List of Scottish Football League clubs and Death Row Records: Difference between pages

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[[Image:ThirdLanarkAC.jpg|thumb|right|250px|[[Third Lanark A.C.|Third Lanark]] enjoyed great success in the early days of Scottish football but disbanded in the 1960s.]]
{{refimprove|date=May 2008}}
This is a list of '''former member clubs of the Scottish Football League''', detailing all the clubs to have played in the league since its formation but which are no longer in membership. The [[Scottish Football League]] was established in 1890, initially as an amateur league as professionalism had not been legalised in Scottish football.<ref name="Davies158">{{cite book |last=Davies |first=Hunter |title=Boots, Balls and Haircuts: An Illustrated History of Football from Then to Now |isbn=1-8440-3261-2 |date=2003 |publisher=Cassell Illustrated |pages=p39}}</ref> In 1893 a Second Division was formed, with the existing single division renamed the First Division. The Second Division was discontinued during the [[First World War]] but revived in 1921.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.rsssf.com/tabless/scot2champ.html|title=Scotland &ndash; List of 2nd Level Champions|publisher=RSSSF|accessdate=2008-05-09|date=2008-05-08}}</ref> A Third Division was added in 1923 but collapsed three years later as a number of its member clubs found themselves unable to complete their fixtures for financial reasons, with many folding altogether. After the [[Second World War]] the divisions were rebranded as Division A and Division B and a Division C was added. This included a mixture of new member clubs and the [[reserve team]]s of clubs from the higher divisions, but this division was dropped in 1955.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.rsssf.com/tabless/scot3champ.html|title=Scotland &ndash; List of 3rd Level Champions|publisher=RSSSF|accessdate=2008-05-09|date=2008-04-18}}</ref> A major re-organisation of the league in 1975 led to the existing two divisions being split into three smaller divisions, with a new [[Scottish Football League Premier Division|Premier Division]] at the highest level. This structure remained in place until 1998, when the teams then in the Premier Division broke away to form the [[Scottish Premier League]], which supplanted the Premier Division as the highest level of football in Scotland.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.scotprem.premiumtv.co.uk/page/History/0,,10002,00.html|title=History|publisher=Scottish Premier League|accessdate=2008-03-05}}</ref>
{{Infobox record label
| image = [[Image:Deathrowlogobig.jpg|150px]]
| parent = Global Music Group
| founded =<small> 1991
| years active =<small> 1992-2007
| founder = [[Dr. Dre]]<br/>[[Suge Knight]]
| distributor = [[Koch Records]]
| genre = [[hip hop music|Hip hop]] , [[Gangsta rap]], [[West Coast Rap]]
| country = [[United States|US]]
| location = [[Los Angeles, California]]
| url = [http://www.deathrow.la/ www.DeathRow.la]}}


'''Death Row Records''' was a [[record label]] that was founded in [[1988 in music|1991]] by [[Dr. Dre]] and [[Suge Knight]], and was once home to some of [[West Coast hip hop]] biggest Rappers, including [[Tupac Shakur|2Pac]], [[Dr. Dre]], [[Snoop Dogg]] and [[Tha Dogg Pound]] ([[Kurupt]] and [[Daz Dillinger]]).
Unlike in [[England]], where since 1987 clubs finishing at the foot of [[the Football League]] have been [[Promotion and relegation|relegated]] out of the competition,<ref>{{cite book|title=News of the World Football Annual 2007&ndash;2008|first=Stuart|last=Barnes|publisher=Invincible Press|date=2007|id=ISBN 0-0072-5555-9|pages=p58}}</ref> there is no mechanism in place in Scotland for clubs at the bottom of the Scottish League to be relegated.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/football/7321457.stm|title=Ups and downs|publisher=BBC|accessdate=2008-05-19|date=2008-05-18}}</ref> A number of clubs who resigned or were expelled from the Scottish League have gone on to play in [[non-league football]], either in "senior" leagues such as the [[East of Scotland Football League]] or in leagues governed by the [[Scottish Junior Football Association]] (SJFA).<ref name="West" /><ref name="GG" />


Death Row has sold nearly 50 million albums worldwide, and generated close to $750 million in revenue.<ref>{{cite web|title= Death Row Records History|url=http://www.deathrowrecords-uk.com/history.htm}}</ref> The label was also once home to [[RBX]], [[The Lady of Rage]], [[Michel'le]], [[Danny Boy (artist)|Danny Boy]], [[Bow Wow]], [[DJ Quik]], [[J-Flexx]], [[Sam Sneed]], [[Mark Morrison]], [[MC Hammer]], [[Tha Realest]], [[Crooked I]], [[O.F.T.B.]], and [[Eastwood (rapper)|Eastwood]]. In addition, the late [[Lisa Lopes|Lisa "Left Eye" Lopes]] of [[TLC (band)|TLC]] was signed on and working on an album when she died in an automobile accident.
==Clubs==
The tables show the first and last seasons in which each club competed in the league. Some clubs' membership was intermittent between their first and last seasons. Clubs shown in '''bold''' were among the founder members of the league. As of 2008 the only founder member club still playing in the league is [[Dumbarton F.C.|Dumbarton]].


On [[July 15]], [[2008]], the label was sold to the independent label of Global Music Group, at an auction for [[United States dollar|$]]24 million.<ref>
===Current members of the Scottish Premier League===
{{cite news
{|class=wikitable style="text-align:left"
| title = Death Row label is sold for $24m
|-
| url = http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/7506883.stm
!Club!!First league<br />season!!Last league<br />season!!Notes
| work = [[BBC News]]
|-
| date = 2008-07-15
|align=left|[[Aberdeen F.C.|Aberdeen]]||align=center|[[1904-05 in Scottish football|1904&ndash;05]] ||align=center|[[1997-98 in Scottish football|1997&ndash;98]]||align=center|<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=27|title=League tables: Aberdeen|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
| accessdate = 2008-07-15 }}</ref>
|-
|align=left|'''[[Celtic F.C.|Celtic]]'''||align=center|[[1890-91 in Scottish football|1890&ndash;91]] ||align=center|[[1997-98 in Scottish football|1997&ndash;98]]||align=center|<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=512|title=League tables: Celtic|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|-
|align=left|[[Dundee United F.C.|Dundee United]]||align=center|[[1910-11 in Scottish football|1910&ndash;11]]||align=center|[[1997-98 in Scottish football|1997&ndash;98]]||align=center|<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=740|title=League tables: Dundee United|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|-
|align=left|[[Falkirk F.C.|Falkirk]]||align=center|[[1902-03 in Scottish football|1902&ndash;03]] ||align=center|[[2004-05 in Scottish football|2004&ndash;05]] ||align=center|<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=955|title=League tables: Falkirk|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|-
|align=left|[[Hamilton Academical F.C.|Hamilton Academical]]||align=center|[[1897-98 in Scottish football|1897&ndash;98]] ||align=center|[[2007-08 in Scottish football|2007&ndash;08]]||align=center|<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=1187|title=League tables: Hamilton Academical|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|-
|align=left|'''[[Heart of Midlothian F.C.|Heart of Midlothian]]'''||align=center|[[1890-91 in Scottish football|1890&ndash;91]] ||align=center|[[1997-98 in Scottish football|1997&ndash;98]]||align=center|<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=1289|title=League tables: Hearts|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|-
|align=left|[[Hibernian F.C.|Hibernian]]||align=center|[[1893-94 in Scottish football|1893&ndash;94]] ||align=center|[[1998-99 in Scottish football|1998&ndash;99]] ||align=center|<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=1227|title=League tables: Hibernian|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|-
|align=left|[[Inverness Caledonian Thistle F.C.|Inverness Caledonian Thistle]]||align=center|[[1994-95 in Scottish football|1994&ndash;95]] ||align=center|[[2003-04 in Scottish football|2003&ndash;04]] ||align=center|<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=482|title=League tables: Inverness Caledonian Thistle|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|-
|align=left|[[Kilmarnock F.C.|Kilmarnock]]||align=center|[[1895-96 in Scottish football|1895&ndash;96]] ||align=center|[[1997-98 in Scottish football|1997&ndash;98]]||align=center|<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=1455|title=League tables: Kilmarnock|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|-
|align=left|[[Motherwell F.C.|Motherwell]]||align=center|[[1893-94 in Scottish football|1893&ndash;94]] ||align=center|[[1997-98 in Scottish football|1997&ndash;98]]||align=center|<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=1734|title=League tables: Motherwell|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|-
|align=left|'''[[Rangers F.C.|Rangers]]'''||align=center|[[1890-91 in Scottish football|1890&ndash;91]] ||align=center|[[1997-98 in Scottish football|1997&ndash;98]]||align=center|<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=2104|title=League tables: Rangers|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|-
|align=left|'''[[St. Mirren F.C.|St. Mirren]]'''||align=center|[[1890-91 in Scottish football|1890&ndash;91]]||align=center|[[2005-06 in Scottish football|2005&ndash;06]] ||align=center|<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=2475|title=League tables: St. Mirren|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|}


==History==
===Other former member clubs===
===Beginnings===
{|class=wikitable style="text-align:left"
While Dr. Dre was trying to leave [[Ruthless Records]], he was introduced to Suge Knight, who was a bodyguard for [[The D.O.C.]] at the time. With Dr. Dre, Suge Knight, and The D.O.C., set out to found their own label which they called Future Shock Records, later renamed Death Row Records. Knight would later explain his reasoning for the company in a 1996 interview with [[Vibe Magazine]]: "We called it Death Row because most everybody had been involved with the law. The majority of our people were parolees or incarcerated - no joke. We got people that were really on Death Row and still is[''sic'']." After a year long battle with Eazy-E and Jerry Heller, who still had disputes over where Dre was signed and on what terms, and a botched deal with Dick Griffey's [[Solar Records]], funding Death Row was accomplished via financial support from [[Interscope Records]]. Interscope would then act as a distributor for Death Row Records for the next six years. The label's first release was ''[[The Chronic]]'', the solo debut from Dr. Dre, in December 1992. Featured on the album were newcomers: Daz, Kurupt, The Lady of Rage, RBX and, most notably, Dr. Dre's new protege [[Snoop Dogg]] (then known as ''Snoop 'Doggy' Dogg''). The album quickly exploded into 1993, eventually topping the [[Billboard 200|Billboard's Top 200 Albums]] chart; selling over three million copies.

