💥 Nobody Messes With Tha Doggfather! Snoop Dogg Reveals the DEADLY Truth About Death Row Records! 🚫

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In a stunning revelation, Snoop Dogg has admitted that an unreleased diss album targeting Death Row Records could have been his last move.

The tracklist? Loaded with venom.

The title? “[F—] Death Row.

” And the label ready to back it? Who Bangin’ Records, with Westside Connection’s Mack 10 offering a cool $1 million to put it out.

The stakes? Life and death.

It all started after the fall of the infamous Death Row dynasty.

Once a powerhouse that ruled the charts with artists like Dr.

Dre, Tupac Shakur, and Snoop Dogg himself, Death Row quickly descended into chaos following Tupac’s death and Suge Knight’s incarceration.

Dre had already jumped ship.

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Pac was gone.

And Snoop? He was stuck—broke, disillusioned, and still under contract with a label that had become a war zone.

Snoop Dogg’s beef with Suge Knight wasn’t just a creative clash—it was blood-deep.

While Snoop was a known Crip, Suge’s Blood affiliation made for constant tension behind the scenes.

And with Tupac stepping into the spotlight as Death Row’s golden boy, Snoop’s star began to dim in the label’s eyes.

Once the face of the West Coast, he suddenly felt like an outsider in the house he helped build.

But things didn’t explode until Snoop made what many considered a dangerous move: he publicly expressed peace with Biggie Smalls—at the height of the East Coast–West Coast war.

In a BET interview, he called Biggie “my homeboy” and praised his music.

Tupac saw it as betrayal.

Suge? Probably worse.

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From that moment on, Snoop was iced out.

On their final flight together, the tension was so thick Snoop claims he sat silent the entire ride, armed with a knife and fork under his blanket, ready to defend himself from both Tupac and Suge if it came to that.

When Tupac was murdered in 1996 and Suge landed in prison soon after, Death Row spiraled into oblivion.

But Snoop’s problems didn’t end.

Despite being one of the most recognizable names in hip-hop, he was flat broke, still locked in a toxic contract, and looking for a way out.

That’s when he started working on “[F—] Death Row”—an album that would go far beyond a diss track.

This wasn’t just music.

It was warfare.

Enter Master P. The No Limit Records mogul wasn’t just offering beats and bars—he was offering freedom.

When Snoop recorded a guest verse for Mystikal, Master P asked how much he wanted for it.

Snoop casually said “fifteen”—expecting $1,500.

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The next day, Master P handed him a check for $35,000.

Snoop was floored.

That’s when Master P invited him to his office and asked what he was working on.

Snoop told him about the Death Row album.

P’s reaction? He closed the door and got real.

“You ain’t gonna live to see that album come out,” Master P warned.

He knew Suge Knight’s reputation—and his reach.

To put out an album with that title and that message while Suge was still powerful behind bars wasn’t just risky.

It was suicide.

Snoop Dogg, for all his pride, realized that Master P wasn’t talking business—he was talking survival.

And just like that, the album died.

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Master P not only talked Snoop off the ledge, he offered him a lifeline—an actual contract with No Limit Records.

While the paperwork was murky, with Suge claiming Snoop was loaned to No Limit through Priority Records, it didn’t matter.

Snoop was free.

And alive.

Ironically, sources say the music on the scrapped album was some of Snoop’s best work.

It may have solidified his legacy—but it also could have ended his life.

As Snoop later admitted, “My pride would’ve gotten me killed.

” Instead, he chose peace.

And a new era.

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Of course, Suge Knight didn’t take it lying down.

The two continued to trade shots for years.

Suge dismissed Snoop’s No Limit era, saying he was no longer a superstar, just “a No Limit soldier.

” Snoop fired back, calling Suge a “bitch” in tracks like “Pimp Slapped” and reminding the world exactly why he left.

The beef never cooled off completely.

But in a poetic twist, Snoop Dogg now owns Death Row Records—a full-circle power move that even Suge couldn’t have predicted.

From being broke and powerless, Snoop now runs the empire that once tried to bury him.

Suge, meanwhile, is locked up, launching his own prison podcast, still throwing shade from behind bars.

Looking back, Snoop credits Master P with saving his life.

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That moment in the office—just two men and a blunt conversation—changed everything.

The album that never was became the fork in the road.

One path led to fame, family, and peace.

The other? A funeral.

Snoop Dogg is more than just a rap icon—he’s a survivor.

In an industry known for its casualties, he played the long game.

And now, with Death Row under his control and his name cemented in music history, one thing’s crystal clear: nobody messes with Tha Doggfather.