he did it with Mike ElizondoDre did In da club by himself from what I know, which is not that complicated of a beat,but one of a kind and arguably most popular rap song ever
he did it with Mike ElizondoDre did In da club by himself from what I know, which is not that complicated of a beat,but one of a kind and arguably most popular rap song ever
Look up Chris The Glove Taylor
Dude produced a lot of Dre shyt. Still a big fan of Dr. DRE but Chris did majority of his shyt. Like someone said Dre is more of an engineer.



Look up Chris The Glove Taylor
Dude produced a lot of Dre shyt. Still a big fan of Dr. DRE but Chris did majority of his shyt. Like someone said Dre is more of an engineer.
I can always tell if Sam Sneed had a hand in Dre production. It has a certain sound.
Natural Born Killaz, Keep Their Heads Ringin, U Betta Recognize, etc. Horrorcore piano type beats with eerie synths.
This isn't true though.
Couple quick things. Dude was NEVER a "ghost producer". Dre used to speak about The Glove all day, everyday. He was always in the credits too. He was a session musician. Dre always shouted him out on records for playing live bass on some of the records. Mel-Man mentioned that before too saying that "If Dre didn't want to sample something, he would tell Glove or Stu to play some strings, keys or bass and we could build around that".
Dre mentioned his team when he was working on The Firm album. He had the same 4-5 dudes with him, for years. Glove was just one of them. Dre also had Stu-B-Doo, Barney, J-Flexx, Bud'da, and Flossy P. Dre put them together and called them "Street Scholars" at first. He said the same thing that Mel-Man did. That these dudes knew how to play instruments, and he didn't. So if he needed a live sound and didn't want to sample, he could always go to them to drop keys, live guitar or bass on a track.
Sam Sneed, Daz and Stu-B-Doo say the same thing that a million other people have. Dre would make a beat and have the foundation for it. Then he would have other people come in to play instrumentation over the beat. Nobody was "ghost producing" for dude. The relationship was the same as his with Storch later on. Glove was who Dre liked to play live basslines. Stu-B-Doo worked on "California Love" with Dre, not Glove. Stu has told the whole story about how he was sitting around with Dre listening to "Pop Locking" and Dre came up with the idea for "California Love" and how they worked on it together. And how that was supposed to be a song for Sam Sneed, not Pac. Then Dre was going to keep it for himself, before he gave it to Pac.
Stu said "Dre used to call us 'The Soul Kitchen' and we would always work on things together". Real talk, Glove got kicked out of the crew because he was a druggie and was supposedly stealing and sh*t. He's the only one that's not still with Dre. Stu and everybody else went on to work on the 50 album and Game's sh*t. Once he got thrown out, Glove started doing interviews lying and saying he was making Dre's beats behind the scenes. Dude went out sad.


