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Two more unreleased songs from this period of 2Pac's career, "Changes" and "God Bless the Dead", were released the following year on the next posthumous release, Greatest Hits. This period of 2Pac's career would then go unexplored until the release of the 2003 song " Runnin' (Dying to Live) ", which was followed by the 2004 album Loyal to the ...
"R U Still Down? (Remember Me)" 1997 R U Still Down? (Remember Me) — Tony Pizarro "Ratha Be Ya Nigga" 1996 All Eyez on Me: Richie Rich: Doug Rasheed "Ready 4 Whatever" 1997 R U Still Down? (Remember Me) Big Syke: Johnny "J" "Real Bad Boyz (Westside)" 1997 Hitworks, Volume One: Dee tha Mad Bitch, DJ King Assassin "The Realist Killaz" 2003 ...
Greatest Hits is a posthumous double-disc greatest hits album by American rapper 2Pac, released by Amaru Entertainment, Death Row Records, Interscope Records, and Jive Records on November 24, 1998.
Additional posthumous albums include R U Still Down? (Remember Me) (1997), Still I Rise (1999, with Outlawz), Until the End of Time (2001), Better Dayz (2002), Loyal to the Game (2004), and Pac's Life (2006). Each of these albums continued to achieve commercial success, with several reaching the top of the Billboard charts and earning multiple ...
The song's title originally came from the lyrics of fellow West Coast rapper, Spice 1's 1992 song, "Welcome to the Ghetto", [1] and contains a direct sample of Cameo's 1978 song, Two of Us. [2] Many of the song's lyrics were reused in 2Pac's 1992 single "Changes" . Rapper Nas interpolated "I Wonder if Heaven Got a Ghetto" in the song "Black ...
] It peaked at No. 1 on Billboard 's Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart and on the Billboard 200, [117] with the second-highest debut-week sales total of any album that year. [118] On June 15, 1999, it was certified 4× Multi-Platinum. [119] Later posthumous albums are archival productions, these albums are: R U Still Down? (1997) Greatest Hits (1998)
"Do for Love" (originally titled "Sucka 4 Luv" in its unreleased form) was the second and final posthumously released single by Tupac Shakur from his second posthumous album R U Still Down? (Remember Me). The vocal sample is from "What You Won't Do for Love" by Bobby Caldwell. The song was produced by Soulshock & Karlin.
In the song, Tupac's lyrics are sampled from his song "Happy Home" [8] which was a part of his fourth posthumous album (seventh studio album overall) Until the End of Time, released on March 27, 2001. "Are U Still Down" peaked at number 29 on the Billboard Hot 100 and number two on the R&B chart in 1998. [9] [10]