===Early Success===
Later that year, Death Row released ''[[Doggystyle]]'', the debut album from Snoop Dogg. Debuting at number one, it wound up beating ''The Chronic'' in sales, and made Snoop Dogg and Death Row Records hip-hop's leading act by 1994. Also in 1994, Death Row released the multi-platinum soundtracks to ''[[Above the Rim]]'' and Snoop Dogg's ''[[Murder Was the Case]]''.

With acclaim came criticism. While riding on the commercial success of Dr. Dre and Snoop Doggy Dogg, Death Row was blasted by several activist groups and public figures in the media for its glorification of the violence associated with the [[gangsta rap]] image that most of its artists promoted. The media criticism, meanwhile, grew louder by the summer of 1995, as dissenters zeroed in on Death Row's highly publicized forthcoming release, ''[[Dogg Food]]''—the debut release by [[Tha Dogg Pound]]. The flak made the shareholders in Interscope Records' parent company, [[Time Warner]], nervous—so much so that the company sold all of its shares in Interscope to [[Music Corporation of America|MCA Music Entertainment]]. ''Dogg Food'', meanwhile, was postponed from its intended July release date to October.

===Addition of 2Pac===
As the controversy with boycotters and Time Warner was adding fuel to Death Row's engine; Suge Knight, in the meantime, posted bail for the then-incarcerated [[Tupac Shakur|Tupac ("2Pac") Shakur]] in exchange for his signing with Death Row. At the time, Tupac and Death Row shared mutual disdain for the fledgling [[New York]]-based [[Bad Boy Records]], along with its CEO [[Sean Combs]] and seminal star [[The Notorious B.I.G.]]

Upon Shakur's release from jail, he immediately went to work on his Death Row debut album, ''[[All Eyez on Me]]''. The album, released in early 1996 became the label's biggest commercial success to date, topping the albums charts and going 9x platinum. The escalating tension between Tupac and Biggie (as well as Death Row and Bad Boy), meanwhile, fueled what was eventually called the "[[East Coast-West Coast hip hop rivalry|East Coast/West Coast rap war]]." What was to follow would be a year-long dispute in which several Death Row artists fired verbal assaults at East Coast artists. Among those who took lyrical shots were: Snoop Dogg, The Dogg Pound, and Tupac (with his group, [[Outlawz]]). The list of those dissed by Death Row included most famously (but is not limited to): [[Mobb Deep]], [[Nas]], [[Jay-Z]], the [[Junior M.A.F.I.A.]], [[Puff Daddy]] and the [[Notorious B.I.G.]].

===Death Row vs. Bad Boy===
Death Row artists who acknowledged [[Bad Boy Records]], or those who didn't support the feud, were looked down upon by Tupac. Lady of Rage commented in an interview that Tupac had once called her the "weakest link in Death Row" because she wouldn't insult Bad Boy. Tupac also spoke ill of Dr. Dre for not having testified for Snoop during his murder trial, discouraging the West Coast-East Coast tension, and for his having departed the label in early 1996. Tupac dissed Dr. Dre on KMEL radio in the Bay Area for not running the streets representing with him and the label and being too slow on producing beats for his album. Snoop Dogg eventually would fall out with Tupac shortly before his death because of an interview in which Snoop claimed to like and respect B.I.G.'s music.

Despite the infamous feud, Suge Knight had planned to open a New York chapter of the label to be called ''Death Row East'', even signing [[K-Solo]], the only rapper that signed before the label disappeared. [[Eric B. & Rakim|Eric B.]] was slated to head that label. In an interview, 2Pac named rappers they planned to sign, from [[Big Daddy Kane]] to the [[Wu-Tang Clan]]. The branch, however, was never formed.

Tupac was shot and killed in Las Vegas in September 1996, while riding on the passenger side in a car driven by Suge Knight. Soon after, Knight was sentenced to nine years in prison for a parole violation relating directly to a fight that both he and Tupac were involved in on the night of his death. As a result of Dr. Dre's having previously left the company, Tupac's death, and Suge Knight's incarceration; Death Row Records imploded almost instantly.

==Second Generation==
===Struggles===
In August 1997, Interscope Records sold its interest in Death Row Records and severed ties with the company. This forced the label to take up distribution with [[Priority Records]]. By 1998, [[Snoop Dogg]], [[Tray Deee]], [[Soopafly]], [[Jewell (singer)|Jewell]], and [[Kurupt]] had all left the label. [[Nate Dogg]], The [[Lady of Rage]], and [[Daz Dillinger]] soon followed. Death Row's saving grace was the fact that they maintained ownership of the original master recordings its former artists produced while they were still under contract. These recordings were sold under auction in 2008.

[[Warren G]], Dr. Dre's stepbrother, left the label without releasing an album — claiming that he had been assaulted by Suge Knight. The book "Have Gun will Travel" by Ronin Ro later claimed that he and his friends were publicly beaten at a boat party, and also details accusations of violence against Sam Sneed. Some employees were allegedly beaten and forced to strip after making a telephone call without permission.<ref>According to StreetGangs.com [http://www.streetgangs.com/newsletter/122002row.html]</ref> On his [[VH1]] ''[[Behind the Music]]'' profile, Dr. Dre noted that the single incident that made him decide to leave the label for good was when he witnessed a studio engineer being assaulted, simply for rewinding a tape back too far.

In 1998, Suge planned to launch the many rappers to come for the second generation of Death Row Records. Although he was incarcerated, he pushed rapper Top Dogg (also known as YGD) as his first new face making his television debut in the video "All About U" on the 2Pac "Greatest Hits" album replacing Snoop Dogg. Top Dogg had generated a buzz from a hidden track on the [[Gang Related (soundtrack)|''Gang Related'' soundtrack]] titled "Goin Back To Cali" aimed toward Puff Daddy. The video, "All About U," received heavy play and Suge followed in 1999 with "The Chronic 2000: Suge Knight Represents" album to introduce a brand new roster headed by Daz Dillinger, Soopafly, Tha Dogg Pound, Top Dogg, Tha Realest, Swoop G, Lil Cstyle, Doobie K, Milkbone, Michelle, VK, and Mac Shawn.

In 2000, the video for Top Dogg's "Cindafella" track received minor airplay with an innovative concept produced by TC as many earlier videos and directed by K.C. Amos, and his album "Every Dog Has His Day" was shelved as his contract expired and he was not renewed. Soopafly shortly lived as the label's lead artist after failure to generate any type of buzz off his single "Like It Or Not," was released due to disputes over payments from the label. Tha Realest tookover as Tha Row's lead artist and made several albums which were never released, including the much anticipated "Witness Tha Realest" that featured a diss track towards Mobb Deep. He recorded tracks with Daz Dillinger, Scarface, Richie Rich, and other big westcoast names along with label mates J Valentine, PB, and his group The Last Circle. After "Too Gangsta For Radio," Tha Realest was kicked off of Death Row because fans were complaining about him for many reasons. They didn't like the fact that he sounded exactly like 2pac, that he tried to give an interview exactly like 2pac, that he was spreading around rumors on the official Death Row website that 2pac and Suge Knight discovered him in las Vegas and they both signed him rumors and fans were also complaining about the similarities between Tha Realest's tattoos and 2pac's. Suge Knight wanted to make his label legitimate so he decided to sign Crooked I. Daz Dillinger left the label as head-producer later that year due to money problems with Suge Knight and he used his Death Row tracks to release an independent album titled "R.A.W." His lead single for the Too Gangsta For Radio compilation titled "Gangsta Rap" was pulled and he was replaced with Scarface & Treach of Naughty By Nature. This track would later appear as the lead single for Knight's Tha Dogg Pound "2002" release. Big Hutch aka Cold187um from Above The Law became the label's lead producer.
In September 2001, with Knight being out of prison, Crooked I's debut "Say Hi To Tha Bad Guy" was supposed to be released with the lead single being "So Damn Hood featuring Sisqo" and rumored guest appearances by Ja Rule, Ashanti, Jadakiss, Kurupt, Scarface, Trick Daddy, Lisa "Left Eye" Lopez, Danny Boy, Jayo Felony, Juvenile, Too Short, Yukmouth, D.J. Quik, Jay-Z E-40 and others marking the big return of the label. The album was never released and it became apparent Death Row Records had major marketing problems. Big Hutch parted the label and Darren Vegas became the new head of productions.