Thanks for the info. I didn't know this.This isn't true though.
Couple quick things. Dude was NEVER a "ghost producer". Dre used to speak about The Glove all day, everyday. He was always in the credits too. He was a session musician. Dre always shouted him out on records for playing live bass on some of the records. Mel-Man mentioned that before too saying that "If Dre didn't want to sample something, he would tell Glove or Stu to play some strings, keys or bass and we could build around that".
Dre mentioned his team when he was working on The Firm album. He had the same 4-5 dudes with him, for years. Glove was just one of them. Dre also had Stu-B-Doo, Barney, J-Flexx, Bud'da, and Flossy P. Dre put them together and called them "Street Scholars" at first. He said the same thing that Mel-Man did. That these dudes knew how to play instruments, and he didn't. So if he needed a live sound and didn't want to sample, he could always go to them to drop keys, live guitar or bass on a track.
Sam Sneed, Daz and Stu-B-Doo say the same thing that a million other people have. Dre would make a beat and have the foundation for it. Then he would have other people come in to play instrumentation over the beat. Nobody was "ghost producing" for dude. The relationship was the same as his with Storch later on. Glove was who Dre liked to play live basslines. Stu-B-Doo worked on "California Love" with Dre, not Glove. Stu has told the whole story about how he was sitting around with Dre listening to "Pop Locking" and Dre came up with the idea for "California Love" and how they worked on it together. And how that was supposed to be a song for Sam Sneed, not Pac. Then Dre was going to keep it for himself, before he gave it to Pac.
Stu said "Dre used to call us 'The Soul Kitchen' and we would always work on things together". Real talk, Glove got kicked out of the crew because he was a druggie and was supposedly stealing and sh*t. He's the only one that's not still with Dre. Stu and everybody else went on to work on the 50 album and Game's sh*t. Once he got thrown out, Glove started doing interviews lying and saying he was making Dre's beats behind the scenes. Dude went out sad.
So would you consider Dre more of a Quincy Jones type of producer?This isn't true though.
Couple quick things. Dude was NEVER a "ghost producer". Dre used to speak about The Glove all day, everyday. He was always in the credits too. He was a session musician. Dre always shouted him out on records for playing live bass on some of the records. Mel-Man mentioned that before too saying that "If Dre didn't want to sample something, he would tell Glove or Stu to play some strings, keys or bass and we could build around that".
Dre mentioned his team when he was working on The Firm album. He had the same 4-5 dudes with him, for years. Glove was just one of them. Dre also had Stu-B-Doo, Barney, J-Flexx, Bud'da, and Flossy P. Dre put them together and called them "Street Scholars" at first. He said the same thing that Mel-Man did. That these dudes knew how to play instruments, and he didn't. So if he needed a live sound and didn't want to sample, he could always go to them to drop keys, live guitar or bass on a track.
Sam Sneed, Daz and Stu-B-Doo say the same thing that a million other people have. Dre would make a beat and have the foundation for it. Then he would have other people come in to play instrumentation over the beat. Nobody was "ghost producing" for dude. The relationship was the same as his with Storch later on. Glove was who Dre liked to play live basslines. Stu-B-Doo worked on "California Love" with Dre, not Glove. Stu has told the whole story about how he was sitting around with Dre listening to "Pop Locking" and Dre came up with the idea for "California Love" and how they worked on it together. And how that was supposed to be a song for Sam Sneed, not Pac. Then Dre was going to keep it for himself, before he gave it to Pac.
Stu said "Dre used to call us 'The Soul Kitchen' and we would always work on things together". Real talk, Glove got kicked out of the crew because he was a druggie and was supposedly stealing and sh*t. He's the only one that's not still with Dre. Stu and everybody else went on to work on the 50 album and Game's sh*t. Once he got thrown out, Glove started doing interviews lying and saying he was making Dre's beats behind the scenes. Dude went out sad.
So would you consider Dre more of a Quincy Jones type of producer?

Dre really does it all. We can’t limit him to just one thing with the either or. Lord Finesse told a story about when he flew to see Dre and gave him the beat for “The Message”. He said he was out there with Dre for a couple weeks and saw Dre diggin’ through old records and making beats like it was 1992. He said Dre grabbed a Roy Ayers album and then chopped some sh*t up, made this crazy beat and then was like “Eh, I don’t know about this one”. Saved it and said he was going to throw it in “the vault”. D.O.C. always says that Dre has a million beats he makes and then just “puts them away”. After he finished 2001, he started learning music theory. Actually went to school for it. Because he said he was tired of relying on people in times when he has music in his head that he can’t play on an instrument. So he enrolled in school to learn, and then started learning how to play. D.O.C. said "Dre can bust your ass on that MPC, or with arranging a live section or even an orchestra". That's how ill Dre is. When he made "Phone Tap" for The Firm album, he couldn't get the sample cleared. So he brought in live players and had them audition. Picked the best player and told them how to play the section over his drums. That's how gifted that dude is. He can do everything. Dre's sitting on beats from 30+ years ago, that would murder sh*t TODAY!!![]()
Dre really does it all. We can’t limit him to just one thing with the either or. Lord Finesse told a story about when he flew to see Dre and gave him the beat for “The Message”. He said he was out there with Dre for a couple weeks and saw Dre diggin’ through old records and making beats like it was 1992. He said Dre grabbed a Roy Ayers album and then chopped some sh*t up, made this crazy beat and then was like “Eh, I don’t know about this one”. Saved it and said he was going to throw it in “the vault”. D.O.C. always says that Dre has a million beats he makes and then just “puts them away”. After he finished 2001, he started learning music theory. Actually went to school for it. Because he said he was tired of relying on people in times when he has music in his head that he can’t play on an instrument. So he enrolled in school to learn, and then started learning how to play. D.O.C. said "Dre can bust your ass on that MPC, or with arranging a live section or even an orchestra". That's how ill Dre is. When he made "Phone Tap" for The Firm album, he couldn't get the sample cleared. So he brought in live players and had them audition. Picked the best player and told them how to play the section over his drums. That's how gifted that dude is. He can do everything. Dre's sitting on beats from 30+ years ago, that would murder sh*t TODAY!!![]()