Jump to content

The Notorious B.I.G.: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Gorgeousp (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Infobox Band
{{Infobox musical artist
| band_name = The Notorious B.I.G.
|Name = Notorious B.I.G
| image = [[image:Biggie018.jpg|‎]]
|Img = Biggie018.jpg
|Background = solo_singer
| caption = Biggie Smalls.
|Birth_name = Christopher Wallace
| years_active = 1992–1997, 1997-2005(posthumous)
|Alias = Big E. Smalls<br>Frank White
| origin = [[Brooklyn]], [[New York]], [[United States|USA]]
| music_genre = [[East Coast hip hop]], [[Hardcore rap]]
|Origin = [[Brooklyn]], [[New York City]]
|Born = May 21, 1972
| record_label = [[Bad Boy Records|Bad Boy]]/[[Atlantic Records|Atlantic]]/WMG
| date of death = [[March 9, 1997]]
|Died = March 9, 1997
|Genre = [[Hip hop music|Hip hop]]
| place of death = [[Los Angeles, California]]
|Years_active = 1992&ndash;1997
|Label = [[Bad Boy Records|Bad Boy]]<br>[[Atlantic Records|Atlantic]]
|Associated_acts = [[Faith Evans]]<br>[[Sean Combs]]<br>[[Lil Kim]]<br>[[Jay-Z]]<br>[[Junior Mafia]]<br>[[Ma$e]]<br>[[D-Block (hip hop)|The L.O.X.]]
}}
}}

'''Christopher George Latore Wallace''' ([[May 21]], [[1972]] &ndash; [[March 9]], [[1997]]), also known as '''The Notorious B.I.G.''' ('''B'''usiness '''I'''nstead of '''G'''ame), '''Big Poppa''' and '''Frank White''' (from the film ''[[King of New York]]''), but best known as '''Biggie Smalls''' (after a stylish [[gangster]] in 1975's ''[[Let's Do it Again]]'') was a very popular [[rapper]] who rose to fame during the mid-[[1990s]].
'''Christopher George Latore Wallace''' ([[May 21]], [[1972]] &ndash; [[March 9]], [[1997]]), also known as '''The Notorious B.I.G.''' ('''B'''usiness '''I'''nstead of '''G'''ame), '''Big Poppa''' and '''Frank White''' (from the film ''[[King of New York]]''), but best known as '''Big E. Smalls''' (after a stylish [[gangster]] in 1975's ''[[Let's Do it Again]]'') was a very popular [[rapper]] who rose to fame during the mid-[[1990s]].


Born in Brooklyn, Christopher Wallace was raised at the height of the [[crack cocaine]] epidemic of the 1980's, and was a drug dealer in [[Bedford-Stuyvesant]]. After becoming a convicted felon, he decided to become a rapper. By the time his critically acclaimed album ''[[Ready To Die]]'' was released in 1994, he became the central figure of [[East Coast hip-hop]], reviving [[New York]] into a hip-hop scene which had previously been focused on [[West Coast hip-hop]]. His career was dominated by the [[Bad Boy Records|Bad Boy/Death Row Records feud]], however, following his death in 1997, The Notorious B.I.G. has been celebrated as a [[Hip hop music|hip hop]] legend. Biggie's double disc set, the equally revered ''[[Life After Death]]'', sold over 10 million units.<ref>
Born in Brooklyn, Christopher Wallace was raised at the height of the [[crack cocaine]] epidemic of the 1980's, and was a drug dealer in [[Bedford-Stuyvesant]]. After becoming a convicted felon, he decided to become a rapper. By the time his critically acclaimed album ''[[Ready To Die]]'' was released in 1994, he became the central figure of [[East Coast hip-hop]], reviving [[New York]] into a hip-hop scene which had previously been focused on [[West Coast hip-hop]]. His career was dominated by the [[Bad Boy Records|Bad Boy/Death Row Records feud]], however, following his death in 1997, The Notorious B.I.G. has been celebrated as a [[Hip hop music|hip hop]] legend. Biggie's double disc set, the equally revered ''[[Life After Death]]'', sold over 10 million units.<ref>

Revision as of 15:57, 14 August 2006

The Notorious B.I.G.