In 2001, Several out-of-print releases from Tha Row were re-released, such as: Snoop Dogg's ''[[Tha Doggfather]]'' and 2Pac's ''[[The Don Killuminati: The 7 Day Theory]]''. However, Tha Row's attempt at a comeback lagged, as their new releases were all compilations. With the exception of previously unreleased material by 2Pac, the label failed to release any solo records by any of its current roster. On the 2001 ''Too Gangsta For Radio'' compilation, several skits were aimed at Tha Row's many adversaries. The introduction had a Snoop impersonator waking up from a nightmare and making his wife phone the prison in which Suge Knight was serving time to verify that he was still behind bars. On the track "Fuck Dre", [[Tha Realest]], TWIST 2 DVS(J. Gallardo) and Lil' C-Style (formerly of the [[LBC Crew]]) recorded a skit where Dr. Dre rapes a potential signee, and on K-9's "Gangsta'd Out", a skit portrayed Eminem as a tool of the [[Ku Klux Klan]]. Upon release from prison in 2001, Knight renamed the label "Tha Row Records" and revealed a new roster headed by gifted Long Beach rapper, [[Crooked I]]. Tha Row also signed [[Left Eye]] of [[TLC (music)|TLC]], under the name N.I.N.A., meaning New Identity Non-Applicable. Left-Eye, however, was later killed in a car accident before anything could come of the deal.

==Third Generation==
By 2002, Knight's fanbase became frustrated with a lack of new albums from active artists. Although Kurupt of Tha Dogg Pound had returned to be President of the label, the release of [[Tha Dogg Pound]]'s ''[[2002 (Tha Dogg Pound album)|2002]]'', [[Tupac|Tupac Shakur]]'s ''[[Until The End Of Time]]'', and [[Snoop Dogg]]'s ''[[Death Row: Snoop Doggy Dogg at His Best]]'' escalated the frustration of loyal fans that wanted to see the new roster. Although he had a great relationship with Suge Knight, it was apparent that Kurupt had very little power when it came to major label decisions, album releases, and recruiting power as the President and that the significant decisions ran through Knight.

By 2003, Kurupt was the label's new lead artist as [[Crooked I]] fought legal battles with Knight to escape his contract. He recorded with his brother Roscoe, MOP, Eastwood, and Tri-Star. By 2005, multi-platinum rapper [[Petey Pablo]] had signed on to become Death Row's new lead artist. Kurupt and Eastwood (Who is now a former artist) were the only ones left of the second generation of Tha Row artists because most had departed from the label. Kurupt's album "Against The Grain" dropped and Death Row claimed that distributor Koch dropped the album before it was finished and left off important tracks Kurupt recorded with Lil Jon and Ice Cube. Songs such as "Vaseline 2" were dropped from the album. The album did poorly for sales and reminded everyone of the problems the label was having. As well as the poor sales Death Row did not endorse the album because of Koch's "mistake".

At 2:30 am on [[May 27]], [[2003]], several bullets were fired by an unknown person, or persons, at Death Row Records [[Beverly Hills]] headquarters; damaging the front door, windows and wall of the offices. Earlier that year, a Los Angeles [[S.W.A.T.]] team raided the Death Row offices, looking for evidence of gang murders and drug dealing. At some point, rumors circulated that rapper [[The Game (rapper)|The Game]] was in talks with Suge Knight about signing with Tha Row. Supposedly, The Game was simultaneously considering a deal with rival [[Bad Boy Records]]. Regardless of the authenticity of these talks, they yielded nothing and The Game is currently under his own label named [[The Black Wall Street Records]].

The year 2004 proved unfortunate for Suge. [[Crooked I]], Tha Row's most promising artist, became frustrated that his album had failed to reach shelves after a period of five years and departed the label when his contract expired. [[Crooked I]] is now under his own label called (Dynasty Entertainment)it is independent and he is also signed to Treacherous Records, an up and coming record label from Los Angeles California. Similarly, R&B artist Danny Boy too left the label after a lengthy postponement, but as of now this is yet to be announced. Rapper Kurupt left in 2005 to reunite group [[Tha Dogg Pound]] with former partner [[Daz Dillinger]]. In the same year, Tha Row signed rapper [[Petey Pablo]]. Additionally, it is rumored that the company attempted to sign incarcerated rapper [[Shyne]], but that didn't work out.
The second generation did not fail due to lack of talent, but rather, a lack of exposure. With poor promotion and missed album releases, several quality records were shelved that may have generated heavy sales. The label failed to release completed albums by Top Dogg, Soopafly, Tha Realest, Daz Dillinger (second album), Above The Law, Ray J, N.I.N.A., J. Valentine, Eastwood, [[Danny Boy (artist)|Danny Boy]], [[Crooked I]], Dre'sta, Mac Shawn, and several others. Later that year Kurupt and Eastwood both left the label. The only remaining artist would be Petey Pablo until 2006.

===Current Company Status===
In early 2006 Suge Knight went on the DJ Kay Slay Hot 97 Radio Show and announced Death Row East and its first artist [[Lakey the Kid]]. Lakey had appeared on albums with Nas previously. Tha Row East has plans for one album. This album is Lakey's solo album called "The Big Ride" which, according to Tha Row East Vice President Delson, will be coming out sometime in 2007. Another artist named Warlord later signed to Death Row West. His mixtape "I Can Getcha Block Knocked Off Volume 1" aided by [[DJ Fokis]] aka [["Bull Of Tha Industry"]] out of [[Chicago, Illinois]] was released [[September 26]], [[2006]]. Warlord recently started working on [["Still Can Get Cha Block Knocked off Volume 2"]]. The mixtape is in its final stages and will soon be available worldwide on Apple’s iTunes. Apparently the mixtape is executive produced by [[Suge Knight]] and Big L.O.S. (Death Row's Former V.P.). There is a video being shot for this called Boss, which will be the main focus of the tape. It has also been reported that Suge Knight is doing a reality show pilot for a major cable channel. Recently Big L.O.S. left from Death Row Records & formed his own company. Petey Pablo was stated to have left from Death Row Records near the end of 2006. Petey Pablo plans on releasing a mixtape around the same time his new album drops.

On [[April 3]], [[2006]], it was reported that a court-appointed receiver is set to acquire Death Row assets to auction off. Suge Knight has missed several court-mandated appearances over his assets. Michael Harris, an imprisoned drug dealer, says that Knight owes him money because he helped fund the label's founding.<ref>Billboard Magazine article http://www.billboard.com/bbcom/news/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1002276110</ref> On [[April 4]], [[2006]], Death Row Records filed for [[bankruptcy|bankruptcy protection]].<ref>BBC article [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/4878224.stm]</ref> Knight would run the company while the matter is before the courts. It is noted that the headquarters of Death Row in [[Beverly Hills]] has been abandoned. A Los Angeles bankruptcy judge has set a deadline for parties to file claims against Death Row Records and Marion "Suge" Knight as part of a Chapter 11 restructuring of the legendary West coast label.

Death Row Records and Knight filed for Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code in April 2006, listing debts of $137.4 million and $4.4 million in assets. Those filing claims with the bankruptcy court presiding over the case must file by [[October 31]] or risk being barred from asserting claims against Death Row Records or Suge Knight. "We believe that it is vital that all parties asserting claims come forward and assert them in a timely manner so that Death Row can come out of Chapter 11 quickly", said Todd Neilson, the Death Row chapter 11 trustee. In March of 2005, Knight was ordered to pay over $100 million to Lydia Harris, who claims her husband, incarcerated drug kingpin Michael "Harry-O" Harris, provided $1.5 million in start-up money for Death Row in return for a 50% stake in the label. Knight missed several court dates in regards to the Harris' ownership claims, resulting in a default judgment.
He filed for [[Chapter 11, Title 11, United States Code|Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection]], which allows a company to continue business operations while restructuring. Death Row is currently being operated by Neilson during the bankruptcy proceedings, while Knight oversees his bankruptcy estate as a debtor in possession. Among those listed as unsecured creditors to Death Row include the Harris', the Internal Revenue Service ($6,900,000), [[Koch Records]] ($3,400,000), Interscope Records ($2,500,000) and others. With Chapter 11 bankruptcy Suge will not lose his company or any of his masters.

On [[May 29]], 2008, [[TMZ]] published US Bankruptcy Court documents putting Death Row Records and all of its assets, including masters, for public auction on [[June 24]] with bids starting at $24 million.<ref>[http://www.tmz.com/2008/05/29/forget-suge-you-can-own-death-row-records/ Forget Suge, You Can Own Death Row Records!]</ref> [[Susan Berg]] won the auction, bidding the starting bid of $24 million.<ref>[http://www.hiphopdx.com/index/news/id.7198/title.death-row-auctioned-off-for-24-million Death Row Auctioned Off For $24 Million | Hip Hop News > HipHopDX.com<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>

Since winning the company for $24 million dollars and group of investors labeled as 'Global Music Group' from New York, NY has yet to be able to pay anything other than the $1,000,000.00 deposit and continue to request payment extension after extension. These events have led to Suge Knight to order a cease and disist to 'Global Music Group' from claiming they have obtained Death Row due to non-payment. Knight is also requesting the label back or a re-bid allowing him to be involved. The long historic saga of Death Row Records is far from over and far from 'being bought' as well.

