Nate Dogg: Catalogue of Videos & Interviews
It's been more than a the month since legendary Long Beach singer Nathaniel "Nate Dogg" Hale passed away at age 41 (from complications of cardiopulmonary disease).
Since then, we've received more than a few emails, phone calls and letters from fans, readers, and others reminiscing, celebrating or just plain curious about his massive body of work and reported plans for a documentary.
While we're not privy to any documentary on the singer's life, there remains a mountain of work from Nate's appearances on film, television and music dating back to his breakthrough single "Indo Smoke" in 1991.
I've compiled some snippets via YouTube and posted them below in chronological order, from the early days in Long Beach to later Grammy-nominated work with Eminem, Dr. Dre and The Game.
Videos (may contain explicit lyrics)
"Indo Smoke" featuring Mista Grimm (1991)
"Lil Ghetto Boy" w/Dr. Dre, Snoop Dogg (1992)
"Regulate" w/Warren G (1993)
"How Long Will They Mourn Me? w/Tupac Shakur (1994)
"Never Leave Me Alone" w/ Snoop Dogg (1996)
"All About U" w/ Tupac Shakur (1996)
"One More Day" w/ Snoop (1996)
"These Days" (1997) w/ 213
"Lay Low" w/ Snoop Dogg (2000)
(embed disabled by BMV Music) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jhEBErxoNMk
"The Next Episode" w/ Snoop, Dr. Dre (2001)
"Nobody Does It Better" w/ Warren G (2001)
"Area Codes" w/ Ludacris (2003)
"21 Questions" w/ 50 Cent (2005)
INTERVIEWS:
A few clips through the years. Nate was also featured extensively in the documentary "Welcome 2 Death Row" (2002)
Yo! MTV Raps (1993)
News Clip (2011)
Paul Eakins reports on Long Beach City Hall, and local and regional
politics. A newcomer to the Press-
Kris Hanson reports on the Ports of Long Beach and Los Angeles,
covering environmental issues, economic triumphs and
pitfalls and trade trends of America’s largest port.
He also writes a weekly column “On The Waterfront”,
appearing Tuesdays, and also produces an occassional video
and column titled “On The Job,” which follows the hard-working
men and women who keep Southern California’s economy humming.
Karen Robes Meeks came to work for the Press-

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