Last updated: 3 hours ago
Soopafly began to garner a substantial name for himself as one of the West Coast's better G-funk producers of the late '90s and early 2000s by aligning himself with some of the coast's better rappers, such as <a href="spotify:artist:7hJcb9fa4alzcOq3EaNPoG">Snoop Dogg</a>, <a href="spotify:artist:4tujQJicOnuZRLiBFdp3Ou">Xzibit</a>, and <a href="spotify:artist:3USpNaxpX1iNqNnQWqg9ob">Mack 10</a>. Though he never played a major role in Death Row's major successes -- <a href="spotify:artist:6DPYiyq5kWVQS4RGwxzPC7">Dr. Dre</a>'s The Chronic, <a href="spotify:artist:7hJcb9fa4alzcOq3EaNPoG">Snoop Dogg</a>'s Doggystyle, <a href="spotify:artist:1ZwdS5xdxEREPySFridCfh">2Pac</a>'s All Eyez on Me -- Soopafly did play a minor role in the label's unimportant late-'90s era; some of his efforts appear on leftover albums such as <a href="spotify:artist:5Jz9kKRnCRLTodCH58MyB4">Daz Dillinger</a>'s Retaliation, Revenge & Get Back, <a href="spotify:artist:7hJcb9fa4alzcOq3EaNPoG">Snoop Dogg</a>'s Dead Man Walkin', and Suge Knight Presents: Chronic 2000. By the end of 2000, Soopafly's clout had risen though, as he was suddenly producing tracks on <a href="spotify:artist:4tujQJicOnuZRLiBFdp3Ou">Xzibit</a>'s Restless ("Fuckin' You Right," "Rimz & Tires") and <a href="spotify:artist:7hJcb9fa4alzcOq3EaNPoG">Snoop Dogg</a>'s Tha Last Meal ("Loosen' Control"). ~ Jason Birchmeier, Rovi
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