===Criminal Allegations===
Many people believe that Death Row was responsible for the murder of acclaimed rapper Tupac Shakur because he was leaving the label to form his own label Makaveli Records. "I'll never forget the look in Suge and Reggie's eyes when I saw them at the hospital," [[Keven Hackie]], an FBI agent and bodyguard for Tupac said. "In 17 years of being a cop, I've seen a lot of guilty people and the look Suge had in his face, the look in his eyes when he looked at me, I knew damn well from their looks, those f****rs were guilty. There's no doubt about it."<ref>[http://allhiphop.com/stories/news/archive/2007/12/03/18956585.aspx AllHipHop.com Daily News - : Tupac Bodyguard Issues 100k Challenge To Death Row Security<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>

Reggie Wright Jr., the former Head of Security for Death Row Records, was offered $100,000 USD to take a lie detector test that asks if he had anything to do with the assassination of [[2Pac]] on the documentary [[Tupac: Assassination]]. Proclaiming his innocence, he has agreed to take it.<ref>[http://www.hhworlds.com/f11/12-09-07-head-security-death-row-accepts-100k-challenge-9794.html ''HHWorlds.com'' - Head Of Security For Death Row Accepts 100K Challenge (December 9, 2007)]</ref>
Many within the industry know Shakur's murder was nothing more than gang activity as at his death Shakur was a full fledged member of the Compton, CA blood gang Mob Piru's (M.O.B.) (Money, Organization, & Business). Many fans simply do not live in the gang enviroment and cannot believe someone can be killed over things as small as a fight or affiliation. This has propelled fans to create alive theories, death conspiracies, and ignited former employees to cash in on this vulnerability by producing DVDs that are bought by only the most hard core of Tupac fans. Death Row Records was under investigation by the FBI for two year prior to Shakur being gunned down in Las Vegas, NV and had the company played a role in the murder people would be in jail.

