As an ex-gang member, drug dealer, professional pimp, serial criminal offender, weed connoisseur and the man responsible for the Snoop Dogg’s Doggystyle pornographic movie, it’s safe to assume that the pearly gates won’t be festooned with big cheery welcome banners whenever the Doggfather eventually rolls up in a low rider, smoking a fat blunt.
Which may or may not have something to do with the Californian rapper’s latest offering to the Lord and the general public of a gospel album titled Bible of Love. Considering Snoop has at different times been a convert to the Nation of Islam and to Rastafarianism, his faith is fickle, but his commitment to this project seems earnest – he has enlisted several heavy hitters of the genre to co-star, including Tye Tribbett, Rance Allen and The Clark Sisters.
History tells us that Snoop is far from the first musician to find God, or at least try and find his favour. From Dylan to Bieber, does spiritual enlightenment lead to artistic salvation? Or is Snoop simply trying to sneak a car boot-load of indica into heaven?
Bob Dylan’s born-again Christian phase
During the 1960s, nobody else embodied the counter-culture like Bob Dylan. That all changed during a three-album phase from 1979 through to 1981 when, following a touched-by-Jesus incident in a Tucson hotel room, he became a born again Christian. Critical reaction was decidedly iffy – a review of the opening night of his 1979 tour decried “Bob Dylan’s God-Awful Gospel” in its headline. A musician known for speaking precious little on stage suddenly got all sermonly, telling audiences cheerful things like “You know we’re living in the end times?” In 1983 Dylan suddenly returned to making secular music again. Nobody seemed to complain.