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"One More Chance / Stay with Me (Remix)" is a song written and recorded by American rapper The Notorious B.I.G. Three versions of the song exist: An original, lyrically explicit version prefaced by an answering machine performance featured on the album, and two versions released as singles, both of which contain identical lyrics by B.I.G. despite differing instrumentals and choruses.
"One More Chance" — Bluez Brothers, Chucky Thompson, Puff Daddy: Ready to Die: 1994 "One More Chance" (Stay With Me Remix) Faith Evans, Mary J. Blige: Diddy, Rashad Smith One More Chance single 1995 "One More Chance" (The Legacy Remix) Cristopher Wallace, Jr., Faith Evans: Notorious: Music Inspired by the Motion Picture: 2009 "Only You" 112 ...
The song features a keyboard sample in the production and rapid-fire rapping, with verses from The Notorious B.I.G., Bizzy Bone, Krayzie Bone and Layzie Bone. [4] B.I.G. refers to 2Pac with the line "so-called beef with you-know-who", calling their feud "bullshit", while Bone Thugs-N-Harmony also disses Three 6 Mafia.
It features mostly his previously heard songs, inclusively the ones harder to find such as "Party and Bullshit" and "One More Chance (Remix)". It includes two original songs " Brooklyn Go Hard " by Jay-Z and a tribute to the rapper by Jadakiss and widow Faith Evans called "Letter to B.I.G.", as well as three unreleased demos by him and a song ...
The post The Biggie Experience is ‘one more chance’ to celebrate one of hip-hop’s greatest appeared first on TheGrio. Launched in B.I.G.’s native Brooklyn by his daughter, T’yanna ...
Life After Death is the second studio album by American rapper the Notorious B.I.G., released on March 25, 1997, on Bad Boy Records and Arista Records. [5] A double album, it was released sixteen days after his murder.
Biggie's lyrics come from studio pieces of some of the songs he created during his life (his verse from "Notorious Thugs" in "Spit Your Game"), along with some less common lyrics (a freestyle from a promotional tape on "Hustler's Story"), & unreleased material (Biggie's verse in "Living in Pain" comes from an unreleased song from Ready to Die ...
Biggie consistently disputed that "Who Shot Ya" targeted Tupac. [26] [2] [39] Still, some call it a diss track, [118] [119] if "subliminal." [120] Biggie recorded his lyrics "months" before Tupac was shot in November 1994, [121] but Puffy removed the song from Biggie's album, released in September 1994. [9]