==Discography==
{|class="wikitable"
!Year
!Artist
!Title
!Last RIAA Certification
!Billboard 200 (Peak)
|-
|-
|rowspan="1"|1992
!width=23%|Club!!width=10%|First league<br />season!!width=10%|Last league<br />season!!width=50%|Current status!!width=7%|Notes
|'''Dr. Dre'''
|''[[The Chronic]]''
|4x Platinum
|#3 (02/13/1993)
|-
|-
|rowspan="1"|1993
|align=left|'''[[Abercorn F.C.|Abercorn]]'''||align=center|[[1890-91 in Scottish football|1890&ndash;91]] ||align=center|[[1914-15 in Scottish football|1914&ndash;15]] ||Defunct ||align=center|<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=26|title=League tables: Abercorn|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|'''Snoop Dogg'''
|''[[Doggystyle]]''
|4x Platinum
|#1 (12/11/1993)
|-
|-
|rowspan="1"|1994
|align=left|[[Airdrieonians F.C.|Airdrieonians]]||align=center|[[1894-95 in Scottish football|1894&ndash;95]] ||align=center|[[2001-02 in Scottish football|2001&ndash;02]] ||Defunct, former owners took over the [[Clydebank F.C.|Clydebank]] club and reformed it as [[Airdrie United F.C.|Airdrie United]] ||align=center|<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=72|title=League tables: Airdrie (old)|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref><ref name="AC">{{cite web|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/scotland/2069736.stm|title=Airdrie United given green light|publisher=BBC|date=2002-07-01|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|'''Various Artists'''
|''[[Above the Rim]]'' (Originial Soundtrack)
|2x Platinum
|#2 (03/29/1994)
|-
|-
|rowspan="1"|1994
|align=left|[[Armadale F.C.|Armadale]]||align=center|[[1921-22 in Scottish football|1921&ndash;22]] ||align=center|[[1931-32 in Scottish football|1931&ndash;32]] ||Defunct ||align=center|<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=137|title=League tables: Armadale|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|'''Various Artists'''
|''[[Murder Was the Case]]'' (Original Soundtrack)
|2x Platinum
|#1 (11/05/1994)
|-
|-
|rowspan="1"|1995
|align=left|[[Arthurlie F.C.|Arthurlie]]||align=center|[[1901-02 in Scottish football|1901&ndash;02]] ||align=center|[[1928-29 in Scottish football|1928&ndash;29]] ||Competing in the [[Scottish Junior Football West Premier League|SJFA West Premier League]] ||align=center|<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=143|title=League tables: Arthurlie|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref><ref name="West">{{cite web|url=http://www.footballcentral.org/sfa/associations/scottish-junior-football-association/west/league_tables.cfm|title=Stagecoach West of Scotland League|publisher=Scottish Junior Football Association|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|'''Tha Dogg Pound'''
|''[[Dogg Food]]''
|2x Platinum
|#1 (11/18/1995)
|-
|-
|rowspan="6"|1996
|align=left|[[Ayr F.C.|Ayr]]||align=center|[[1897-98 in Scottish football|1897&ndash;98]] ||align=center|[[1909-10 in Scottish football|1909&ndash;10]] ||Merged with Ayr Parkhouse to form [[Ayr United F.C.|Ayr United]] ||align=center|<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=172|title=League tables: Ayr United|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref><ref name="Ayr">{{cite web|url=http://www.ayrunitedfc.co.uk/index.asp?p=history_utd01|title=History of Ayr United F.C.|publisher=Ayr United F.C.|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|'''2Pac'''
|''[[All Eyez on Me]]''
|9x platinum
|#1 (03/02/1996)
|-
|-
|'''2Pac'''
|align=left|[[Ayr Parkhouse F.C.|Ayr Parkhouse]]||align=center|[[1902-03 in Scottish football|1902&ndash;03]] ||align=center|[[1909-10 in Scottish football|1909&ndash;10]] ||Merged with Ayr to form Ayr United ||align=center|<ref name="Ayr" /><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=140|title=League tables: Ayr Parkhouse|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|''[[The Don Killuminati: The 7 Day Theory]]''
|9x Platinum
|#1 (11/23/1996)
|-
|-
|'''Snoop Dogg'''
|align=left|[[Bathgate F.C.|Bathgate]]||align=center|[[1921-22 in Scottish football|1921&ndash;22]] ||align=center|[[1928-29 in Scottish football|1928&ndash;29]]<ref>Bathgate resigned during the 1928&ndash;29 season and the club's record was expunged from the table.</ref> ||Defunct ||align=center|<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=271|title=League tables: Bathgate|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|''[[Tha Doggfather]]''
|2x Platinum
|#1 (11/30/1996)
|-
|-
|'''Various Artists'''
|align=left|[[Beith F.C.|Beith]]||align=center|[[1923-24 in Scottish football|1923&ndash;24]] ||align=center|[[1925-26 in Scottish football|1925&ndash;26]] ||Reformed as [[Beith Juniors F.C.|Beith Juniors]] and currently competing in the SJFA West Premier League ||align=center|<ref name="West" /><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.eteamz.com/beithjuniorsfc/news/index.cfm?id=2398396&cat=247479|title=Beith FC &ndash; Information|publisher=Beith Juniors F.C.|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=253|title=League tables: Beith|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|''[[Death Row Greatest Hits]]''
|Platinum
|#35 (12/21/1996)
|-
|-
|'''Various Artists'''
|align=left|[[Bo'ness F.C.|Bo'ness]]||align=center|[[1921-22 in Scottish football|1921&ndash;22]] ||align=center|[[1932-33 in Scottish football|1932&ndash;33]] ||Merged with Bo'ness Cadora to form [[Bo'ness United F.C.|Bo'ness United]] and currently competing in the [[Scottish Junior Football East Region Premier League|SJFA East Premier League]] ||align=center|<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=360|title=League tables: Bo'ness|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.historicalkits.co.uk/Scottish_Football_League/Bo_ness/bo_ness.htm|title=Bo'ness|publisher=Historical Football Kits|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|''[[Christmas on Death Row]]''
|None
|#155 (12/28/1996)
|-
|-
|'''Hammer'''
|align=left|[[Broxburn United F.C.|Broxburn United]]||align=center|[[1921-22 in Scottish football|1921&ndash;22]] ||align=center|[[1925-26 in Scottish football|1925&ndash;26]] ||Defunct ||align=center|<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=463|title=League tables: Broxburn United|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|''[[Too Tight (Unreleased)]]''
|None
|None
|-
|-
|rowspan="2"|1997
|align=left|'''[[Cambuslang F.C.|Cambuslang]]'''||align=center|[[1890-91 in Scottish football|1890&ndash;91]] ||align=center|[[1891-92 in Scottish football|1891&ndash;92]]||Defunct ||align=center|<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=481|title=League tables: Cambuslang|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|'''The Lady of Rage'''
|''[[Necessary Roughness (album)|Necessary Roughness]]''
|None
|#32 (07/12/1997)
|-
|-
|'''Various Artists'''
|align=left|[[Clackmannan F.C.|Clackmannan]]||align=center|[[1921-22 in Scottish football|1921&ndash;22]] ||align=center|[[1925-26 in Scottish football|1925&ndash;26]]||Defunct ||align=center|<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=572|title=League tables: Clackmannan|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|[[Gang Related (soundtrack)|''Gang Related'' soundtrack]]
|2x Platinum
|#2 (10/25/1997)
|-
|-
|rowspan="3"|1998
|align=left|[[Clydebank F.C.#Clydebank F.C. (1914-32)|Clydebank]] (original club)||align=center|[[1914-15 in Scottish football|1914&ndash;15]] ||align=center|[[1930-31 in Scottish football|1930&ndash;31]] ||Defunct ||align=center|<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=489|title=League tables: Clydebank (1)|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|'''2Pac'''
|''[[Greatest Hits (2Pac album)|Greatest Hits]]''
|9x Platinum
|#3 (01/23/1999)
|-
|-
|'''Daz Dillinger'''
|align=left|[[Clydebank F.C.#Clydebank F.C. (1965-2002)|Clydebank]] (second club)||align=center|[[1965-66 in Scottish football|1965&ndash;66]] ||align=center|[[2001-02 in Scottish football|2001&ndash;02]] ||Taken over by the former owners of the defunct [[Airdrieonians F.C.|Airdrieonians]], who reformed the club as [[Airdrie United F.C.|Airdrie United]] ||align=center|<ref name="AC" /><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=495|title=League tables: Clydebank|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-06}}</ref>
|''[[Retaliation, Revenge & Get Back]]''
|Gold
|#8 (04/18/1998)
|-
|-
|'''Michel'le'''
|align=left|'''[[Cowlairs F.C.|Cowlairs]]'''||align=center|[[1890-91 in Scottish football|1890&ndash;91]] ||align=center|[[1894-95 in Scottish football|1894&ndash;95]]||Defunct ||align=center|<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=696|title=League tables: Cowlairs|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|''[[Hung Jury (album)|Hung Jury]]''
|None
|Did Not Chart
|-
|-
|1999
|align=left|[[Dumbarton Harp F.C.|Dumbarton Harp]]||align=center|[[1923-24 in Scottish football|1923&ndash;24]] ||align=center|[[1924-25 in Scottish football|1924&ndash;25]]||Defunct ||align=center|<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=727|title=League tables: Dumbarton Harp|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|'''Various Artists'''
|''[[Suge Knight Represents: Chronic 2000]]''
|Gold
|#11 (05/22/1999)
|-
|-
|rowspan="2"|2000
|align=left|[[Dundee Wanderers F.C.|Dundee Wanderers]]||align=center|[[1894-95 in Scottish football|1894&ndash;95]] ||align=center|[[1894-95 in Scottish football|1894&ndash;95]]||Defunct ||align=center|<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=741|title=League tables: Dundee Wanderers|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|'''Snoop Dogg'''
|''[[Dead Man Walkin']]''
|None
|#24 (11/18/2000)
|-
|-
|'''Various artists'''
|align=left|[[Dykehead F.C.|Dykehead]]||align=center|[[1923-24 in Scottish football|1923&ndash;24]] ||align=center|[[1925-26 in Scottish football|1925&ndash;26]]||Defunct ||align=center|<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=846|title=League tables: Dykehead|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|''[[Too Gangsta for Radio]]''
|None
|#171 (10/21/2000)
|-
|-
|rowspan="3"|2001
|align=left|[[Edinburgh City F.C.|Edinburgh City]]||align=center|[[1931-32 in Scottish football|1931&ndash;32]] ||align=center|[[1948-49 in Scottish football|1948&ndash;49]]||Currently playing in the [[East of Scotland Football League|East of Scotland League]] Premier Division ||align=center|<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=871|title=League tables: Edinburgh City|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.edinburghcityfc.com/ecfc/abriefhistory.html|title=A Brief History|publisher=Edinburgh City F.C.|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|'''Snoop Dogg'''
|''[[Death Row: Snoop Doggy Dogg at His Best]]''
|None
|#28 (11/10/2001)
|-
|-
|'''Tha Dogg Pound'''
|align=left|[[Galston F.C.|Galston]]||align=center|[[1923-24 in Scottish football|1923&ndash;24]] ||align=center|[[1925-26 in Scottish football|1925&ndash;26]] ||Defunct ||align=center|<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=1068|title=League tables: Galston|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|''[[2002 (Tha Dogg Pound album)|2002]]''
|None
|#36 (08/18/2001)
|-
|-
|'''2Pac'''
|align=left|[[Gretna F.C.|Gretna]]||align=center|[[2002-03 in Scottish football|2002&ndash;03]] ||align=center|[[2006-07 in Scottish football|2006&ndash;07]]<ref>Gretna officially returned to the Scottish League upon being relegated from the Scottish Premier League at the conclusion of the 2007&ndash;08 season, but resigned from the league before the start of the subsequent season.</ref>||Defunct. A new club set up by its supporters, [[Gretna F.C. 2008|Gretna 2008]], plays in the [[East of Scotland League]]||<ref>{{cite news | url=http://edinburghnews.scotsman.com/sport/Gretna-given-place-in-the.4279463.jp | title=Gretna given place in the East of Scotland League | work=The Scotsman | date=2008-07-11 | quote='We are obviously a new club carrying on the traditions of the old club and there is no connection with the old club other than the similarity in name,' said Hodge.}}</ref>
|''[[Until the End of Time]]''
|5x Platinum
|#1 (04/14/2001)
|-
|-
|rowspan="2"|2002
|align=left|[[Helensburgh F.C.|Helensburgh]]||align=center|[[1923-24 in Scottish football|1923&ndash;24]] ||align=center|[[1925-26 in Scottish football|1925&ndash;26]]||Defunct ||align=center|<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=1213|title=League tables: Helensburgh|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|'''Various Artists'''
|''[[Dysfunktional Family]]'' (Original Soundtrack)
|None
|#95 (05/10/2003)
|-
|-
|'''2Pac'''
|align=left|[[Johnstone F.C.|Johnstone]]||align=center|[[1912-13 in Scottish football|1912&ndash;13]] ||align=center|[[1925-26 in Scottish football|1925&ndash;26]]||Defunct ||align=center|<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=1401|title=League tables: Johnstone|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|''[[Better Dayz]]''
|3x Platinum
|#5 (12/14/2002)
|-
|-
||2003
|align=left|[[King's Park F.C.|King's Park]]||align=center|[[1921-22 in Scottish football|1921&ndash;22]] ||align=center|[[1938-39 in Scottish football|1938&ndash;39]]||Defunct ||align=center|<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=1467|title=League tables: King's Park|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|'''2Pac'''
|''[[Nu-Mixx Klazzics]]''
|Gold
|#15 (10/25/2003)
|-
|-
|2004
|align=left|[[Leith Athletic F.C.|Leith Athletic]]||align=center|[[1891-92 in Scottish football|1891&ndash;92]] ||align=center|[[1952-53 in Scottish football|1952&ndash;53]]||Defunct ||align=center|<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=1529|title=League tables: Leith Athletic|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|'''2Pac'''
|''[[2Pac Live]]''
|None
|Did Not Chart
|-
|-
|rowspan="3"|2005
|align=left|[[Linthouse F.C.|Linthouse]]||align=center|[[1895-96 in Scottish football|1895&ndash;96]] ||align=center|[[1899-1900 in Scottish football|1899&ndash;00]]||Defunct ||align=center|<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=1591|title=League tables: Linthouse|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|'''Various Artists'''
|''[[The Very Best of Death Row]]''
|None
|#94 (05/14/2005)
|-
|-
|'''Kurupt'''
|align=left|[[Lochgelly United F.C.|Lochgelly United]]||align=center|[[1914-15 in Scottish football|1914&ndash;15]] ||align=center|[[1925-26 in Scottish football|1925&ndash;26]]||Defunct ||align=center|<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=1547|title=League tables: Lochgelly United|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|''[[Against tha Grain]]''
|None
|#60 (09/10/2005)
|-
|-
|'''2Pac'''
|align=left|[[Meadowbank Thistle F.C.|Meadowbank Thistle]]||align=center|[[1974-75 in Scottish football|1974&ndash;75]] ||align=center|[[1994-95 in Scottish football|1994&ndash;95]]||Relocated and became [[Livingston F.C.|Livingston]]. The current club considers its founding date to be 1995.||align=center|<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=1705|title=League tables: Meadowbank Thistle|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.livingstonfc.co.uk/onelivi.php|title=One Livi|publisher=Livingston F.C.|accessdate=2008-06-09}}</ref>
|''[[Tupac: Live at the House of Blues]]''
|Platinum (DVD)
|#159 (10/22/2005)
|-
|-
|rowspan="2"|2006
|align=left|[[Mid-Annandale F.C.|Mid-Annandale]]||align=center|[[1923-24 in Scottish football|1923&ndash;24]] ||align=center|[[1925-26 in Scottish football|1925&ndash;26]] ||Defunct, revived version of the club currently competing in the [[South of Scotland Football League|South of Scotland League]] ||align=center|<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=1677|title=League tables:Mid Annandale|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref><ref name="GG">{{cite web|url=http://www.gallowaygazette.co.uk/sport/Sanny-saying-goodbye.4011939.jp|title=Sanny saying goodbye|publisher=The Galloway Gazette|accessdate=2008-06-04|date=2008-04-23}}</ref>
|'''Dr. Dre'''
|''[[Chronicles: Death Row Classics]]''
|None
|Did Not Chart
|-
|-
|'''Various Artists'''
|align=left|[[Nithsdale Wanderers F.C.|Nithsdale Wanderers]]||align=center|[[1923-24 in Scottish football|1923&ndash;24]] ||align=center|[[1926-27 in Scottish football|1926&ndash;27]] ||Defunct, revived version of the club currently competing in the South of Scotland League ||align=center|<ref name="GG" /><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=1886|title=League tables: Nithsdale Wanderers|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|''[[15 Years on Death Row]]''
|None
|Did Not Chart
|-
|-
|rowspan="7"|2007
|align=left|[[Northern F.C.|Northern]]||align=center|[[1893-94 in Scottish football|1893&ndash;94]] ||align=center|[[1893-94 in Scottish football|1893&ndash;94]]||Defunct ||align=center|<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=1877|title=League tables: Northern|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|'''Snoop Dogg'''
|''Chronicles''
|None
|Did Not Chart
|-
|-
|'''Various Artists'''
|align=left|[[Peebles Rovers F.C.|Peebles Rovers]]||align=center|[[1923-24 in Scottish football|1923&ndash;24]] ||align=center|[[1925-26 in Scottish football|1925&ndash;26]]||Reformed as [[Peebles F.C.|Peebles]] and currently competing in the East of Scotland League Division One ||align=center|<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=1992|title=League tables: Peebles Rovers|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.historicalkits.co.uk/Scottish_Football_League/Peebles_Rovers/Peebles_Rovers.htm|title=Peebles Rovers|publisher=Historical Football Kits|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|''Death Row Archives: The Soundtracks''
|None
|Did Not Chart
|-
|-
|'''Various Artists'''
|align=left|[[Port Glasgow Athletic F.C.|Port Glasgow Athletic]]||align=center|[[1893-94 in Scottish football|1893&ndash;94]] ||align=center|[[1910-11 in Scottish football|1910&ndash;11]] ||Defunct ||align=center|<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=2000|title=League tables: Port Glasgow Athletic|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|''[[Death Row: The Singles Collection]]''
|None
|Did Not Chart
|-
|-
|'''2Pac'''
|align=left|'''[[Renton F.C.|Renton]]'''||align=center|[[1890-91 in Scottish football|1890&ndash;91]] ||align=center|[[1897-98 in Scottish football|1897&ndash;98]] ||Defunct ||align=center|<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=2130|title=League tables: Renton|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|''[[Nu-Mixx Klazzics Vol. 2]]''
|None
|#45
|-
|-
|'''2Pac'''
|align=left|[[Royal Albert F.C.|Royal Albert]]||align=center|[[1923-24 in Scottish football|1923&ndash;24]] ||align=center|[[1925-26 in Scottish football|1925&ndash;26]]||Currently competing in the [[Scottish Junior Football Central Division Two|SJFA West Central Division Two]] ||align=center|<ref name="West" /><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=2215|title=League tables: Royal Albert|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|''[[Best of 2Pac Part 1: Thug]]''
|None
|#65
|-
|-
|'''2Pac'''
|align=left|[[Solway Star F.C.|Solway Star]]||align=center|[[1923-24 in Scottish football|1923&ndash;24]] ||align=center|[[1925-26 in Scottish football|1925&ndash;26]] ||Defunct ||align=center|<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=2408|title=League tables: Solway Star|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|''[[Best of 2Pac Part 2: Life]]''
|None
|#77
|-
|-
|'''Various Artists'''
|align=left|[[St Bernard's F.C.|St. Bernard's]]||align=center|[[1893-94 in Scottish football|1893&ndash;94]] ||align=center|[[1938-39 in Scottish football|1938&ndash;39]] ||Defunct ||align=center|<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=2465|title=League tables: St Bernard's|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|''[[Death Row Presents: Fellowship of The Great]]''
|None
|Did Not Chart
|-
|-
|rowspan="7"|2009
|align=left|'''[[Third Lanark A.C.|Third Lanark]]'''||align=center|[[1890-91 in Scottish football|1890&ndash;91]] ||align=center|[[1966-67 in Scottish football|1966&ndash;67]] ||Defunct ||align=center|<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=2557|title=League tables: Third Lanark|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|'''2Pac'''
|''The Lost Scriptures''
|TBD
|TBD
|-
|-
|align=left|[[Thistle F.C.|Thistle]]||align=center|[[1893-94 in Scottish football|1893&ndash;94]] ||align=center|[[1893-94 in Scottish football|1893&ndash;94]] ||Defunct ||align=center|<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=2556|title=League tables: Thistle|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|-
|align=left|'''[[Vale of Leven F.C.|Vale of Leven]]'''||align=center|[[1890-91 in Scottish football|1890&ndash;91]] ||align=center|[[1925-26 in Scottish football|1925&ndash;26]]||Defunct, revived version of the club currently competing in the SJFA West Central Division Two ||align=center|<ref name="West" /><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.soccerbase.com/league2.sd?teamid=2707|title=League tables: Vale of Leven|publisher=Soccerbase|accessdate=2008-06-04}}</ref>
|}
|}