Christopher George Latore Wallace (May 21, 1972March 9, 1997), also known as The Notorious B.I.G. (Business Instead of Game), Big Poppa and Frank White (from the film King of New York), but best known as Big E. Smalls (after a stylish gangster in 1975's Let's Do it Again) was a very popular rapper who rose to fame during the mid-1990s.

Born in Brooklyn, Christopher Wallace was raised at the height of the crack cocaine epidemic of the 1980's, and was a drug dealer in Bedford-Stuyvesant. After becoming a convicted felon, he decided to become a rapper. By the time his critically acclaimed album Ready To Die was released in 1994, he became the central figure of East Coast hip-hop, reviving New York into a hip-hop scene which had previously been focused on West Coast hip-hop. His career was dominated by the Bad Boy/Death Row Records feud, however, following his death in 1997, The Notorious B.I.G. has been celebrated as a hip hop legend. Biggie's double disc set, the equally revered Life After Death, sold over 10 million units.[1]

Biggie is remembered for his talents in storytelling and freestyling, and his easy to understand yet complex flow. He also pioneered the increasingly popular method of not writing lyrics on paper.

Early life

Christopher Wallace was born in the Bedford-Stuyvesant section of Brooklyn, New York. His father, George Latore, left the family shortly before his birth, and his mother, Voletta, was a schoolteacher. Wallace was originally a straight "A" student in school, before getting bored with school and attracted to the lure of the streets.

Wallace attended Westinghouse High School in Downtown Brooklyn, along with fellow MCs (and future collaboraters) Jay-Z and Busta Rhymes. He dropped out of school at age 17. While he is known to have dropped out of school to become a drug dealer, his mother has claimed that the family was not poor and that Wallace exaggerated his childhood situation in his lyrics. His best childhood friend and inspiration was a chubby kid who went by the name of Lil Punisha.

Wallace, who originally didn't stray much further than his Brooklyn neighborhood to sell drugs, began to traffic drugs to Virginia and Maryland where it was sold at a higher price. He was eventually busted, and served 9 months in jail. Shortly after he was released, he and his girlfriend of the time, Florence "Jan" Tucker, had Wallace's first child, T'Yanna.

With a baby on the way, Wallace decided to start rapping. He developed into a talented lyricist, and he began to build a following for himself in his Bed-Stuy neighborhood. A famous video exists of Wallace rapping against an opponent in 1989. As his name was getting bigger, he began recording a demo tape with local performer Mr. Cee, who was the DJ for Brooklyn MC Big Daddy Kane. This tape reached The Source magazine, and they co-signed Biggie in their "Unsigned Hype" column, which is dedicated to aspiring rappers.

Rap career

The demo tape found its way into the hands of Sean "Puffy" Combs, who was working at Uptown Records at the time and arranged for a meeting with Wallace. Combs and Wallace became instant friends, performing together on the 1992 reggae song "Dolly My Baby" by Super Cat.

Wallace first gained notice with "Party and Bullshit," his first single. He made his second mainstream appearance on the remix of Mary J. Blige's smash hits "Real Love" and "What's the 411". He also appeared on the "Flava In Ya Ear" remix by Craig Mack. He appeared on the album One Million Strong on a song called "Runnin'" with 2Pac and Dramacydal. He also recorded with Uptown Record's Heavy D on the tracks "A Bunch Of Niggas" (alongside 3rd Eye, Guru, Rob-O and Busta Rhymes) and "Let's Get It On" (with 2Pac and Brand Nubian's Grand Puba). All of these guest appearances built a sizeable buzz around Wallace's name leading up to his solo debut.

In 1994, he released "Juicy", his first mainstream single. He also released Ready to Die, his debut album, which is regarded as one of hip-hop's all-time classics and, along with Nas' critically-acclaimed debut LP Illmatic, is credited with revitalizing East Coast hip hop. The album features one of rap's most famous "playa anthems," "Big Poppa," which samples the Isley Brothers. His death gave the album a notable sales boost boosting it to number-one on the Hot 100.

Wallace's album drew critical acclaim for its vivid story-telling and razor-sharp lyricism, an example being the line "They don't know about the stress filled day/Baby on the way, mad bills to pay/That's why you drink Tanqueray/So you can reminisce and wish/You wasn't living so devilish" from "Everyday Struggle." It also was noted in its diversity, which featured radio friendly cuts (like the aforementioned "Juicy" and "Big Poppa") and grimier, more hardcore cuts (like "The What" and "Warning"). Ready To Die was an instant classic, which immediately put B.I.G. on the path to more mainstream fame.

