Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
R U Still Down? was the name of several handwritten track lists 2Pac had written in 1993 and 1994 that featured both, unreleased songs and songs that would later be issued on Me Against The World and Thug Life: Volume 1. [3] Interscope Records originally planned to release an album under the same name in December 1995, during 2Pac's imprisonment.
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]
"I Wonder If Heaven Got a Ghetto" is a song by American rapper 2Pac. 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
R U Still Down? (Remember Me) Dave Hollister: 2Pac, DJ Daryl "Nothing to Lose" 1997 R U Still Down? (Remember Me) Y?N-Vee: 2Pac, Live Squad "Old School" 1995 Me Against the World — Soulshock "One Day at a Time (Em's Version)" 2003 Tupac: Resurrection: Eminem, Outlawz: Eminem "Only Fear of Death" 1997 R U Still Down? (Remember Me) — Live ...
"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.
All songs on the album were recorded prior to Tupac's involvement in the controversial East Coast-West Coast hip hop rivalry, serving as the second posthumous album released consisting of material from this time period, the first being 1997's R U Still Down? (Remember Me). Although the songs are mostly unreleased, the title track, "Loyal to the ...
Ole Miss goes down as a talented team that flopped, because the Rebels couldn’t handle pressure situations. The Rebels persistently tightened up in crunch time and failed to make enough big ...
Strictly 4 My N.I.G.G.A.Z... received generally positive reviews from music critics.In The New Rolling Stone Album Guide book, Greg Tate saw 2Pac "comes with a sense of drive, and eruptive, dissident, dissonant fervour worthy of Fear of a Black Planet and AmeriKKKa's Most Wanted", and called it Shakur's "best constructed and most coherent album, and it's also his most militantly political". [7]