== See also ==
==See also==
*[[Death Row Records artists]]
*[[List of former Football League clubs]]

*[[Timeline of Scottish football]]
==References==
{{Reflist}}
[http://www.deathrow.la Death Row Records Official Site]


== References ==
==Further reading==
*''Have Gun Will Travel: The Spectacular Rise and Violent Fall of Death Row Records'', Ronin Ro, Doubleday, 1998, 384 pages.
{{reflist|2}}
*''Labyrinth: Corruption and Vice in the L.A.P.D.: The truth behind the murders of Tupac Shakur and Biggie Smalls'' by Randall Sullivan, Atlantic Monthly Press, [[April 2]], [[2002]], 384 pages, ISBN 0-87113-838-7


==External links==
{{fb start}}
*[http://www.thenewdeathrowrecords.com/ Death Row Records - Official website]
{{Football in Scotland}}
<br/>
{{fb end}}
{{Rampart Scandal}}


[[Category:American record labels]]
{{featured list}}
[[Category:Record labels established in 1991]]
[[Category:Vanity record labels]]
[[Category:Hip hop record labels]]
[[Category:Independent record labels]]
[[Category:Tupac Shakur]]


[[ca:Death Row Records]]
[[Category:History of Scottish football]]
[[de:Death Row Records]]
[[Category:Scottish football clubs| ]]
[[et:Death Row Records]]
[[Category:Lists of football (soccer) clubs]]
[[es:Death Row Records]]
[[Category:Scotland-related lists|f]]
[[fr:Death Row Records]]
[[ko:데스 로우 레코드]]
[[it:Death Row Records]]
[[nl:Death Row Records]]
[[ja:デス・ロウ・レコード]]
[[no:Death Row Records]]
[[pl:Death Row Records]]
[[sr:Дет роу рекордс]]
[[fi:Death Row Records]]
[[sv:Death Row Records]]

Revision as of 01:12, 13 October 2008

Death Row Records
File:Deathrowlogobig.jpg
Parent companyGlobal Music Group
Founded 1991
FounderDr. Dre
Suge Knight
Distributor(s)Koch Records
GenreHip hop , Gangsta rap, West Coast Rap
Country of originUS
LocationLos Angeles, California
Official websitewww.DeathRow.la

Death Row Records was a record label that was founded in 1991 by Dr. Dre and Suge Knight, and was once home to some of West Coast hip hop biggest Rappers, including 2Pac, Dr. Dre, Snoop Dogg and Tha Dogg Pound (Kurupt and Daz Dillinger).

Death Row has sold nearly 50 million albums worldwide, and generated close to $750 million in revenue.[1] The label was also once home to RBX, The Lady of Rage, Michel'le, Danny Boy, Bow Wow, DJ Quik, J-Flexx, Sam Sneed, Mark Morrison, MC Hammer, Tha Realest, Crooked I, O.F.T.B., and Eastwood. In addition, the late Lisa "Left Eye" Lopes of TLC was signed on and working on an album when she died in an automobile accident.

On July 15, 2008, the label was sold to the independent label of Global Music Group, at an auction for $24 million.[2]

History

Beginnings

While Dr. Dre was trying to leave Ruthless Records, he was introduced to Suge Knight, who was a bodyguard for The D.O.C. at the time. With Dr. Dre, Suge Knight, and The D.O.C., set out to found their own label which they called Future Shock Records, later renamed Death Row Records. Knight would later explain his reasoning for the company in a 1996 interview with Vibe Magazine: "We called it Death Row because most everybody had been involved with the law. The majority of our people were parolees or incarcerated - no joke. We got people that were really on Death Row and still is[sic]." After a year long battle with Eazy-E and Jerry Heller, who still had disputes over where Dre was signed and on what terms, and a botched deal with Dick Griffey's Solar Records, funding Death Row was accomplished via financial support from Interscope Records. Interscope would then act as a distributor for Death Row Records for the next six years. The label's first release was The Chronic, the solo debut from Dr. Dre, in December 1992. Featured on the album were newcomers: Daz, Kurupt, The Lady of Rage, RBX and, most notably, Dr. Dre's new protege Snoop Dogg (then known as Snoop 'Doggy' Dogg). The album quickly exploded into 1993, eventually topping the Billboard's Top 200 Albums chart; selling over three million copies.

Early Success

Later that year, Death Row released Doggystyle, the debut album from Snoop Dogg. Debuting at number one, it wound up beating The Chronic in sales, and made Snoop Dogg and Death Row Records hip-hop's leading act by 1994. Also in 1994, Death Row released the multi-platinum soundtracks to Above the Rim and Snoop Dogg's Murder Was the Case.

With acclaim came criticism. While riding on the commercial success of Dr. Dre and Snoop Doggy Dogg, Death Row was blasted by several activist groups and public figures in the media for its glorification of the violence associated with the gangsta rap image that most of its artists promoted. The media criticism, meanwhile, grew louder by the summer of 1995, as dissenters zeroed in on Death Row's highly publicized forthcoming release, Dogg Food—the debut release by Tha Dogg Pound. The flak made the shareholders in Interscope Records' parent company, Time Warner, nervous—so much so that the company sold all of its shares in Interscope to MCA Music Entertainment. Dogg Food, meanwhile, was postponed from its intended July release date to October.

Addition of 2Pac

As the controversy with boycotters and Time Warner was adding fuel to Death Row's engine; Suge Knight, in the meantime, posted bail for the then-incarcerated Tupac ("2Pac") Shakur in exchange for his signing with Death Row. At the time, Tupac and Death Row shared mutual disdain for the fledgling New York-based Bad Boy Records, along with its CEO Sean Combs and seminal star The Notorious B.I.G.

Upon Shakur's release from jail, he immediately went to work on his Death Row debut album, All Eyez on Me. The album, released in early 1996 became the label's biggest commercial success to date, topping the albums charts and going 9x platinum. The escalating tension between Tupac and Biggie (as well as Death Row and Bad Boy), meanwhile, fueled what was eventually called the "East Coast/West Coast rap war." What was to follow would be a year-long dispute in which several Death Row artists fired verbal assaults at East Coast artists. Among those who took lyrical shots were: Snoop Dogg, The Dogg Pound, and Tupac (with his group, Outlawz). The list of those dissed by Death Row included most famously (but is not limited to): Mobb Deep, Nas, Jay-Z, the Junior M.A.F.I.A., Puff Daddy and the Notorious B.I.G..