His album debuted at number-seventeen selling 36,342 copies in the first week. This was the third highest first week sales by a male rapper at the time.

In 1995, Wallace's protegés, Junior M.A.F.I.A. (Junior Masters At Finding Intelligent Attitudes), released the album Conspiracy. That same year, Wallace introduced to the mainstream his crewmates Lil' Kim and Lil' Cease. His single "One More Chance" debuted at #5 on the pop charts, tying "Scream/Childhood" by Michael Jackson as the highest debut single in music history at the time, although this record has since been surpassed by Jackson's "You Are Not Alone," which debuted at number one. "One More Chance," which sampled the R&B song "Stay With Me," was a remix of the song by the same name that originally appeared on Ready to Die. "One More Chance" was also his highest selling single, going Platinum in a matter of weeks.

Also in 1995, Wallace featured in Michael Jackson's song "This Time Around", which can be found on Jackson's HIStory album. This was not the only Michael Jackson song in which Wallace featured in. In 2001, Jackson included a rap verse sung by Wallace in his song "Unbreakable", which is found on Jackson's Invincible album.

By the end of 1995, Wallace had become one of the most famous and popular rappers in the world. He was named "Lyricist Of The Year" by The Source (magazine), and many dubbed him the "King Of New York" (a play on his "Frank White" persona.)

Technique

From early in his career, Biggie's lyrical content involved hardcore gangsta-rap lyrics at a time when that style dominated the West Coast, and most of his native New York was dominated by the jazziness of A Tribe Called Quest and Gang Starr and the blend of Five Percenter/far East-influenced/gangsta stylings of MCs like Afu Ra, Jeru the Damaja and the Wu-Tang Clan.

Over the course of his career, fans who called him the greatest would cite his flow, topical diversity, and vivid, detailed storytelling; he also moved from simple thug lyrics to mafioso-like tales of "gangsterism", a posturing which some speculate possibly could have led to his death.

East Coast - West Coast feud

Although Ready to Die made Wallace a star, he is most famed for his involvement in rap's infamous feud between the East and West Coast scenes. Before Ready to Die was released, he began to associate with rap superstar Tupac Shakur, a New York City native who moved to Baltimore and later Marin City. The two recorded a number of songs together, and Wallace even performed alongside Shakur in the now-famous Madison Square Garden freestyle in 1994. However, their friendship ended when Shakur was shot in November of that year. Though there is no evidence suggesting it, Shakur claimed that Combs and Wallace knew about the shooting beforehand based on their behavior that night and what he had heard from his sources. Shakur subsequently joined Death Row Records after his release from prison in late 1995.

Death Row Records and Bad Boy Entertainment were the two most successful labels of the 1990s, and with the two biggest stars in rap now associated with different labels, the feud escalated. In 1996, Tupac recorded a song called "Hit 'Em Up", in which he claims to have slept with Biggie's wife Faith Evans, and claims that Biggie copied his style. When Shakur was killed in a drive-by shooting in Las Vegas, rumors of Wallace's possible involvement in the murder cropped up almost immediately. He denied the allegations. Also around this time, he was involved in a car accident that shattered his leg and would force him to use a cane for the rest of his life, alluded to in a lyric from his song "Long Kiss Goodnight": "It used to tickle me / I used to be as hard as Ripple be / 'Til Lil Cease crippled me / Now I play hard like my girls' nipples be / The game sour like a pickle be / Y'all know the rules".

Death

On March 9, 1997, Wallace was attending the Soul Train Music Awards at the Peterson Automotive Museum on Wilshire Boulevard in Los Angeles. Other guests included Busta Rhymes, Heavy D, Da Brat, Aaliyah, Jermaine Dupri, Jagged Edge, Yo Yo, and Sean "Puffy" Combs.

Just after midnight fire marshals shut down the party and Biggie left with his friends in a black GMC Suburban. By 12:45 a.m. the street was crowded with people leaving the event. Biggie's car stopped at a red light just 50 yards from the museum. While waiting for the light to change a black Chevy Impala crept up alongside Biggie's car. The driver of the Chevy rolled down his window and pulled out a gun and shot six to ten bullets into the GMC Suburban, most of which hit Biggie in the chest. While it was believed he was killed almost instantly, he was rushed to Cedars Sinai Medical Center in downtown Los Angeles and pronounced dead fifteen minutes later.

