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The album produced three singles with accompanying music videos: "Trapped", "Brenda's Got a Baby" and "If My Homie Calls". The second single off of the album, "Brenda's Got a Baby", made it to No. 23 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs , number 3 on the Hot Rap Songs and number 55 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles Sales .
Tupac: Resurrection — Eminem "God Bless the Dead" 1998 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
2Pac Live is a live album by American rapper 2Pac, released by Death Row Records and Koch Records. [3] It consisted of recordings of live club performances during the All Eyez on Me (1996) period in his career. [1]
Shakur released his debut studio album, 2Pacalypse Now, in November 1991. The album peaked at number 64 on the United States Billboard 200 and has since been recognized as a groundbreaking work of the hip-hop genre. Its singles included "Brenda's Got a Baby" and "Trapped," both of which highlighted Shakur's focus on social issues.
It includes several previously released 2Pac recordings, including "Death Around the Corner" from Me Against the World, "Secretz of War" from Still I Rise, "Holler If Ya Hear Me" from Strictly 4 My N.I.G.G.A.Z... and "Rebel of the Underground" from 2Pacalypse Now; and unreleased 2Pac verses re-constructed into new tracks such as "Ghost", "One Day at a Time", and "Runnin (Dying to Live)".
Tupac’s style and boldness, Di’lecarta said, has had a significant effect on young people. “Being a Black British person and a part of Gen Z, like, my interest in him was almost weird ...
Much like the track, the video clips were shot in an energetic, nearly-chaotic pace. The video starts off from the viewpoint of a young boy who witnesses his father's death. Tupac's lyrics of resistance to injustice and encouragement to bear arms and fight back are backed by his gathering groups of young black men and women to march in the streets.
The video contains interviews of both Tupac and Notorious B.I.G. It is the only song from the album to feature a music video. The video version mutes all language, violence and drug references, even Biggie's comment about two cops being shot (the radio version only censors all profanity except the word "bitches" in 2Pac's verse). In the video ...