sir Jinx, Tri Star, Dat Boi Hop, Roscoe | prod. w/ Choir Boi | ||
"I Don't Take You Serious" | Sir Jinx, Tri Star, Dat Boi Hop, Butch Cassidy | prod. w/ Tha Futuristik | ||
"Fuq Um All Nite" | Sir Jinx, Tri Star, Dat Boi Hop | N/A | ||
"That Type of Girl" | Sir Jinx, Tri Star, Dat Boi Hop, Butch Cassidy, Choir Boi | prod. w/ Thayod | ||
"Show Me the Money" | Sir Jinx, Tri Star, Dat Boi Hop, Damion Cantrell | prod. w/ Track Team | ||
"45 Insert" | Sir Jinx, Tri Star, Dat Boi Hop | prod. w/ DJ Rek | ||
"Even the Score" | Sir Jinx, Tri Star, Dat Boi Hop, M-Hat | prod. w/ Choir Boi | ||
"Get Somethin' Mane" | Sir Jinx, Tri Star, Dat Boi Hop | prod. w/ Tha Futuristik | ||
"The Time Is Now!" | Sir Jinx, Tri Star, Dat Boi Hop, Bone Crusher, E Note, Ras Kass, Rodney O | prod. w/ Choir Boi | ||
2012 | "It's Time (Intro)" | Tri Star, Brother J | Triology | N/A |
"Look in My Eyes" | Tri Star | N/A | ||
"Do a Lil Somthin" | N/A | |||
"Pulled up to the Curb" | N/A | |||
"G Till the Day I Die" | N/A | |||
"Too Many Chiefs" | Tri Star, Roscoe, Slo Stallone, Young Bizzle | N/A | ||
"I'm a Rida Man" | Tri Star | N/A | ||
"Dirty" | N/A | |||
"That's Work" | Tri Star, Roscoe | N/A | ||
"Flip" | Tri Star | N/A | ||
"Hennessy" | Tri Star, Kurupt, Young Tone | N/A | ||
"Stick to Myself" | Tri Star | N/A | ||
"I Will Kill You" | Tri Star, Eastwood | N/A | ||
"Loco Crazy" | Tri Star | N/A | ||
"Cutlas in My Driveway" | N/A | |||
"Dress Code Killa" | N/A | |||
"Till the End of Tri (Outro)" | N/A | |||
2013 | "First 48" | Serial Killers | Serial Killers Vol. 1 | prod. w/ Mike & Keys |
2016 | "Dope" | T.I., Marsha Ambrosius | N/A | prod. w/ Dr. Dre |
N.W.A was an American hip hop group formed in Compton, California. Among the earliest and most significant figures of the gangsta rap subgenre, the group is widely considered one of the greatest and most influential acts in hip hop music.
O'Shea Jackson Sr., known as Ice Cube, is an American rapper, songwriter, actor, and film producer. His lyrics on N.W.A's 1988 album Straight Outta Compton contributed to gangsta rap's widespread popularity, and his political rap solo albums AmeriKKKa's Most Wanted (1990), Death Certificate (1991), and The Predator (1992) were all critically and commercially successful. He was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as a member of N.W.A in 2016.
Straight Outta Compton is the debut studio album by American gangsta rap group N.W.A, which, led by Eazy-E, formed in Los Angeles County's City of Compton in early 1987. Released by his label, Ruthless Records, on August 8, 1988, the album was produced by N.W.A members Dr. Dre, DJ Yella, and Arabian Prince, with lyrics written by N.W.A members Ice Cube and MC Ren along with Ruthless rapper and unofficial member The D.O.C. Not merely depicting Compton's street violence, the lyrics repeatedly threaten to lead it by attacking peers and even police. The track "Fuck tha Police" drew an FBI agent's warning letter, which aided N.W.A's notoriety, with N.W.A calling itself "the world's most dangerous group."
World Class Wreckin' Cru was an American electro group, during the 1980s in the Los Angeles area, that contributed to rap's development. Two of its members, Dr. Dre and DJ Yella, attained greater fame as members of N.W.A, which pioneered gangsta rap. A song by the Cru had also featured R&B singer Michel'le.
100 Miles and Runnin' is the only EP from the American gangsta rap group N.W.A. Released on August 14, 1990, this EP of five tracks reflects an evolution of N.W.A's sound and centers on the single "100 Miles and Runnin'". Two tracks, "100 Miles" and "Real Niggaz", incidentally incited N.W.A's feud with Ice Cube, who had left to start a solo rap career. The porno rap track "Just Don't Bite It" also drew notice. Pushing lyrical boundaries in its day, the EP went gold in November 1990 and platinum in September 1992.
N.W.A. and the Posse is a compilation album, re-releasing N.W.A and associated groups' underground rap songs from the Los Angeles area's rap scene on November 6, 1987. It is regarded as American rap group N.W.A's first but neglected album; N.W.A's authorized debut studio album, rather, is Straight Outta Compton, released in August 1988. Whereas the Straight album was certified platinum, one million copies sold in July 1989, the Posse album was certified gold, half as many copies sold, in April 1994.
C.I.A., a name short for Cru’In Action!, replacing the earlier name Stereo Crew, was an American hip hop trio, K-Dee, Sir Jinx, and Ice Cube, on the Los Angeles rap scene in the 1980s. The trio debuted at parties thrown by Sir Jinx's cousin Dr. Dre. Dre was in one of the Los Angeles area's leading DJ crews, the World Class Wreckin' Cru, whose core members, including Dre, doubled as a successful electro rap group. In 1986, the Stereo Crew's single "She's a Skag" arrived on Epic Records, which soon dropped the group for poor sales.