Funeral

Biggie's death was a shock to the music industry. Wallace was loved in his neighborhood and his funeral was well-attended. Thousands flooded into his Brooklyn neighborhood to catch a glimpse of his hearse, jumping on cars and clashing with police; ten people were arrested. [citation needed] Smalls was cremated on March 18, 1997.

Theories about his death

His murder has not been solved, though theories abound as to the motives and identities of the murderers. Death Row Records CEO Suge Knight and the Mob Piru Bloods gang with whom he associated are among the prime suspects for involvement. In his book LAbyrinth, LAPD officer Russell Poole probes the circumstances and figures involved in the shootings.

Conspiracy theories abound about Wallace's murder: Some believe that the Crips gang may have shot Wallace in retalliation for his not paying for the security services they provided at a previous party. However, it should be noted that such theories are simply speculation, with no hard evidence backing them up.

The Los Angeles Times ran an almost universally discredited article entitled "Who Shot Tupac Shakur?" by reporter Chuck Phillips, which concludes that Wallace was ultimately behind Shakur's murder. Evidence to the contrary has since surfaced, most notably a dated and timed excerpt from a recording that Wallace made in a studio in New York when he was supposedly providing the murder weapon to hitmen in Las Vegas. The article also claims that he checked in and out of a hotel without being noticed by a single individual, despite being a 6'3", 300-pound national celebrity.[citation needed]

Director Nick Broomfield and co-producer Dmitri Leybman have released an investigative documentary called Biggie & Tupac which implicates the LAPD and Suge Knight. Proponents of this theory defend it because the LAPD's elite robbery and homicide unit didn't begin to investigate Wallace's murder until a month after it happened, and the job was given to a poorly funded division of LAPD investigators; and several prison inmates who were once members of the Mob Piru Bloods have come forward and said that they know for a fact that Suge Knight ordered Wallace's murder due to their own personal connections.

Lawsuits

In March 2005, Voletta Wallace sued the LAPD for $2 million dollars in a wrongful death lawsuit. Wallace claimed that the LAPD had sufficent enough evidence to catch the murderer of her son, but failed to utilize it. She won the lawsuit in the summer of 2005, and the case has since been re-opened.[2]

Posthumous career

Life After Death, Wallace's second album, debuted at #1 on the charts. The album was released only two weeks after his murder. Its lead single was "Hypnotize", which was also the last music video he would take part in. Life After Death hit number one on the Billboard charts and spawned several hit singles in the United States. The album sold over 18 million copies worldwide and is the best selling hip-hop album of all time. His biggest chart hit was "Mo Money, Mo Problems," which featured Combs (under the rap alias "Puff Daddy") and rapper Mase, and sampled the disco song "I'm Coming Out" by Diana Ross for the beat. The video is noted for having started the "Shiny Suit" era in hip hop. The last video single from Life After Death was "Sky's The Limit," featuring 112. The video for this song, directed by Spike Jonze, was noted for the use of children portraying Wallace and his contemporaries, such as Combs, Lil' Kim, and Busta Rhymes. This technique has been recently used in the Three 6 Mafia music video for "Poppin' My Collar"

During the summer of 1997, Combs released his debut album, No Way Out, which featured Wallace on a number of songs, notably in the chorus of the single "Been Around the World" over a David Bowie sample ("Let's Dance"). However, the single that carried this album to the top was "I'll Be Missing You," which was dedicated to Wallace's memory. The song featured Puff Daddy, Wallace's widow Faith Evans and 112. The song sampled The Police's hit song "Every Breath You Take." All these artists performed the song with former Police vocalist Sting during the 1997 MTV Video Music Awards.

In 1999, Combs released Wallace's third album, Born Again. It had two hit singles: "N.O.T.O.R.I.O.U.S.," featuring Puff Daddy and Lil' Kim (interpolation to the Duran Duran's song of the same name), and "Dead Wrong" a single that later was remixed with a verse from Eminem. The video for "N.O.T.O.R.I.O.U.S." also featured appearances by 98 Degrees and Fat Joe.

