Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
R U Still Down? (Remember Me) is the sixth studio album and second double album by American rapper, 2Pac, released on November 25, 1997.It is his second posthumous release and his first album to be released without his creative input.
"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 ...
It was released as the first single from the posthumous album R U Still Down? (Remember Me). The original version, titled "I Wonda if Heaven's Got a Ghetto", was released as a B-side on the 1993 single, "Keep Ya Head Up". There are two versions of the song on the R U Still Down? (Remember Me) album. One, a remake of the original (using the same ...
"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.
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 ...
E.D.I. Mean of the Outlawz recalls: "At the time Hurt-M-Badd, who was just an up-and-coming producer at Death Row, and Darryl Harper, who was an R&B producer – Suge had him working on all the R&B projects – they had a green room up in Can-Am [Studios] which everybody around Death Row called the 'wack room' because they said 'Ain't nothing ...
Chuck Lorre is offering his thanks to first responders.. At the end of his CBS comedy Georgie and Mandy’s First Marriage on Jan. 30, the vanity card written by the producer offered a message to ...
It follows his previous posthumous albums R U Still Down? (Remember Me) and Still I Rise. The album consists of material recorded while the rapper was on Death Row Records from 1995 to 1996. The album debuted at number one on the US Billboard 200 chart, selling 426,870 copies in its first week. [10]