Dr. Dre was a founding member of the gangster rap group NWA and then went solo, releasing timeless albums like "the chronic" and "the 2001" album.

Before Dr. Dre had a recent health emergency in which he experienced a brain aneurysm and was rushed to the hospital, before Dr. Dre had over 5 million Instagram followers, almost 3 million Twitter followers, and over 4 million YouTube subscribers, music has always been in Dr. Dre's blood.

The guy who would one day transform the hip-hop scene began working as a dj in his teens, and his first significant success as a member of the rap group NWA followed soon after. His first solo album, "the chronic," released in 1992, was one of the biggest hits of the decade. Later in his career, he'd co-founded "Death Row" records.

In fact, more than any other rapper, he is credited with developing gangsta rap by eschewing the political overtones and party atmosphere of old school rap.


Although Dr. Dre is best known for his rapping career, he would probably be the first to admit that his true talent was as a producer. He worked with artists like 50 cent and eminem before branching out even more and co-founding the company "beats electronics," which would make him richer than pretty much anything else he was ever a part of.


Here is an updated account of Dr. Dre's ascent to prominence.


Dr. Dre was born Andre Romelle Young in Compton, California, on February 18, 1965. Theodore and Verna Young, his parents, were aspiring musicians. Verna actually played in a group called the Four Aces, and her husband was in an R&B group called the Real Mouse.

For the rest of his life, Dr. Dre would use his middle name as a stage name. His parents had married when they were pretty young—16 and 15, respectively—and life had not been simple. When he was just a year old, illness claimed his infant brother. Now that made Verna's friends and family to condemn her, they thought she would either lose Dre too or that he would never succeed. Then, when DRE was three years old, his parents divorced. A few years later, Verna remarried and had three more children.

Dre's love and passion for music grew along with his family. He developed a fascination with his family's record player when he was four years old, which influenced the development of his enthusiasm for the genre.

Now, dre's mother would later get remarried a third time, bringing rapper, Warren Ginto his ever-expanding extended family. However, by this time, Dre had already been living with his grandmother in the Wilmington Arms housing projects for most of his childhood. It goes without saying that growing up in Compton was difficult, especially given the continual harassment by the cops. Dre would have to maneuver his way through the constant gang violence, essentially every day of his life.

In fact, he was compelled to transfer to Roosevelt Junior High for his freshman year of high school after being forced to leave Vanguard Junior High. Despite attending Centennial, he was forced to transfer yet again, this time to Fremont High School in south central Los Angeles, due to bad academics.

Despite his apparent enthusiasm for music, Dre only considered it to be a hobby rather than a possible job. Dre had his heart set on being a pilot ever since he was a child, even going so far as to enroll in the North Rope Aviation Program, but he was rejected owing to his subpar academic performance. Although Dre demonstrated a natural ability for drafting during his time in high school, his attention would ultimately lie outside of academic work due to his grades.


Dre ultimately made the decision that music would be his future. After receiving a music mixer for Christmas in 1984, he quickly converted his family's house into his own private studio. He labored endlessly, using fragments of other songs and sounds to craft his own masterpieces. He frequently frequented the nightclubs in Compton, where he was aware of the burgeoning hip-hop movement.

After meeting fellow rapper, Dj Yellow, the two rappers join the Elite record crew, which performed in nightclubs all over town. Dr. Dre, the master of mixology, created his own persona to stand out. He was first known as Dre J.

His favorite basketball player at the time, Dr. Julius Erving, served as a major inspiration for this stage moniker. He finally began to feel as though he had outgrown the desire to be a member of the wrecking team. They had a really significant hit with the song "surgery," but Dre felt he was being held back creatively and that he wasn't being given any kind of creative control because he was the group's "baby." 

In1296, he first encountered Ice cube, a local rapper who was employed by the record company Ruthless Records, owned and run by another rapper in the area named Easy E. 

He would be arrested shortly after their meeting because he had an unpaid $900 parking ticket. After receiving assistance from Easy E to pay his fine, Dre started to assist at Ruthless Records, where he was granted significantly more creative freedom than ever before.

Something great generally emerges from humble beginnings, and with all the talents packed in Ruthless Records, it was only a matter of time before NWA, the forerunner of the hip-hop genre, was created. In 1918, the group made its debut album "Straight outta Compton", featuring anthems like "Express yourself" and, of course, "fuck tha police". 


It goes without saying that the record was divisive. The record's release was dogged by claims that it glorified gang culture and misogynistic behaviour, although this controversy did little to hurt album sales.

It was the greatest of times for Dre, but it was also the worst of times, as his younger brother Tyree was attacked and killed in the streets of Los Angeles. Despite being personally heartbroken, Dre tried his best to hide it. Instead, he used his songs to express his feelings to the public about what had happened. The feelings he was experiencing just encouraged him to put in more effort in the studio.

NWA eventually came to an end as a result of conflict and division within management.

After meeting Suge Knight, who used force to force Easy-E out of his contract with Dre, Suge Knight and Dre formed Death Row Records in 1991.

They now got to work right away, hiring upcoming musicians like Snoop Dogg and Tupac. Then, in 1992, Dre released his own record, "the chronic," which included the songs "Let Me Ride," "Little Ghetto Boy," and "Nuthin' but a G Thang," widely regarded as one of the greatest hip-hop songs ever.

Death row held on tightly to dre until the spring of 1995. Dre finally got weary of Suge Knight's relentless use of coercion and quit the record firm in the summer of 1996 to start his own record label, "Aftermath." In his debut album, he declared gangster rap to be extinct. Dr. Dre Presents that Aftermath will be widely covered by the media. However, Dre's sophomore album, simply titled "2001," which was released in 1997, is what finally contributed to the record's lackluster commercial performance and earned him the Grammy for Best Rap Performance.


Then, in 1999, Dr. Dre let loose Eminem on the world's unprepared ears. After a one-two blow like that, his entire stable of rappers will be depleted, and they'll go on to become legendary figures.

Dre won a Grammy for his contribution to the Marshall Mathers album, and later in his career, he won two more for his work on the Relapse album by Eminem. Throughout the 2000s, Dr. Dre recruited a ton of new artists to his label, some of whom went on to become well-known, including Doc and fitty Cent, the Game, and Kendrick Lamar.

Meanwhile, Dre kept himself occupied by engaging in other activities like venturing into acting in movies like "Training Day" and "Beef." ".

Fans adored Dr. Dre's versatility, but they were also impatiently awaiting the release of his third album, tentatively titled "detox." After nearly a decade of false starts and stopped tracks, the album would ultimately never be released. They would be leaked, but nothing significant would result from it since Dre was so committed on producing rather than performing.

Dr. Dre introduced his first line of headphones in 2008 under the name "beats by dre." This brand would go on to revolutionize the headphone industry and was so well-liked that it was sold to Apple for $3 billion.


Beats Electronics, a firm best known for its high-end headphones bearing the name Dr. Dre, is reportedly expected to be acquired by technology giant Apple for more than $3 billion.

According to Forbes, the deal raised Dre's estimated net worth to $800 million, making him the richest rapper in the world at the time.

Dre is still among the three richest rappers today, and this contract is much to blame for that.

Then, in 2015, came the moment that all of Dr. Dre's fans had been anticipating: the announcement of a new album with the working title "compton," accompanied with a soundtrack for the upcoming "NWA biopic right out of compton."

This movie depleted the entire NWA roster and went on to earn over $200 million worldwide. It was also nominated for an Academy Award in 2016 for best original screenplay. In any case, their inclusion in the rock and roll hall of fame cemented their status as significant figures in the development of popular music.