Snoop Dogg has always been more than a rapper. He is a living archive — a walking, talking bridge between the past and the present. On OG to BG, the sixth track off his freshly released 22nd studio album 10 Til’ Midnight, Snoop steps into full elder-statesman mode, delivering something that feels less like a rap song and more like a sit-down with your OG.
From the Block to the Booth
Produced by Priest ‘Soopafly’ Brooks and written by Snoop himself — born Calvin Cordozar Broadus Jr. — OG to BG opens not with a verse, but with a monologue. He is chopping game with a YN, short for ‘young n—-,’ and what follows is the kind of raw, unfiltered street knowledge that no classroom can teach. He traces the alphabet of the streets— YN, BG, OG — each letter marking a stage of survival, growth, and consequence.
The track lands at a significant moment. 10 Til’ Midnight was released Friday, April 10, through Death Row Records and gamma, the label that Snoop himself owns — a full-circle power move that only adds more weight to everything he puts on wax. The 14-track album runs about 35 minutes and features production from legends including Pharrell, Swizz Beatz, Erick Sermon, and Rick Rock.
Snoop’s Gritty Flashback
The verses on OG to BG paint a brutally honest picture of Snoop’s BG days — the Baby Gangster era — when the streets were the classroom and the curriculum was survival
- Growing up surrounded by Gs and BGs deep in the crack era
- Hustling by increments, dressing sharp but carrying steel
- Stashing goods, splitting earnings, and running with the crew
- Hearing his mother’s warnings and choosing the hood anyway
It is raw, but it is real. Snoop does not glamorize the life. He documents it — the way a journalist might, but with cadence and credibility that only lived experience can produce. The Snoop on this track is not flexing his wealth or his status. He is sitting across from the youngins, making sure they understand what all those acronyms actually cost.
A Message Hidden Inside the Music
What separates OG to BG from a typical street anthem is its outro. Snoop breaks character completely, speaking plainly and directly— he prays the YNs live long enough to become OGs, and warns them not to get caught by the alphabet boys — federal law enforcement. The phrase let that sink in lands like a final exam question. This is mentorship wrapped in music.
Throughout 10 Til’ Midnight, Snoop leans into his OG status, offering game about life, business, and staying solid — less about proving he is the best rapper and more about showing why he has lasted this long. OG to BG is the purest expression of that mission.
Snoop and the Bigger Picture of 10 Til’ Midnight
The song does not exist in isolation. 10 Til’ Midnight is framed as a soundtrack for reflection and growth — a space to pause, make choices, and keep moving forward. Snoop himself summed it up plainly— We’re all standing right there every night, ten minutes away from who we’re gonna be next.
A companion short film, directed by Luis De Pena and Yaslynn Rivera, premiered at a private screening at the Death Row compound, following two brothers — both played by Snoop — whose lives take different turns as a heist unravels. The film deepens the album’s themes considerably, and OG to BG fits perfectly within that cinematic vision.
Why This Snoop Track Hits Different in 2026
At a time when hip-hop is dominated by younger voices, Snoop is not competing — he is contextualizing. OG to BG reminds listeners that every YN they see on the corner came from somewhere, and that without the game being passed down, the cycle just repeats. It is the kind of track that earns its place not on a playlist, but in a conversation.
Snoop Dogg has been in the game for over three decades. He is not running out of things to say. If anything, OG to BG proves he is just now getting to the part that matters most.
Stream 10 Til’ Midnight now on all major platforms via Death Row Records.

