Thirty minutes before The D.O.C. lost his voice, the police let him go.
He had been pulled over drunk in Beverly Hills. The officers saw NWA's gold records in his backseat, took pictures with him and sent him home.
Half an hour later he fell asleep at the wheel on the Ventura Freeway, crashed face-first into a tree and was thrown through his rear window.
He spent 21 hours in surgery. When he woke up, he couldn't speak.
His debut album No One Can Do It Better had just sold over a million copies. He was 21 years old.
Dr. Dre came to the hospital and told him the hard truth. "Don't rap."
So instead he wrote. He ghost-wrote Straight Outta Compton, Eazy-Duz-It, The Chronic, Nuthin But a G Thang. He convinced Dr. Dre to go solo when Dre himself didn't believe in it.
He co-founded Death Row Records. He mentored Snoop Dogg on songwriting when Snoop only knew how to freestyle.
The biggest albums in West Coast hip hop history have his fingerprints all over them. His name is on almost none of them.
He said it himself years later.
"Had I kept my voice, I might not be here today."
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📌 Sources: Rolling Stone · Complex · Wikipedia · Ambrosia for Heads · Vice