bruh, 2Pac was really with the shit. Oakland native here, born and raised. when Pac first got to the bay he didn't really fit in, and ended up in ish all of the time. that made him change the way he moved about in the streets(before he was famous).getting shot that first time just made him worse. then going to jail made the rapper on that "all eyes on me" double disk. theres stories of him shooting 2 cops(think they were off duty and harassing some black guy). There are a lot of stories about how "gangsta" he was.
@cassandraclark54997 ай бұрын
We already know it’s just the suckers who be hating the nixxa came from a militant background a lot of suckers hate because they can never have the charisma style and just impact that man had and mofos who never met him in the rap game idolize him he set the bar extremely high nixxas still can’t catch up and the woman told stories of how A listers be in a room and pac will come in and all eyes are literally on him nixxas can’t take that it kills their ego when they batch watching another nixxa 😂😂😂😂
@naaiiiz7 ай бұрын
He really was what He was rapping about 💯 the realest ever
@cassandraclark54997 ай бұрын
@@naaiiiz in telling you it’s real street cats that vouch for him that’s why he’s the people’s champ dude is real down to the bone grissle
@HustlemanHustlonian7 ай бұрын
Real nigga. I saw him at Jack the Rapper convention in 93’ in Atlanta, and he was acting the exact same way as he did in his songs. Every word he is spitting is true!
@brandondetroitfanmichaels43257 ай бұрын
Like his" Nothing but love". He talked about how he got his "game" from Oakland
@kayadavid10377 ай бұрын
I still don’t understand how ppl say Pac wasn’t lyrical. He is skating on this entire song for 3 verses. & this was recorded in 95
@mrbond30046 ай бұрын
It’s jealousy and hate not because Pac is not lyrical, Pac is the goat. Period 🎉
@jacksizzle89375 ай бұрын
96 it was recorded he made rap first double album in 2 weeks lol fresh out of prison lol like day 1 or 2 laid down ambitionz, had a Henny, a sack of spinach and went to work lol and papa g said he was so driven it forced others to step their shit up and dre couldn't handle his energy and realness he bailed and said fuck it lol and left 500 mil on the table he had like 50 percent stake in death row lol
@mrbond30045 ай бұрын
@@jacksizzle8937 imagine that
@forgingicehole4750Ай бұрын
@@mrbond3004 🤣
@jimjones328723 күн бұрын
He hustles with these lyrics is referring to the time he sold crack in Oakland. He's saying he spits bars as well as he sold drugs. This song is a metaphorical masterpiece.
@ucheatuma77647 ай бұрын
Common dude, Tupac lived every lyrics in his songs. “I hustle with my lyrics” is just his way of saying he earns a living from his words
@jEdi_bUddhiC_YOGi9 күн бұрын
When he genuinely talks about himself, yes. But not "every" song. 16 ON DEATHROW is a song from a POV of kids serving a deathrow sentence. Also, SOULJAS STORY fro example. VIOLENT. Many songs are just stories - he is Hip- Hop's greatest story teller. You know what I mean, of course he was still a thug & spoke a lot of truth in his tracks, Just not all. Some songs were great stories with deep meanings.
@melvingaines35287 ай бұрын
DJ Quik is major on the Production tip. Legendary producer!!
@piotrswat1697 ай бұрын
Yup him E Moe B.
@jessevasquez79177 ай бұрын
💯
@habitatnative7 ай бұрын
Quik and problem rapped on this beat again on their new album that dropped friday.
@dfeelz14887 ай бұрын
🔥Track
@buckbuck313buck27 ай бұрын
Dj quik Producer firts rapper second
@marcopisani92897 ай бұрын
Pac was an artist first and foremost. Not a gangster. Was he fearless, yes. Was he surrounded by gangster growing up, yes. He came from a family of revolutionaries and as such was a natural born leader. When he refers to himself as a “thug” he doesn’t mean that he’s about spreading hurt, robbing or anything else associated that word. He mainly uses that word to define himself his people, black, brown, poor, forgotten youth, the oppressed. T.H.U.G.L.I.F.E (the hate you give little infants fucks everyone) . The THUGLIFE CODE he helped create is a code to help self govern the forgotten communities of the poor. Simple rules to help keep things from being completely lawless. He was a revolutionary, a movie star and the number 1 rapper world wide… which is why he was cut down and assassinated before he’s real work could start. One of the most important people of the last century in my eyes with a life that should be studied . Many lessons to be learned from his life. He had a lot more love in his heart than hate. He cared deeply for his people . He was wild yes but not a gangster. Black Jesus 🙌 2pac FOREVER. Teach your kids about him. ✌️
@omnipotential7 ай бұрын
Well said dude.
@arnisobiang74664 ай бұрын
If you don't appreciate things said intelligently you can't understand 2pac. And you are intelligent, Tupac didn't say anything lightly and didn't say anything at random. From Libreville in Gabon in central Africa.