In 2001, one of Wallace's raps was featured in Michael Jackson's song "Unbreakable," which was included on his multi-platinum album Invincible. Wallace previously collaborated with Jackson in his 1995 song "This Time Around" from the autobiographical album HIStory.

In 2002, former producer and friend of Wallace, Irv Gotti, sampled Wallace's classic, record breaking hit "One More Chance" for his up-and-coming singer, Ashanti. The song, called "Foolish" was one of the biggest hits of 2002, and Wallace's verse from "F*ckin' U Tonite" (from Life After Death) was added to the remix. Gotti paid tribute to Wallace at a Hot 97 perfromance of the song later that year.

Also in 2002, Combs gave 50 Cent rights to sample Wallace's verses from "Niggaz" (a song from the Born Again album) into a song called "The Realest Niggaz." It got out as a single and was a big hit on New York radio stations. Many have attributed that song as the first big break for 50 Cent, who is now one of hip-hop's biggest superstars. The song was later put on the soundtrack for the 2003 hit movie Bad Boys 2 with Martin Lawrence and Will Smith. Later on in 2003, Eminem remixed the 1994 Wallace/Shakur collaboration "RUNNIN'" and added a sample of Edgar Winter's "Dying to Live." Titled "Runnin' (Dying To Live)", the song was released as a single from the soundtrack of Tupac Resurrection. In 2004, DJ Green Latern remixed Wallace's classic "Everyday Struggle" with a popular song by crooner Akon. The song, which also featured the vocals of 2Pac, Jadakiss and Styles P, was called "Ghetto".

On August 28, 2005, at the 2005 MTV Video Music Awards, Combs (who was hosting the event) and Snoop Dogg paid a well-received tribute to Wallace: an orchestra played while the lyrics from "Juicy" and "Warning" played on the arena speakers. In September 2005, VH1 had its second annual "Hip Hop Honors," with a tribute to Wallace headlining the show. The long awaited The Notorious B.I.G. Duets: The Final Chapter album was released December 20, 2005. The album spawned the singles "Nasty Girl", which became his first UK #1, as well as "Spit Your Game" "Whatchu Want" and "Hold Ya Head".

On March 19, 2006, a judge ordered that sales of Ready to Die be halted because the title track apparently sampled "Singing in the Morning" by the Ohio Players without permission. [3]

After death - if he were alive

Many people associated with rap music continuously speculate about how different rap would be today if rappers like Wallace (along with Tupac, Big Pun, Eazy-E, Big L, and others) had never died. The rapper Jadakiss, who was a close associate of Biggie's, stated in an appearance on MTV's The Shop that most rappers popular today would "be taking fast food orders" if Wallace were still producing music. However, Wallace's friends Lil' Cease, Lil' Kim, and Puff Daddy, all insist that he was not going to be in hip-hop for a very long time. In an interview with XXL Magazine (conducted in 1995 but released in 2003), Wallace himself said he was planning to retire from rap music in 2000 to manage the careers of Junior M.A.F.I.A.

In the song "1970 Somethin", a song featuring West Coast Rapper The Game and Faith Evans, Game dedicates an entire verse to the New York Emcee. Similarily "copying" his rap style, emulating B.I.G. Here is an excerpt:

"If I was in Brooklyn and B.I.G. was still alive
In 2006, it might sound like this
NY, 7-1-8's, 2-1-2's
With Sue's rendezvous, it's like Moulin Rouge
High fashion, uptown Air Force Ones and Vasquez
Puerto Ricans with fat asses
Blazed ducth masters, we dump ashes
On models in S classes for you bastards
Catch a cab to Manhattan, with that Broadway actin'
You hype, that Belly shit'll get you capped and wrapped in plastic
Tell the captain to ask Rog' What's Happenin'?
I hear, nor speak no evil inside the magnum"

At the time of his death, Biggie had begun to promote a clothing line called "Brooklyn Mint", which was directly targeted towards heavy set people. The clothing line, which was co-founded by B.I.G. himself, never got off the ground due to his untimely death. However, Jay-Z, a close friend of Biggie, and a successful clothing entrepenur, re-launched Brooklyn Mint in 2004. All proceeds of Brooklyn Mint go to the Christopher Wallace Foundation.

