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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.
Best of 2Pac is a posthumous greatest hits compilation series from rapper Tupac Shakur released in two parts – Thug and Life. Both albums were released on December 4, 2007 in the United States and December 3, 2007 in the United Kingdom, [ 1 ] having had been leaked on November 30.
The discography of American rapper Tupac Shakur consists of 10 studio albums. Throughout his career and posthumously, Shakur sold more than 75 million records worldwide. [ 1 ] He has scored 5 No. 1 albums on the Billboard 200 and 8 No. 1 albums on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart.
Meanwhile, the Greatest Hits album, released in 1998, and which in 2000 had left the pop albums chart, the Billboard 200, returned to the chart and reached No. 129, while also other Shakur albums and singles drew sales gains.
With "needle drop" introduction by 2Pac, entirely different mix, and less, "Boom!", backing vocals throughout. Radio Edit: 2Pac’s outro disses are removed, instead the backing vocals are the focus. Video Version: Features additional outro vocals by KC instead of the outro disses by 2Pac. Greatest Hits version:
Greatest Hits — "The Good Die Young" 1999 Still I Rise: Val Young, Napoleon, Young Noble, Kastro, E.D.I. Mean: Big D "Good Life" 2001 Until the End of Time: Big Syke, E.D.I. Mean: Mike Mosley "Got My Mind Made Up" 1996 All Eyez on Me: Tha Dogg Pound, Method Man, Redman: Dat Nigga Daz "Got My Mind Made Up" (Nu-Mixx) 2007 Evolution: Duets and ...
Death Row Greatest Hits insert art by Ronald "Riskie" Brent. The album's cover and insert artwork was designed by California based artist, Ronald "Riskie" Brent, a recurrent Death Row collaborator. Brent was also commissioned to create covers and inserts for albums such as All Eyez on Me , The 7 Day Theory , Tha Doggfather , Christmas on Death ...
Released posthumously on his album Greatest Hits, the song talks about all of the different issues that were related to Tupac's era of influence—notably racism, police brutality, drugs and gang violence. The "Huey" that 2Pac mentions in the song ("two shots in the dark, now Huey's dead") is Huey P. Newton, founder of the Black Panther Party. [3]