@PR-WAY2 ай бұрын
💯there it is
@abayomibello11037 ай бұрын
He's the realest. Ask some of your NY Og's. Fat Joe said Pac was the realest.
@TheAngrySecurityGuardChannel7 ай бұрын
Today’s rappers need to listen to pac and be more like him, in and outside the booth. No rapper can ever touch his level lyrically, spiritually and mentally. The best of ALL time.
@roccovb53776 ай бұрын
AMEN to that
@kiddmobb47597 ай бұрын
Nice reaction!..all rappers embellish to some degree but for those who say Pac wasn't are hating. He may not have started out that way but who did the events u go through in life tend to mold u . Being shot 5 times abandoned by your friends set up on a phoney grape charge doing time for it will tare at your spirit. Anyone who shoots two cops to help a brother and beats the court case behind it is gangsta and is as real as it gets!💯
@fornlike7 ай бұрын
The power of this song is unique. This is a very underrated 2pac's song. This song is an absolute killer. PS: And to react to your question, I think the vast majority of what 2pac said is true to what he experienced. This man seemed to sleep just a little because he was almost always active on so many different things. So he lived many things in his so short live.
@jeffhermance48867 ай бұрын
this is one of my favorite pac songs
@fornlike7 ай бұрын
@@jeffhermance4886 And you are right.
@shaheempashua69242 ай бұрын
@@jeffhermance4886yeah mine too
@myzto7 ай бұрын
2pac raised by panthers, shot 2 cops in ATL, died by retaliation for stomping a gang banger. Thats scratching the surface. No one is as real as pac, but I appreciated his message, delivery and inspiration. He said he would spark the mind that changed the world. Hopefully that person is there. He did spark me for writing and I appreciate that. I wonder what person will change the world? Unfortunately some took the message and ran a different direction
@BB-yo9yp7 ай бұрын
You have learnt NOTHING about Pac. I thought you were finally starting to understand who he was as a human being, you you call him a "gangster". That would have broken his heart. Shame on you. Y'all need to dive into all his interviews and learn who he really was and what he was ultimately about.
@mohammeda.mohieldin27175 ай бұрын
Fact ♥️
@dedan197 ай бұрын
Tupac wasn't no gangsta!! Tupac was a soldier!!! Get it straight!!
@PR-WAY2 ай бұрын
💯
@FactsNC3007 ай бұрын
Quick is very underrated producer. His done a lot beats you have heard and love
@loutlaw85419 сағат бұрын
That's what made rappers at the time stand out. He was real, that's why the lyrics are felt and not just heard....🤷🏾
@NorrisFoxx7 ай бұрын
I've answered that question of how much of his music was about him under an earlier reaction. He explained it in an interview, some of his music is about him, some about the conditions and experiences of his peers, and some are "allegories or fables with an underlining theme of the Thug Life/ghetto life". His more aggressive music was often used as a warning to deter people from attempting to try him - mostly in response to the energy others were giving him. He also used his harsher music to win an audience for him to reach - there are several interviews where people who knew him say his goal was to "give them what they wanted to hear, and then, after he has their ears, give them what they needed to hear.". So, he was also conflicted (you can hear this on "Troublesome 96" where the first two verses are violent (aggressive) but then the last verse goes the opposite direction and speaks against said attitudes. It's fairly easy to distinguish what perspective he is speaking from once you become familiar with him through his interviews and his upbringing. Quick hints, Tupac grew up poor in a family surrounded by revolutionaries, and therefore, was raised to be community oriented and for the betterment of his people. This was his true soul. Being the case, he wasn't ever in the drug game (he tried for two weeks but was too sympathetic and had too much of a conscience, so the dealers encouraged him to leave it alone an pursue his rap career). He didn't have a criminal record until he became a public figure. He wasn't ever in a gang and always pushed against the "gangsta rap" label (instead referring to his work as rebel and soul music), until the last few months of his life when he became affiliated with the gang environment at Death Row Records. And, although he was a hot-head at times, was fearless and didn't believe in backing down, got into a lot of fights, and had a bad habit of inheriting the beefs of his boys (being loyal to a fault), which led him to many conflicts he'd never taken anyone's life or fired off shots at anyone (besides the 2 off-duty cops who was harassing a Black motorist - Tupac reaching into his revolutionary bag).
@shaheempashua69247 ай бұрын
No disrespect but this man is above reading comments I've never seen a response from him or a mention of a comment he only responds to "donations"
@ИванИванов-р8ь8ч7 ай бұрын
He was and always be the realest rapper, everything he is saying is 100% him no bs. That third verse is one of my favorite verses of all time.