Death Row vs. Bad Boy

Death Row artists who acknowledged Bad Boy Records, or those who didn't support the feud, were looked down upon by Tupac. Lady of Rage commented in an interview that Tupac had once called her the "weakest link in Death Row" because she wouldn't insult Bad Boy. Tupac also spoke ill of Dr. Dre for not having testified for Snoop during his murder trial, discouraging the West Coast-East Coast tension, and for his having departed the label in early 1996. Tupac dissed Dr. Dre on KMEL radio in the Bay Area for not running the streets representing with him and the label and being too slow on producing beats for his album. Snoop Dogg eventually would fall out with Tupac shortly before his death because of an interview in which Snoop claimed to like and respect B.I.G.'s music.

Despite the infamous feud, Suge Knight had planned to open a New York chapter of the label to be called Death Row East, even signing K-Solo, the only rapper that signed before the label disappeared. Eric B. was slated to head that label. In an interview, 2Pac named rappers they planned to sign, from Big Daddy Kane to the Wu-Tang Clan. The branch, however, was never formed.

Tupac was shot and killed in Las Vegas in September 1996, while riding on the passenger side in a car driven by Suge Knight. Soon after, Knight was sentenced to nine years in prison for a parole violation relating directly to a fight that both he and Tupac were involved in on the night of his death. As a result of Dr. Dre's having previously left the company, Tupac's death, and Suge Knight's incarceration; Death Row Records imploded almost instantly.

Second Generation

Struggles

In August 1997, Interscope Records sold its interest in Death Row Records and severed ties with the company. This forced the label to take up distribution with Priority Records. By 1998, Snoop Dogg, Tray Deee, Soopafly, Jewell, and Kurupt had all left the label. Nate Dogg, The Lady of Rage, and Daz Dillinger soon followed. Death Row's saving grace was the fact that they maintained ownership of the original master recordings its former artists produced while they were still under contract. These recordings were sold under auction in 2008.

Warren G, Dr. Dre's stepbrother, left the label without releasing an album — claiming that he had been assaulted by Suge Knight. The book "Have Gun will Travel" by Ronin Ro later claimed that he and his friends were publicly beaten at a boat party, and also details accusations of violence against Sam Sneed. Some employees were allegedly beaten and forced to strip after making a telephone call without permission.[3] On his VH1 Behind the Music profile, Dr. Dre noted that the single incident that made him decide to leave the label for good was when he witnessed a studio engineer being assaulted, simply for rewinding a tape back too far.

In 1998, Suge planned to launch the many rappers to come for the second generation of Death Row Records. Although he was incarcerated, he pushed rapper Top Dogg (also known as YGD) as his first new face making his television debut in the video "All About U" on the 2Pac "Greatest Hits" album replacing Snoop Dogg. Top Dogg had generated a buzz from a hidden track on the Gang Related soundtrack titled "Goin Back To Cali" aimed toward Puff Daddy. The video, "All About U," received heavy play and Suge followed in 1999 with "The Chronic 2000: Suge Knight Represents" album to introduce a brand new roster headed by Daz Dillinger, Soopafly, Tha Dogg Pound, Top Dogg, Tha Realest, Swoop G, Lil Cstyle, Doobie K, Milkbone, Michelle, VK, and Mac Shawn.

In 2000, the video for Top Dogg's "Cindafella" track received minor airplay with an innovative concept produced by TC as many earlier videos and directed by K.C. Amos, and his album "Every Dog Has His Day" was shelved as his contract expired and he was not renewed. Soopafly shortly lived as the label's lead artist after failure to generate any type of buzz off his single "Like It Or Not," was released due to disputes over payments from the label. Tha Realest tookover as Tha Row's lead artist and made several albums which were never released, including the much anticipated "Witness Tha Realest" that featured a diss track towards Mobb Deep. He recorded tracks with Daz Dillinger, Scarface, Richie Rich, and other big westcoast names along with label mates J Valentine, PB, and his group The Last Circle. After "Too Gangsta For Radio," Tha Realest was kicked off of Death Row because fans were complaining about him for many reasons. They didn't like the fact that he sounded exactly like 2pac, that he tried to give an interview exactly like 2pac, that he was spreading around rumors on the official Death Row website that 2pac and Suge Knight discovered him in las Vegas and they both signed him rumors and fans were also complaining about the similarities between Tha Realest's tattoos and 2pac's. Suge Knight wanted to make his label legitimate so he decided to sign Crooked I. Daz Dillinger left the label as head-producer later that year due to money problems with Suge Knight and he used his Death Row tracks to release an independent album titled "R.A.W." His lead single for the Too Gangsta For Radio compilation titled "Gangsta Rap" was pulled and he was replaced with Scarface & Treach of Naughty By Nature. This track would later appear as the lead single for Knight's Tha Dogg Pound "2002" release. Big Hutch aka Cold187um from Above The Law became the label's lead producer. In September 2001, with Knight being out of prison, Crooked I's debut "Say Hi To Tha Bad Guy" was supposed to be released with the lead single being "So Damn Hood featuring Sisqo" and rumored guest appearances by Ja Rule, Ashanti, Jadakiss, Kurupt, Scarface, Trick Daddy, Lisa "Left Eye" Lopez, Danny Boy, Jayo Felony, Juvenile, Too Short, Yukmouth, D.J. Quik, Jay-Z E-40 and others marking the big return of the label. The album was never released and it became apparent Death Row Records had major marketing problems. Big Hutch parted the label and Darren Vegas became the new head of productions.

In 2001, Several out-of-print releases from Tha Row were re-released, such as: Snoop Dogg's Tha Doggfather and 2Pac's The Don Killuminati: The 7 Day Theory. However, Tha Row's attempt at a comeback lagged, as their new releases were all compilations. With the exception of previously unreleased material by 2Pac, the label failed to release any solo records by any of its current roster. On the 2001 Too Gangsta For Radio compilation, several skits were aimed at Tha Row's many adversaries. The introduction had a Snoop impersonator waking up from a nightmare and making his wife phone the prison in which Suge Knight was serving time to verify that he was still behind bars. On the track "Fuck Dre", Tha Realest, TWIST 2 DVS(J. Gallardo) and Lil' C-Style (formerly of the LBC Crew) recorded a skit where Dr. Dre rapes a potential signee, and on K-9's "Gangsta'd Out", a skit portrayed Eminem as a tool of the Ku Klux Klan. Upon release from prison in 2001, Knight renamed the label "Tha Row Records" and revealed a new roster headed by gifted Long Beach rapper, Crooked I. Tha Row also signed Left Eye of TLC, under the name N.I.N.A., meaning New Identity Non-Applicable. Left-Eye, however, was later killed in a car accident before anything could come of the deal.

Third Generation

By 2002, Knight's fanbase became frustrated with a lack of new albums from active artists. Although Kurupt of Tha Dogg Pound had returned to be President of the label, the release of Tha Dogg Pound's 2002, Tupac Shakur's Until The End Of Time, and Snoop Dogg's Death Row: Snoop Doggy Dogg at His Best escalated the frustration of loyal fans that wanted to see the new roster. Although he had a great relationship with Suge Knight, it was apparent that Kurupt had very little power when it came to major label decisions, album releases, and recruiting power as the President and that the significant decisions ran through Knight.

By 2003, Kurupt was the label's new lead artist as Crooked I fought legal battles with Knight to escape his contract. He recorded with his brother Roscoe, MOP, Eastwood, and Tri-Star. By 2005, multi-platinum rapper Petey Pablo had signed on to become Death Row's new lead artist. Kurupt and Eastwood (Who is now a former artist) were the only ones left of the second generation of Tha Row artists because most had departed from the label. Kurupt's album "Against The Grain" dropped and Death Row claimed that distributor Koch dropped the album before it was finished and left off important tracks Kurupt recorded with Lil Jon and Ice Cube. Songs such as "Vaseline 2" were dropped from the album. The album did poorly for sales and reminded everyone of the problems the label was having. As well as the poor sales Death Row did not endorse the album because of Koch's "mistake".

At 2:30 am on May 27, 2003, several bullets were fired by an unknown person, or persons, at Death Row Records Beverly Hills headquarters; damaging the front door, windows and wall of the offices. Earlier that year, a Los Angeles S.W.A.T. team raided the Death Row offices, looking for evidence of gang murders and drug dealing. At some point, rumors circulated that rapper The Game was in talks with Suge Knight about signing with Tha Row. Supposedly, The Game was simultaneously considering a deal with rival Bad Boy Records. Regardless of the authenticity of these talks, they yielded nothing and The Game is currently under his own label named The Black Wall Street Records.

The year 2004 proved unfortunate for Suge. Crooked I, Tha Row's most promising artist, became frustrated that his album had failed to reach shelves after a period of five years and departed the label when his contract expired. Crooked I is now under his own label called (Dynasty Entertainment)it is independent and he is also signed to Treacherous Records, an up and coming record label from Los Angeles California. Similarly, R&B artist Danny Boy too left the label after a lengthy postponement, but as of now this is yet to be announced. Rapper Kurupt left in 2005 to reunite group Tha Dogg Pound with former partner Daz Dillinger. In the same year, Tha Row signed rapper Petey Pablo. Additionally, it is rumored that the company attempted to sign incarcerated rapper Shyne, but that didn't work out. The second generation did not fail due to lack of talent, but rather, a lack of exposure. With poor promotion and missed album releases, several quality records were shelved that may have generated heavy sales. The label failed to release completed albums by Top Dogg, Soopafly, Tha Realest, Daz Dillinger (second album), Above The Law, Ray J, N.I.N.A., J. Valentine, Eastwood, Danny Boy, Crooked I, Dre'sta, Mac Shawn, and several others. Later that year Kurupt and Eastwood both left the label. The only remaining artist would be Petey Pablo until 2006.