Movie

There is a movie in the works about Wallace's life. Antoine Fuqua, the director of Training Day, will direct the film. The film is being produced by Wallace's mother and by his former managers, Wayne Barrow and Mark Pitts. [4]

Legacy

Biggie is widely celebrated as one of the all time greatest hip-hop artists. His lyrics have been sampled by many of today's more famous names in hip hop, such as Jay-Z, Fat Joe, Nelly, 50 Cent, Pharell Williams, Snoop Dogg, Juelz Santana, Busta Rhymes, Fabolous and even R & B stars such as Usher, Akon, Mary J. Blige, Alicia Keys, and Ashanti. He is also sampled in Michael Jackson's 2001 album INVINCIBLE in the song UNBREAKABLE.

In 2001, hip-hop magazine The Source crowned him as the greatest MC of all time. Likewise in 2003, when XXL Magazine asked many elite names in hip hop who they felt was the top 5 rappers of all time, Biggie's named appeared on more rappers' lists than any other MC. During Canibus's 1998 feud with LL Cool J, Canibus responded to LL Cool J's claim to be the greatest rapper of all time on the song Second Round K.O. by saying "the greatest rapper of all time died on March 9th", which was the day Biggie died.

Unfortunately, a huge knock on Biggie's legacy is the fact that he only recorded two albums while alive, with only two posthumous releases in the near-decade since his death. In 2006, MTV ranked Biggie as the #1 MC of all time, but later recinded. However, he still ranked number #3, with 2Pac and Jay-Z ranked ahead of him.

At the time of his death, Wallace created a hip-hop supergroup called The Commission, which consisted of himself, Jay-Z, Lil' Cease, P. Diddy and Charli Baltimore. A song on the duets album called Whatchu Want (The Commission) featuring Wallace and Jay-Z is based on the group. The Commission was also mentioned in the song "Victory" from No Way Out. Other rumored members of the Commission included Ma$e, Cam'ron and the LOX.

Every year the Christopher Wallace Memorial Foundation holds a black-tie dinner ("B.I.G. Night Out") to raise funds for children's school equipment and supplies and to honor the memory of the Notorious B.I.G. (For this particular event, because it is a children's schools' charity, "B.I.G." is also said to stand for "Books Instead of Guns".)[5]

Trivia

File:Steve&Bone&BadBoy&MoThugs.JPG
Top: Bizzy Bone, Puff Daddy, Krayzie Bone & Steve Lobel. Bottom: Flesh-N-Bone, Layzie Bone on the right-hand side of The Notorious B.I.G. & Lil Cease during the making of Life After Death.
  • His song Big Poppa was featured throughout the 2001 movie Hardball.
  • Both "Hypnotize" and "Mo Money Mo Problems" hit #1 after Biggie's death giving him two posthumous #1 hits - more than any other singer. Other posthumous #1 hits belong to Otis Redding ("The Dock Of The Bay"); Janis Joplin ("Me And Bobby McGee"); Jim Croce ("Time In A Bottle"); and, John Lennon ("(Just Like) Starting Over").
  • Wallace had the ability to create verses in his head and was able to freestyle tracks on the mic without the use of pen and paper. This skill was also shared by Jay-Z, which lead to their eventual friendship. This was also a reason why he has very little posthumous material. Other artists who use this unique style of rapping (and cite Biggie as an influence) include Lil Wayne, Kanye West, and Common.
  • The animated program Futurama aired a reference to Biggie with their episode The Luck of the Fryrish with the street beatboxer Noticeably F.A.T.
  • Biggie's diss track "Kick In The Door" was directed towards fellow New York rapper Nas according to Nas on his song "Last Real Nigga Alive". Some fans still speculate that it was aimed as a diss towards fellow Brooklynite Jeru The Damaja.
  • Biggie was good friends with now rivals Jay-Z and Cam'Ron and interestingly instrumental in both of their careers.

