Dug Infinite: Difference between revisions
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'''Dug Infinite''' is a producer, disc jockey, emcee, and cultural advocate within the hip-hop community from Chicago, Illinois. Now residing in San Francisco, he remains closely associated with Chicago’s early hip-hop history and development. Starting as a B-boy and DJ in the early 1980s, he later shifted focus to production and rapping, eventually working with artists such as [[Common]], No I.D., Masta Ace, Lenny Williams, and Baby Bam of the Jungle Brothers. | '''Dug Infinite''' is a producer, disc jockey, emcee, and cultural advocate within the hip-hop community from Chicago, Illinois. Now residing in San Francisco, he remains closely associated with Chicago’s early hip-hop history and development. Starting as a B-boy and DJ in the early 1980s, he later shifted focus to production and rapping, eventually working with artists such as [[Common]], [[No I.D.]], Masta Ace, Lenny Williams, and Baby Bam of the Jungle Brothers. | ||
Known for his early collaborations with Common and No I.D., Dug contributed notable production to Common’s debut album ''Can I Borrow a Dollar?'' and co-released ''The Sampler Vol. 1'' with No I.D. in 2002. He’s credited with creating several of Common’s standout early tracks, including “1, 2 Many” and “Real N**** Quotes.” | Known for his early collaborations with [[Common]] and [[No I.D.]], Dug contributed notable production to Common’s debut album ''Can I Borrow a Dollar?'' and co-released ''The Sampler Vol. 1'' with No I.D. in 2002. He’s credited with creating several of Common’s standout early tracks, including “1, 2 Many” and “Real N**** Quotes.” | ||
In addition to music, Dug has been involved in mentoring and community engagement. He ran a skateboard shop in Chicago, taught music workshops for youth, and mentored aspiring producers including Kanye West. Though he stepped back from the spotlight for several years, Dug returned in 2016 with ''The Sampler Vol. 2'', an instrumental album and a follow-up to his earlier collaborative project.<ref>https://highpowerstudios.com/dug-infinite/</ref><ref>https://www.fakeshoredrive.com/2016/07/fsd-feature-catching-dug-infinite.html/</ref> | In addition to music, Dug has been involved in mentoring and community engagement. He ran a skateboard shop in Chicago, taught music workshops for youth, and mentored aspiring producers including [[Kanye West]]. Though he stepped back from the spotlight for several years, Dug returned in 2016 with ''The Sampler Vol. 2'', an instrumental album and a follow-up to his earlier collaborative project.<ref>https://highpowerstudios.com/dug-infinite/</ref><ref>https://www.fakeshoredrive.com/2016/07/fsd-feature-catching-dug-infinite.html/</ref> | ||
[[Category:Producers]] | [[Category:Producers]] | ||
[[Category:Disc Jockeys]] | [[Category:Disc Jockeys]] | ||
[[Category:EmCees]] | [[Category:EmCees]] | ||
[[Category:Street Dancers]] | |||
[[category:Breakers]] |
Latest revision as of 16:31, 9 July 2025
Dug Infinite is a producer, disc jockey, emcee, and cultural advocate within the hip-hop community from Chicago, Illinois. Now residing in San Francisco, he remains closely associated with Chicago’s early hip-hop history and development. Starting as a B-boy and DJ in the early 1980s, he later shifted focus to production and rapping, eventually working with artists such as Common, No I.D., Masta Ace, Lenny Williams, and Baby Bam of the Jungle Brothers.
Known for his early collaborations with Common and No I.D., Dug contributed notable production to Common’s debut album Can I Borrow a Dollar? and co-released The Sampler Vol. 1 with No I.D. in 2002. He’s credited with creating several of Common’s standout early tracks, including “1, 2 Many” and “Real N**** Quotes.”
In addition to music, Dug has been involved in mentoring and community engagement. He ran a skateboard shop in Chicago, taught music workshops for youth, and mentored aspiring producers including Kanye West. Though he stepped back from the spotlight for several years, Dug returned in 2016 with The Sampler Vol. 2, an instrumental album and a follow-up to his earlier collaborative project.[1][2]