



Wu-Tang Clan "Enter The Wu-Tang" (7" Deluxe Casebook).Snoop Doggy Dogg "Tha Doggfather" (Bio / Video, 1996).The Diary of Prince Paul (Mini-Documentary, 2003).Has-Lo 'In Case I Don't Make It' (Chairman's Choice).Bluestaeb "Rodalquilar" (Instrumental Album).A Tribe Called Quest "We Got It From Here.DJ Droppa "Keep It Movin' Volume 4" (Mixtape).Bluntone "Blunted Remixes LP" (Album Stream).Millenium "Fantasia" (Press Kit x Chairman's Choic.Mobb Deep "Hell On Earth" (Hip Hop Connection, 1997).Foxy Brown "Ill Na Na" (Press Kit, 1996).Ghostface Killah "Bulletproof Wallets" (Vibe, 12/01).Dep "Child Of The Ghetto" (Vibe, January 2002) Jay-Z 60 Minutes Special 11/20/02 (VHS Video).Bluntone "Lost & Found" (Instrumental Album).DJ Clue "Scarecrow's Birthday" (Mixtape, 1994).Andre LeRoy Davis 'The Last Words' (The Source, 1998).2Pac "R U Still Down (Remember Me)" (Vibe, 2/98).Raekwon 'Wishing On A Star' / 'We Wanna Thank You'.Donnie Propa "Straight From The Crate Cave" (Pete.Take It Personal Podcast "ATCQ Tribute Episode".Clipse "Hell Hath No Fury" (Spin, 9/06).Fatt Father "Veterans Day" (Album Stream).Like 'Pac's erstwhile Digital Underground homies once surmised, on this album it's mostly the same song." Revisit the album, cont'd below. "Thug Style," one of the record's few stellar moments, is nevertheless reminiscent of 1995's "Old School," in which Shakur articulates his East Coast conception while basking in California love. For example, "When I Get Free," sans the countrified twang, sounds like 1992's "Soulja's Story," revisited and is resonate with the latter's warbled voice distortions. This 24-track retrospective, recorded between 19, is far from being 2Pac's greatest work an unnerving sense of deja vu permeates the sprawling opus. Now, under the watchful eye of Tupac's mother, Afeni Shakur - who sued Death Row Records for control of hundreds of unreleased songs, which she culled to produce the double CD R U Still Down? (Remember Me) - hip-hop's complex crown prince is given new voice.
TUPAC R U STILL DOWN ALL ALBUM ARCHIVE
His archive of start-some-shit soliloquies, ghetto ballads, and odes to various revolutions thoroughly recounted the artist's turbulent life and even foreshadowed his demise. The album peaked at #2 on the Billboard 200 and #1 on the Top R&B/Hip Hop Albums chart, achieving Gold status in its first week of release and going on to multi-platinum status thanks to the singles “I Wonder If Heaven Got a Ghetto” and “Do For Love.” “Definition of a Thug Nigga” was previously released in 1993 on the Poetic Justice soundtrack, and “I Wonder If Heaven Got a Ghetto” was originally released in 1993 as a B-side to “Keep Ya Head Up” but it was remixed twice for this album."When Tupac Shakur died, in 1996, he didn't need an obituary. The album contains previously unreleased material created between 1992-1994, the time period of his albums Strictly 4 My N.I.G.G.A.Z., Thug Life: Volume 1, and Me Against the World. With a large collection of unreleased Tupac songs, this double album was the first release from his mother Afeni Shakur’s imprint, Amaru Entertainment, set up to control 2Pac’s posthumous releases. It was the first to be finished without his creative input. 2Pac’s sixth overall album and second posthumous album, R U Still Down? (Remember Me), was released on November 25, 1997.