@maxredpain55827 ай бұрын
This is my FAVOURITE 2Pac song!!! I love his flow on this, I’m surprised that iv never heard anyone speak on this track 😂 I don’t even know who this KZbinr is but THANK YOU for this 👊🏾 memories!!!!!!!!
@ladolcevitafl6 ай бұрын
I have never come across another artist who pressed their will on us. His energy when he got out of jail was off the chain.
@Champ198987 ай бұрын
He wasn’t a “good guy” he was flawed, he was human. Like we all are. Pac just didn’t mind tellin people how flawed he was
@NewEdgeDesigns7 ай бұрын
Typical commentary from a biggie fan
@Champ198987 ай бұрын
@@NewEdgeDesigns Pac is my favourite rapper of all time. However he was flawed, he wasn’t perfect and he was the first to admit it. In his interviews and music. You sound overly emotional. Someone who gets butt hurt over opinions. I’d suggest stay off the internet if you are gonna cry at everything you see that doesn’t fit your narrative.
@NewEdgeDesigns7 ай бұрын
@@Champ19898 I wasn’t calling you I biggie fan, I was talking about the channel owner that is an admitted biggie fan.. You came to quite a conclusion there with very little context, maybe you should look within to see who should actually stay offline because of sore rectums..
@mikae3457 ай бұрын
@@Champ19898 The "good guy" thing is subjective. Let's look at the time period of Tupac's heyday. 1993-1996.. .. Let's look at all of the "good guys" at that time. Bill Clinton.. Bill Cosby... Puff Daddy.. Dr. Dre... These are just some of people who were suppose to be good guys at the time. Dr. Dre was a vicious woman beater in reality. Bill Clinton was a sexual deviant and pathological liar. Bill Cosby drugged women. Puff Daddy has been beating, raping, and torturing women for decades. The point is that PAC was human. He wore his heart on his sleeve. When he was happy.. You knew it... When he was sad.. You knew it.. When he was pissed.. You knew it. He didn't hide anything. All of these people mentioned pretended to be one thing... However.. Time revealed them for who they really were
@stephenvasher21297 ай бұрын
Pac was a prophet! Biggie was a reporter! Much love to both!!!
@smittybenzo46937 ай бұрын
If you heard a Quik verse, you've heard Quik's production. He produced his whole catalogue and was a major contributor to the Death Row sound at the time.
@Andre-z3p7 ай бұрын
GREAT SONG BY THE GREATEST
@Mahojo17 ай бұрын
Please do “Hold Ya Head” Underrated track from the Makaveli album
@flaquis27297 ай бұрын
My favorite 2pac track.
@terrancerobinson207 ай бұрын
That's my favorite Pac song of all time
@eddiesanchez56727 ай бұрын
Best song
@davisrichard34407 ай бұрын
Yes, hold your head is one of my favz for sure!
@granitaliu23505 ай бұрын
Best song
@thetruthhurts86184 ай бұрын
How real was Tupac😂😂Well he had just got out of jail before he made this album,got shot several times, shot 2 off duty cops and he was unalived in the streets at an early age!! He has songs that showed different sides of himself and he grew up poor in the slums! He showed every side of himself through his music! He was his music or his music was him!! From Dear Momma to Brenda got a baby to Hit em up to The Heartz of Men are all Tupac!
@mikegomery127 ай бұрын
Bro don't ever say Tupac wasn't a good guy, You're completely lost on that. Don't Go by Just his music
@MrBlackstallion0097 ай бұрын
He's a producer that raps. The beats on his songs he made. Quik is a West Coast Compton legend.
@slippinnjimmy7 ай бұрын
Pac was as real as they come. You can watch interviews from people who knew him before he was famous who confirmed that Pac was always a wild cat who never backed down from a conflict. I think the dilemma with Pac was that he was raised by Black Panthers. So he felt like (in his own words) that he was a representative of the black people. The problem was that a lot of his conflicts came from black people themselves. People hating on him and "testing his gangster". He had to stand his ground. He was a real one who loved his people but unfortunately he stepped into a world where his vision wasn't a reality. So he had to adapt and fight back. No one's saying he didn't make mistakes, cause he did. But he was pretty real with his lyrics, even though he a lot of times would rap from other people's perspective.
@alisalahddine2657 ай бұрын
Wat!!!! PAC is the realest who ever ever touch a mic..no doubt
@Moose960807 ай бұрын
His smile when he realizes pac will murder any track 😂
@ChosenOne559_6 ай бұрын
@@Moose96080 he does that a lot. And then retracts his thoughts by trying to think of something Big said that was better……….. and it never happens! #Makaveli
@JerryLouisPutItInYaMouth5 ай бұрын
@@ChosenOne559_big used to rap about rxping women for shock value, Pac stood up from women who have been rxped. That's the difference. Can't believe people compare Biggie to the greatness of Tupac.
