Dr. Dre Admits He Was 'Talked Into' Making 'The Chronic': 'It Wasn’t My Decision'

KingsOfKings

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"Dr. Dre has shared a bombshell revelation about his classic album The Chronic, admitting it wasn’t even his idea and that he had to be “talked into” making the record.

The legendary producer sat down with Kevin Hart for his Hart To Heart series on Peacock, and said that N.W.A‘s tense final years caused him to begin to distance himself from the group.

“The difference, there was money and business got involved, and it separated the friendship,” Dre said. “I had to separate myself from [Eazy-E] because he decided to take a different route. [Ice] Cube had already left, so I’m out here on my own. I have absolutely no idea what the fukk I’m gonna do. I just know I have this talent.”

Dre went on to say that his close friend and collaborator, The D.O.C., told him that he needed to just get in the studio and start creating, convincing him to start crafting his debut album as a solo artist.

“A close friend of mine, we’ll call him D.O.C., talked me into doing the Chronic album,” he continued. “It wasn’t my decision, I was talked into doing that. I just went in there and went for it because I felt, at that time, it was a life or death situation.”



Dr. Dre released The Chronic on December 15, 1992. The album reached No. 3 on the Billboard 200 and spawned a pair of top 10 Hot 100 hits with “Nuthin’ But a ‘G’ Thang” (No. 2) and “Dre Day” (No. 8). “Let Me Ride,” meanwhile, earned Dre his very first Grammy Award.

Beyond its commercial success and critical acclaim, the album is widely credited with elevating the sound of Hip Hop and helping the West Coast dethrone New York as the genre’s dominant region at the time, while influencing generations of rappers to come.

The Beats By Dre mogul previously spoke about The D.O.C.’s influence on The Chronic during an appearance on Dolvett Quince’s Workout The Doubt podcast last summer, where he explained he originally didn’t plan on rapping on the project at all.

“The D.O.C., my friend, talked me into to getting on the mic and actually doing that thing,” he said. “Before that, I wasn’t going to get on the mic. I was just going to lay back and produce, which was the idea of The Chronic album, my first solo album. That’s what I wanted to do.”

The D.O.C.’s creative impact has been revered for years. He’s penned multiple hits for N.W.A, Eazy-E and Dre, and enjoyed success as a solo artist in 1989 with No One Can Do It Better. Just months after the album’s release, the Texas native’s vocal cords were severed in a car accident, all but ending his burgeoning solo career.

In more recent news, Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg have been getting fans excited as they continue to tease their long-awaited new album, Missionary.

Taking to Instagram last month, Snoop shared a photo of Dre sitting behind the boards, coffee in hand, as he reflectively chipped away at some new tunes.

While a release date remains elusive for the project, Snoop confirmed in the caption that fans will soon get their hands on some new music from the West Coast legends, writing: “Coming soon.”

Meanwhile, it was recently revealed that Dr. Dre will finally receive a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 2024."


Dr. Dre Admits He Was 'Talked Into' Making 'The Chronic': 'It Wasn’t My Decision'
 

Bugzbunny129

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Imo dre himself isnt the juice

Thats why i put rza over him

Dre has to be forced to make decisions and then uses the people around him to create a classic. If it wasnt for their force of will and belief in him, idk if hed even be dre. But if you leave it up yo him, hed never drop any of it or not create anything worthwhile. A lot of his transitions into the greater game were flops imo. He lucked out with em and then double with 50.

But i havent heard a dre track in years that moved me. His name moves the dial more than his music moved me is what im saying. He certaibly created many legendary songs but dowsnt trust himself idk what it is. All those floundering artists on aftermath and his recent run of never putting shyt out is annoying.
 

BK The Great

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I like Dre’s music but a lot of other artists saved him from his name fading. Snoop, Em, 50, Game & Kendrick. Compton was decent but showed it wasn’t the best he’s made. The GTA soundtrack was better. He’s too much of a perfectionist and the fans suffer because of that.
 
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I like Dre’s music but a lot of other artists saved him from his name fading. Snoop, Em, 50, Game & Kendrick. Compton was decent but showed it wasn’t the best he’s made. The GTA soundtrack was better. He’s too much of a perfectionist and the fans suffer because of that.

It’s the music business jabroni. You align yourself with talent
 

Awesome Wells

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Top 2 producer of all-time. Still.

No other producer in Hip Hop has the vision and sense of direction that Dre has. He's able to sit in the room with other legendary producers/writers and actually find strengths in their talents that could make them even better at their craft. He's responsible for so many iconic careers, it's crazy. I respect that he's never been against being humble and letting his peers help in either coaching or motivating him. That's a true sign of greatness. He's always trying to refine the mastery. Serious GOAT sh*t.
 

Complexion

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That worked. This is just forced and corny :mjlol:

If he makes it a character album that blends his various personas together as an ex gangbanging, former preacher, current pimp whose roles are interchangeable throughout the songs and topics as he wittily highlights the nature of the hustle in three forms with various levels of social acceptance I'd give it a spin. After all they're all pretty much the same really because its all about power over someone else hence Missionary would be perfect because you're getting F'd either way.

Top 2 producer of all-time. Still.

No other producer in Hip Hop has the vision and sense of direction that Dre has. He's able to sit in the room with other legendary producers/writers and actually find strengths in their talents that could make them even better at their craft. He's responsible for so many iconic careers, it's crazy. I respect that he's never been against being humble and letting his peers help in either coaching or motivating him. That's a true sign of greatness. He's always trying to refine the mastery. Serious GOAT sh*t.

Helping someone find a skill they didn't know they possessed is a type of magic if you think about it. Dre has this in spades because he can hit a target they themselves couldn't see and then he'll coax that performance out of them. Much to their chagrin usually because if it doesn't fit its vision its in the recycle bin.
 
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