Discography

Albums

Album cover Album information
File:NotoriousBIGReadytoDie.jpg
Ready To Die
File:Conspiracy2.jpg
Conspiracy with Junior M.A.F.I.A.
Life After Death
  • Released: March 25, 1997
  • Chart positions: #1 US #23 UK
  • Last RIAA certification: Diamond (10x platinum)
  • Singles: "Hypnotize", "Mo Money Mo Problems", "Sky's The Limit"
File:Notoriousbi bornagain 101b.jpg
Born Again
  • Released: December 7, 1999
  • Chart positions: #1 US #13 UK
  • Last RIAA certification: 2x Platinum
  • Singles: "N.O.T.O.R.I.O.U.S.", "Dead Wrong", "Biggie", "Would you Die for me"
File:Biggie.JPG
Duets: The Final Chapter

Singles

Year Song U.S. Hot 100 UK singles Album
1993 "Party and Bullshit" - - Who's The Man? (OST)
1994 "Juicy" / "Unbelievable" 27 72 Ready To Die
1995 "Big Poppa" / "Warning" 6 63 Ready To Die
1995 "One More Chance" / "The What"
(remix featuring Faith Evans)
2 34 Ready To Die
1997 "Hypnotize" 1 10 Life After Death
1997 "Mo Money Mo Problems"
(featuring Puff Daddy and Ma$e)
1 6 Life After Death
1997 "Going Back To Cali" 26 - Life After Death
1998 "Sky's The Limit"
(featuring 112)
60 35 Life After Death
1999 "Dead Wrong"
(featuring Eminem)
36 - Born Again
1999 "Notorious B.I.G."
(featuring Puff Daddy and Lil Kim)
67 16 Born Again
2003 "The Realist Niggas"
(featuring 50 Cent)
- - Bad Boys 2 (OST)
2004 "Runnin' (Dying to Live)"
(duet with 2Pac)
19 17 Tupac: Resurrection (OST)
2005 "Nasty Girl"
(featuring P. Diddy, Nelly, Jagged Edge and Avery Storm)
46 1 Duets: The Final Chapter Who Shot Ya
2005 "Spit Your Game" (Remix)
(featuring Twista, Krayzie Bone & 8 Ball & MJG) /
"Hold Ya Head" (featuring Bob Marley)
- 64 Duets: The Final Chapter
Year Song U.S. Hot 100 UK singles Album
1993 "Real Love (Remix)"
(Mary J. Blige featuring The Notorious B.I.G.)
46 What's The 411?
1993 "What's The 411? (Remix)"
(Mary J. Blige featuring The Notorious B.I.G.)
What's The 411?
1994 "Flava In Ya Ear (Remix)"
(Craig Mack featuring The Notorious B.I.G., LL Cool J, Rampage, and Busta Rhymes)
1995 "Can't You See"
(Total featuring The Notorious B.I.G.)
13 43 Total
1995 "Only You"
(112 featuring The Notorious B.I.G.)
13 - 112
1996 "Crush On You"
Lil Kim feat The Notorious B.I.G. and Lil Cease
- - Hardcore
1996 "Brooklyn's Finest"
Jay-Z feat The Notorious B.I.G.
- - Reasonable Doubt
1997 "Stop The Gunfight"
(Trapp featuring 2Pac and The Notorious B.I.G.)
77 - Stop the Gunfight: Untold Stories
1997 "Be the Realist"
(Trapp Featuring 2Pac and The Notorious B.I.G.)
- - Stop the Gunfight: Untold Stories
1997 "All About The Benjamins "
Puff Daddy feat Lil Kim, The LOX, and The Notorious B.I.G.
-13 - No Way Out
1998 "Been Around The World "
Puff Daddy feat Mase and The Notorious B.I.G.
-13 - No Way Out
2000 "Sports, Drugs and Entertainment" "
Cam'ron
- - S.D.E.
2002 "Unfoolish"
Ashanti featuring The Notorious B.I.G.
-4 -11 We Invented The Remix

References

  1. ^ "RIAA Top 100 Albums". 2006-05-04. Retrieved 2006-08-03. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  2. ^ Philips, Chuck (2006-07-31). "LAPD Renews Search for Rapper's Killer". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2006-08-01. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  3. ^ "Notorious B.I.G. Album Sales Halted". cbc.ca. 2006-03-19. Retrieved 2006-08-01. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  4. ^ Heath, Paul (2005-07-19). "Antoine Fuqua to direct Notorious BIG biopic". The Hollywood News. Retrieved 2006-08-01. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  5. ^ "Biggie, Jam Master Jay, Left Eye And Their Mothers Honored At B.I.G. Night Out". mtv.com. 2003-03-21. Retrieved 2006-08-01. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)