"Fuck wit Dre Day (And Everybody's Celebratin')", or censored as a single titled "Dre Day", is a song by American rapper and record producer Dr. Dre featuring fellow American rapper Snoop Doggy Dogg and uncredited vocals from Jewell released in May 1993 as the second single from Dre's debut solo album, The Chronic (1992). "Dre Day" was a diss track targeting mainly Dre's former groupmate Eazy-E, who led their onetime rap group N.W.A and who, along with N.W.A's manager Jerry Heller, owned N.W.A's record label, Ruthless Records. In "Dre Day" and in its music video, which accuse Eazy of cheating N.W.A's artists, Dre and Snoop degrade and menace him. Also included are disses retorting earlier disses on songs by Miami rapper Luke Campbell, by New York rapper Tim Dog, and by onetime N.W.A. member Ice Cube, although Dre, while still an N.W.A member, had helped diss Cube first. After "Dre Day," a number of further diss records were exchanged.
Lench Mob Records is a record label owned by Los Angeles rapper and actor Ice Cube. Founded as Street Knowledge Records, it was once home to many of Cube's former allies such as DJ Pooh, and Lench Mob's own Chilly Chill, Del the Funky Homosapien, Kam, Yo-Yo and the group Da Lench Mob. The label, established in 1992, remained dormant for a long period until a revival in 2006 with the release of Ice Cube's album Laugh Now, Cry Later. Lench Mob Records also distributes Bigg Swang Records home to WC, DJ Crazy Toones, Young Maylay and Tha Trapp. Hallway Productionz have produced multiple tracks for the label's two major artists.
Stephen Anderson, better known as Bud'da, is an American producer, songwriter, composer and rapper for artists such as Ice Cube, Dr. Dre, Xzibit and Aaliyah. Through the successful Westside Connection stint, and the mutual acquaintance of fellow Pittsburgh producer Sam Sneed, Dr. Dre wanted to feature snippets of a Bud’da-produced track in the beginning and end of the 2pac & Dr. Dre video for “California Love,” off Tupac Shakur’s All Eyez on Me. Soon after Dr. Dre’s historic departure from Death Row Records, Bud’da was once again recruited by Dr. Dre to co-produce the lead single "Been There, Done That" off the Dr. Dre Presents the Aftermath album.
The Up in Smoke Tour was a West Coast hip hop tour in 2000 which was headlined by Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg, also featuring artists and disc jockeys Ice Cube, Eminem, Proof, Nate Dogg, Kurupt, D12, MC Ren, Westside Connection, Chilldrin of da Ghetto, Mel-Man, Tha Eastsidaz, Doggy's Angels, Devin The Dude, Warren G, Crucial Conflict, TQ, Truth Hurts, Xzibit, The D.O.C., Hittman, DJ Crazy Toones, Six-Two, Ms. Toi, & DJ Jam.
AmeriKKKa's Most Wanted is the debut studio album by American rapper Ice Cube, released on May 18, 1990, by Priority Records. It was his first solo album, after an acrimonious split from his former group N.W.A. Primarily produced by Public Enemy's production team the Bomb Squad, the album was a critical and commercial success, and was certified platinum in the United States on June 23, 1990.
"No Vaseline" is a diss track written and recorded by American rapper Ice Cube. It was released on October 31, 1991, through Lench Mob Records and Priority Records, amidst his feud with his former group N.W.A. The song serves as the twentieth song on Cube's Death Certificate (1991). It is Cube's response to several diss tracks N.W.A. released after his departure from the group.
Darrell L. Johnson, also known as K-Dee, formerly Kid Disaster, is an American rapper most known for his album Ass, Gas, or Cash
I Am the West is the ninth solo studio album by American rapper Ice Cube. It was released on September 28, 2010 through Lench Mob Records and Universal Republic Records, marking his second independent release following 2008's Raw Footage.
Derrick Baker, also known as Chilly Chill, is an American hip hop music producer who has worked for Ice Cube, Snoop Dogg, Ice-T, Rick James, RBX, Ike Turner, Public Enemy, Kurupt, Jewel, Yo-Yo, WC, Korn, 7th Veil, Kool Keith, Da Lench Mob, Lupe Fiasco, Bun B, and more.
Dazzie Dee is an American West Coast hip hop rapper and record producer who has collaborated and affiliated with artists such as Suga Free, Mausberg, DJ Quik, Ice Cube, Shade Sheist, K-Dee, Kool G Rap, Coolio, Mixmaster Spade, Yo-Yo, Da Lench Mob, and many more. He released two solo albums in 1996, Where's My Receipt? and The Re-Birth, with the most known singles "Knee Deep", "Everybody Wants To Be A Gangsta", and "Where You From?".
Alonzo Williams is an American DJ and former member and promoter of the World Class Wreckin' Cru. He is credited for playing a major role in the development of West Coast Hip Hop, tracing back to the late 1970s. He is also the former owner of Kru-Cut Records.
Tony Alvarez, known as DJ Tony A. Da Wizard is an American DJ, music producer and film director.
Jerome Muhammad, born Jerome Washington, better known by his stage name Shorty, was an American rapper, producer, gang intervention activist, and member of Ice Cube's spin-off Gold hip hop group Da Lench Mob.