Current Company Status

In early 2006 Suge Knight went on the DJ Kay Slay Hot 97 Radio Show and announced Death Row East and its first artist Lakey the Kid. Lakey had appeared on albums with Nas previously. Tha Row East has plans for one album. This album is Lakey's solo album called "The Big Ride" which, according to Tha Row East Vice President Delson, will be coming out sometime in 2007. Another artist named Warlord later signed to Death Row West. His mixtape "I Can Getcha Block Knocked Off Volume 1" aided by DJ Fokis aka "Bull Of Tha Industry" out of Chicago, Illinois was released September 26, 2006. Warlord recently started working on "Still Can Get Cha Block Knocked off Volume 2". The mixtape is in its final stages and will soon be available worldwide on Apple’s iTunes. Apparently the mixtape is executive produced by Suge Knight and Big L.O.S. (Death Row's Former V.P.). There is a video being shot for this called Boss, which will be the main focus of the tape. It has also been reported that Suge Knight is doing a reality show pilot for a major cable channel. Recently Big L.O.S. left from Death Row Records & formed his own company. Petey Pablo was stated to have left from Death Row Records near the end of 2006. Petey Pablo plans on releasing a mixtape around the same time his new album drops.

On April 3, 2006, it was reported that a court-appointed receiver is set to acquire Death Row assets to auction off. Suge Knight has missed several court-mandated appearances over his assets. Michael Harris, an imprisoned drug dealer, says that Knight owes him money because he helped fund the label's founding.[4] On April 4, 2006, Death Row Records filed for bankruptcy protection.[5] Knight would run the company while the matter is before the courts. It is noted that the headquarters of Death Row in Beverly Hills has been abandoned. A Los Angeles bankruptcy judge has set a deadline for parties to file claims against Death Row Records and Marion "Suge" Knight as part of a Chapter 11 restructuring of the legendary West coast label.

Death Row Records and Knight filed for Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code in April 2006, listing debts of $137.4 million and $4.4 million in assets. Those filing claims with the bankruptcy court presiding over the case must file by October 31 or risk being barred from asserting claims against Death Row Records or Suge Knight. "We believe that it is vital that all parties asserting claims come forward and assert them in a timely manner so that Death Row can come out of Chapter 11 quickly", said Todd Neilson, the Death Row chapter 11 trustee. In March of 2005, Knight was ordered to pay over $100 million to Lydia Harris, who claims her husband, incarcerated drug kingpin Michael "Harry-O" Harris, provided $1.5 million in start-up money for Death Row in return for a 50% stake in the label. Knight missed several court dates in regards to the Harris' ownership claims, resulting in a default judgment. He filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, which allows a company to continue business operations while restructuring. Death Row is currently being operated by Neilson during the bankruptcy proceedings, while Knight oversees his bankruptcy estate as a debtor in possession. Among those listed as unsecured creditors to Death Row include the Harris', the Internal Revenue Service ($6,900,000), Koch Records ($3,400,000), Interscope Records ($2,500,000) and others. With Chapter 11 bankruptcy Suge will not lose his company or any of his masters.

On May 29, 2008, TMZ published US Bankruptcy Court documents putting Death Row Records and all of its assets, including masters, for public auction on June 24 with bids starting at $24 million.[6] Susan Berg won the auction, bidding the starting bid of $24 million.[7]

Since winning the company for $24 million dollars and group of investors labeled as 'Global Music Group' from New York, NY has yet to be able to pay anything other than the $1,000,000.00 deposit and continue to request payment extension after extension. These events have led to Suge Knight to order a cease and disist to 'Global Music Group' from claiming they have obtained Death Row due to non-payment. Knight is also requesting the label back or a re-bid allowing him to be involved. The long historic saga of Death Row Records is far from over and far from 'being bought' as well.

Criminal Allegations

Many people believe that Death Row was responsible for the murder of acclaimed rapper Tupac Shakur because he was leaving the label to form his own label Makaveli Records. "I'll never forget the look in Suge and Reggie's eyes when I saw them at the hospital," Keven Hackie, an FBI agent and bodyguard for Tupac said. "In 17 years of being a cop, I've seen a lot of guilty people and the look Suge had in his face, the look in his eyes when he looked at me, I knew damn well from their looks, those f****rs were guilty. There's no doubt about it."[8]

Reggie Wright Jr., the former Head of Security for Death Row Records, was offered $100,000 USD to take a lie detector test that asks if he had anything to do with the assassination of 2Pac on the documentary Tupac: Assassination. Proclaiming his innocence, he has agreed to take it.[9] Many within the industry know Shakur's murder was nothing more than gang activity as at his death Shakur was a full fledged member of the Compton, CA blood gang Mob Piru's (M.O.B.) (Money, Organization, & Business). Many fans simply do not live in the gang enviroment and cannot believe someone can be killed over things as small as a fight or affiliation. This has propelled fans to create alive theories, death conspiracies, and ignited former employees to cash in on this vulnerability by producing DVDs that are bought by only the most hard core of Tupac fans. Death Row Records was under investigation by the FBI for two year prior to Shakur being gunned down in Las Vegas, NV and had the company played a role in the murder people would be in jail.

Discography

Year Artist Title Last RIAA Certification Billboard 200 (Peak)
1992 Dr. Dre The Chronic 4x Platinum #3 (02/13/1993)
1993 Snoop Dogg Doggystyle 4x Platinum #1 (12/11/1993)
1994 Various Artists Above the Rim (Originial Soundtrack) 2x Platinum #2 (03/29/1994)
1994 Various Artists Murder Was the Case (Original Soundtrack) 2x Platinum #1 (11/05/1994)
1995 Tha Dogg Pound Dogg Food 2x Platinum #1 (11/18/1995)
1996 2Pac All Eyez on Me 9x platinum #1 (03/02/1996)
2Pac The Don Killuminati: The 7 Day Theory 9x Platinum #1 (11/23/1996)
Snoop Dogg Tha Doggfather 2x Platinum #1 (11/30/1996)
Various Artists Death Row Greatest Hits Platinum #35 (12/21/1996)
Various Artists Christmas on Death Row None #155 (12/28/1996)
Hammer Too Tight (Unreleased) None None
1997 The Lady of Rage Necessary Roughness None #32 (07/12/1997)
Various Artists Gang Related soundtrack 2x Platinum #2 (10/25/1997)
1998 2Pac Greatest Hits 9x Platinum #3 (01/23/1999)
Daz Dillinger Retaliation, Revenge & Get Back Gold #8 (04/18/1998)
Michel'le Hung Jury None Did Not Chart
1999 Various Artists Suge Knight Represents: Chronic 2000 Gold #11 (05/22/1999)
2000 Snoop Dogg Dead Man Walkin' None #24 (11/18/2000)
Various artists Too Gangsta for Radio None #171 (10/21/2000)
2001 Snoop Dogg Death Row: Snoop Doggy Dogg at His Best None #28 (11/10/2001)
Tha Dogg Pound 2002 None #36 (08/18/2001)
2Pac Until the End of Time 5x Platinum #1 (04/14/2001)
2002 Various Artists Dysfunktional Family (Original Soundtrack) None #95 (05/10/2003)
2Pac Better Dayz 3x Platinum #5 (12/14/2002)
2003 2Pac Nu-Mixx Klazzics Gold #15 (10/25/2003)
2004 2Pac 2Pac Live None Did Not Chart
2005 Various Artists The Very Best of Death Row None #94 (05/14/2005)
Kurupt Against tha Grain None #60 (09/10/2005)
2Pac Tupac: Live at the House of Blues Platinum (DVD) #159 (10/22/2005)
2006 Dr. Dre Chronicles: Death Row Classics None Did Not Chart
Various Artists 15 Years on Death Row None Did Not Chart
2007 Snoop Dogg Chronicles None Did Not Chart
Various Artists Death Row Archives: The Soundtracks None Did Not Chart
Various Artists Death Row: The Singles Collection None Did Not Chart
2Pac Nu-Mixx Klazzics Vol. 2 None #45
2Pac Best of 2Pac Part 1: Thug None #65
2Pac Best of 2Pac Part 2: Life None #77
Various Artists Death Row Presents: Fellowship of The Great None Did Not Chart
2009 2Pac The Lost Scriptures TBD TBD

See also

References

  1. ^ "Death Row Records History".
  2. ^ "Death Row label is sold for $24m". BBC News. 2008-07-15. Retrieved 2008-07-15.
  3. ^ According to StreetGangs.com [1]
  4. ^ Billboard Magazine article http://www.billboard.com/bbcom/news/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1002276110
  5. ^ BBC article [2]
  6. ^ Forget Suge, You Can Own Death Row Records!
  7. ^ Death Row Auctioned Off For $24 Million | Hip Hop News > HipHopDX.com
  8. ^ AllHipHop.com Daily News - : Tupac Bodyguard Issues 100k Challenge To Death Row Security
  9. ^ HHWorlds.com - Head Of Security For Death Row Accepts 100K Challenge (December 9, 2007)

Death Row Records Official Site

Further reading

  • Have Gun Will Travel: The Spectacular Rise and Violent Fall of Death Row Records, Ronin Ro, Doubleday, 1998, 384 pages.
  • Labyrinth: Corruption and Vice in the L.A.P.D.: The truth behind the murders of Tupac Shakur and Biggie Smalls by Randall Sullivan, Atlantic Monthly Press, April 2, 2002, 384 pages, ISBN 0-87113-838-7

External links