Muggs never dabbled too much with hitmaking but remained a formidable and recognized
rap producer because of his work with
Cypress Hill and his series of collaborative solo albums. Fame came quickly for the California-by-way-of-New York producer, as he scored runaway hits right off the bat with
House of Pain ("Jump Around") and
Ice Cube ("Check Yo Self"), as well as with his group,
Cypress Hill. As the mid-'90s transitioned to the late '90s,
Muggs maintained a fairly low profile and didn't score any more big hits.
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Cypress Hill's initial impact faded a bit, and the producer felt compelled to try something new. He then emerged with Muggs Presents the Soul Assassins, Chapter I (1997), an album laden with many various major-label rappers, including
Goodie Mob,
KRS-One,
Mobb Deep, and
RZA and GZA of
the Wu-Tang Clan. The album spawned an MTV-aired single, "Puppet Master" (featuring
Dr. Dre and
B Real), and sold relatively well but did no chart-topping. After three more quiet years,
Muggs returned with
Chapter II, another guest-laden album featuring several big names, but again didn't meet the sales expectations of his record label, Columbia. He parted ways with the label and signed to Anti, an independent label distributed by Epitaph. His debut Anti release,
Dust, bore little resemblance to his past work, which had been dark
hip-hop, instead veering toward
trip-hop à la
Massive Attack and
Tricky. He meanwhile continued to work with
Cypress Hill, who had begun integrating
rock into their music and experienced periodic success as a result. In terms of his own releases,
Muggs decided to eliminate the problems he was running into with label owners by completely producing and releasing his own music. He started Angeles Record with
Chace Infinite and DJ Khalil and issued Grandmasters, a collaborative project between himself and GZA in 2005, followed the next year by an instrumental version. ~ Jason Birchmeier, All Music Guide