Death Row Records is one of the most successful music
labels of all time. From its inception in 1992, it
exploded on the rap music scene with sales climbing to
the $125 million mark in just four years. Even more
noticeable than the label's financial success is the
effect it had on American youth culture, making gangsta
rap more popular with suburban white youth and MTV
viewers than traditional rock groups. But under the
guidance of six-foot-four-inch, 300-pound CEO Marion
"Suge" Knight, Death Row also became the most
controversial record label in history--a place where
violence, gang feuds, threats, intimidation, and brushes
with death were business as usual. Have Gun Will Travel
details the spectacular rise and violent fall of a music
label that had at its heart a ferocious criminal
enterprise cloaked behind corporate facades that gave it
a guise of legitimacy. With inside access no other
writer can claim, Ronin Ro, the country's preeminent rap
journalist, exposes the facts everyone else is afraid to
divulge--from the initial bankrolling of Death Row by a
leader of L.A.'s notorious Bloods gang, to links with
New York's Genovese crime family. Have Gun Will Travel
lays bare the full story behind this influential label,
including the still-unsolved murders of Tupac Shakur and
the Notorious B.I.G., as well as Suge Knight's rise to
power, his fight with East Coast rap titans such as Sean
"Puffy" Combs, and his eventual imprisonment. Although
it has been all over the news--from The Wall Street
Journal to Rolling Stone--this is a timeless story about
an empire built on greed, corruption, murder, and
exploitation. With exclusive interviews and
bloodcurdling eyewitness accounts, Have Gun Will Travel
combines the behind-the-scenes fascination of books like
Hit Men and Hit and Run with the violence and dramatic
sweep of The Godfather, in a brilliant and blistering
document of contemporary culture. |
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