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Who Ride Wit Us: Kurupt's Greatest Hit...

73.9M streams

73,927,690

Kurupts Greatest: Greatest Hits Vol. 1

59.1M streams

59,116,313

Space Boogie: Smoke Oddessey (Clean Ve...

47.9M streams

47,946,402

Tha Streetz Iz A Mutha (Digitally Rema...

33.1M streams

33,135,374

Space Boogie: Smoke Oddessey (Digitall...

15.6M streams

15,626,549

Tha Streetz Iz A Mutha (Digitally Rema...

15M streams

15,043,123

On, Onsite / Hate on Me

12.8M streams

12,763,886

Tha Streetz Iz a Mutha

2.4M streams

2,367,898

Dpg 4 Life

2.1M streams

2,090,435

Digital Smoke (2018 Remaster) (Deluxe ...

1.8M streams

1,750,437

Biography

Kurupt began his winding career with Death Row Records and rose to momentary fame alongside Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg, but struggled to establish himself as a successful solo artist. Born Ricardo Brown in Philadelphia on November 23, 1972, he moved to Hawthorne, CA, where he befriended Snoop and joined the roster of Death Row. He debuted on Dr. Dre's The Chronic (1992) and continued to contribute guest appearances to successive Death Row releases, most notably Snoop's Doggystyle (1993). He ultimately debuted as one-half of Tha Dogg Pound, a partnership with rapper/producer Daz Dillinger spun off from Snoop's enormous success at that time. Together with Daz and Snoop, Kurupt enjoyed sizable success with Dogg Food (1995) and its hit singles: "Let's Play House" and "New York, New York." Three years later the then-A&M-affiliated Antra Records released Kuruption! (1998), the rapper's ambitious double-disc solo debut. The album met modest success but didn't make much of a commercial impact, nor did its tighter, more traditional follow-up, Tha Streetz Is a Mutha (1999). Kurupt's next release, Space Boogie: Smoke Oddessey (2001), aimed for crossover success, incorporating pop-rap elements as well as unlikely big-name guests like Fred Durst and Everlast, but again made little impact beyond the rapper's following. Meanwhile, Kurupt teamed with Daz for another Dogg Pound album, Dillinger & Young Gotti (2001), which presented a much more underground sound, released independently by D.P.G. Recordz. Meanwhile, Death Row released 2002 (2001), a collection of leftovers from Tha Dogg Pound's mid-'90s era. In the wake of these many releases and little accompanying commercial success, Kurupt returned to the long-quiet Death Row label in 2002 and helped Suge Knight revive the infamous label. Against tha Grain, released in 2004, was the first fruits of the relationship. ~ Jason Birchmeier, Rovi