Saturday, May 2, 2026

RAYE, Niall Horan and Fatboy Slim lead first wave of stars for Capital’s Summertime Ball 2026

RAYE, Niall Horan, Fatboy Slim, Myles Smith, Sekou, Robyn, Bebe Rexha and new boy band December 10 are the first artists confirmed...

Latest Posts

Barbie Ferreira starred in never-released Beyonce video

Barbie Ferreira has "finally" accepted no one will ever see her appearance in a Beyoncé music video. The Euphoria...

Lizzo lets fans decide her sound

Lizzo likes to "let people decide" the sound of her records. The Good as Hell hitmaker recently dropped the...

Is Beyoncé’s rock album going to feature a cameo from Stevie Nicks?

Beyoncé has sent the BeyHive into full detective mode after uploading a new video to her website — and fans are now...

Lizzo unleashes B**** and a wild circus video

Lizzo has unveiled the title track from her upcoming album B****, giving fans the latest preview of her newly announced third studio...

Snoop Dogg explains decision to pull Death Row catalogue from streaming platforms

Snoop Dogg has removed the Death Row catalogue from streaming platforms because they “don’t pay”.

The 50-year-old hip hop legend bought Death Row Records – which was founded by Suge Knight, Dr. Dre and Michael ‘Harry O’ Harris in 1991 – earlier this year, and he’s explained his decision to pull its collection from various services.

He told DJ EFN and N.O.R.E.’s ‘Drink Champs’ podcast: “First thing I did was snatch all the music off those platforms traditionally known to people, because those platforms don’t pay.

“And those platforms get millions of millions of streams, and nobody gets paid other than the record labels.”

Now, Snoop – who helped secure the label’s legendary status alongside the likes of Dre and 2Pac – is looking at other options for its future.

He added: “So what I wanted to do is snatch my music off, create a platform similar to Amazon, Netflix, Hulu.

“It’ll be a Death Row app, and the music, in the meantime, will live in the metaverse.”

Snoop shot to fame after appearing on Dr. Dre’s acclaimed 1992 ‘The Chronic’, released on the legendary record label, and was signed himself and went on to put out his debut album, ‘Doggystyle’, a year later.

The rapper – whose real name is Calvin Broadus Jr – acquired the company from MNRK Music Group for an undisclosed sum.

The 50-year-old megastar said: “I am thrilled and appreciative of the opportunity to acquire the iconic and culturally significant Death Row Records brand, which has immense untapped future value.

“It feels good to have ownership of the label I was part of at the beginning of my career and as one of the founding members. This is an extremely meaningful moment for me.”

Death Row – which was also the home of the likes of the late Tupac Shakur and Nate Dogg – filed for bankruptcy in 2006 and was sold in 2012, after founder Suge Knight faced serious financial and legal issues.

Latest Posts

Barbie Ferreira starred in never-released Beyonce video

Barbie Ferreira has "finally" accepted no one will ever see her appearance in a Beyoncé music video. The Euphoria...

Lizzo lets fans decide her sound

Lizzo likes to "let people decide" the sound of her records. The Good as Hell hitmaker recently dropped the...

Is Beyoncé’s rock album going to feature a cameo from Stevie Nicks?

Beyoncé has sent the BeyHive into full detective mode after uploading a new video to her website — and fans are now...

Lizzo unleashes B**** and a wild circus video

Lizzo has unveiled the title track from her upcoming album B****, giving fans the latest preview of her newly announced third studio...

Don't Miss

New Kids on the Block announce residency remix

New Kids On The Block are giving their Las Vegas residency a remix. The Hangin' Tough hitmakers - which...

Ne-Yo relieved country music community have been more welcoming than he expected

Ne-Yo was warned off his plans to make a "country-inspired" album in "cliquey" Nashville. The So Sick hitmaker...

Iron Maiden won’t retire

Iron Maiden won't retire. Although the English heavy metal band plan to take a break in 2027 after their...

Cara Delevingne signs deal with Warner Music

Cara Delevingne has signed a deal with Warner Music. The 33-year-old model and actress is set to branch out...

Kneecap say undercover police, banned songs and Belfast politics shaped their rise

Kneecap have lifted the lid on the chaos, politics and undercover‑police chases that shaped their early years, revealing how their breakout tracks...

Stay in touch

To be updated with all the latest news, offers and special announcements.