@popoffeveryround7 ай бұрын
“REPRESENT CUZ I’VE BEEN SENT” ✊🏽🔥 So simple but yet so powerful
@jimmybrown20407 ай бұрын
that goes over damn near everyone heads to what that mean...
@damionmorse56247 ай бұрын
One of the best pac songs IMO is “Hell Razor”- Each verse increases in intensity, however the third verse goes insane and has a message.
@JT-ps8wb7 ай бұрын
2Pac is genuine no hyperbole or embellishment 💯
@bigkev664323 күн бұрын
He rides on any beat like no other.......G.O.A.T.
@kennydeez..17747 ай бұрын
🔥🔥😮"OMG!"..This Is My Favorite Song From 2Pac. This Song Is Soooo Damn 🔥🔥🔥. Great Great Reaction Bruh👍🏾💯💯💯
@EpikosKurdi7 ай бұрын
not just everything he says is truly in him, but he used to say some things that happened in his life only in rare interviews, for instance the illegal weapon case was Biggie and his friends guns that they have left in Pac's apartment when police arrived to capture 2pac, Pac took the case because he was not a snitch and haven't spoke about it even in his music.
@Singhalicious4 ай бұрын
DJ Quik said the following regarding the creation of this track: Tupac was venting. He was vexed about something he wanted to speak about and my job as the producer is to lay down the musical bed so he can be most comfortable getting that shit out of his system. And I think that’s what we accomplished. A driving, angry beat to match his driving, angry delivery. Pac was a consummate artist. ‘Pac would really think first before he wrote. He would become a part of the song. Almost as if he knew the shit would last forever. He was that meticulous about the way he wrote to certain tracks. My thing with that record was that, as tight as Tupac was - he’s legendary - I still had to be the producer and check what I didn’t like and how we could make that record near perfect, if we couldn’t make it perfect. I had to be stern with him on some things, but for the most part, it was like he was a ghost. It was like, ‘You’re not supposed to be here.’ He was there in the flesh.
@dploy6197 ай бұрын
Tupac is as real as it gets fam
@anthonykenner67606 ай бұрын
Definitely one of my favorite songs from PAC
@davisrichard34407 ай бұрын
Easy 80/20 easy, he's beaten guys up, he's bin beat up, he bust his gat, spoke from heart, he's broke bread, he died behind his words n actions, he's bin to jail, never snitched, tossed up women, n supported the under dogs! So I say he's a real one
@fcukhataz17 ай бұрын
I agree with you, the way Pac attacks beat is unmatched, so effortless, impactful, every first bar is not wasted, just hooks your attention. Unreal 🐐
@odogg68997 ай бұрын
Quick is a Rapper and Producer like RZA for example.
@rezzierezz7 ай бұрын
2pac - Lord Knows (all eyez on me)
@treyas28186 ай бұрын
*Me against the world
@joshg.6315Ай бұрын
All Eyez on Me is an amazing accomplishment. 28 songs, not one skip to be found. Also, fun fact. The voice sampled in the chorus is stand up from the legendary Richard Pryor
@benjamincastleman85807 ай бұрын
Even One's, That Are Considered Gangster, Can, ALSO BE An INSPIRATION, For Those That, Have To Go Through The Pain, Of The GHETTO, Like 2 Pac,.. Is, And, Will ALWAYS BE A 🐐🔥🎙️🔥💯!! G.O.A.T.!
@dustincowart67674 ай бұрын
Oh wow! Can’t believe I missed this one. I’ve been waiting on this since you started the 2Pac journey. Easily one of his top 3 tracks, but rarely reviewed.
@UltraManUltra767 ай бұрын
2PAC was a Realist and the Realest.
@marcellussims48317 ай бұрын
I died and came back, Been hustling at these lyrics as if it's a gang of crack Favorite part of the song especially when you changed his Rhyming sequence from when you started,..
@alanjones48346 ай бұрын
The king Richard Pryor is on the ad-libs on the chorus 🔥🔥🔥
@400iz77 ай бұрын
Legendary track. I listen to it on repeat every time. Supposed to know about this OG
@naaiiiz7 ай бұрын
That song especially is timeless for me
@chazbrown58007 ай бұрын
The best Pac joint ever. Boom bap Pac right here.
@danielgombo66694 ай бұрын
Yes this is definitely boom bap
@NirvanaNimbus7 ай бұрын
Pac was more real than he even portrayed in his music. To this day, people that actually knew him will tell you the same. I've never once heard anything foul about the dude or anyone ever say he lied or embellished anything.
@shaneoshea99847 ай бұрын
You gotta do 'Everything They Owe' and 'Death Around the Corner' both from 2pac
@jerryalmeida56257 ай бұрын
2pac was the realest rapper out there! Have you reacted to Tradin War stories or Ain't hard 2 find? Those songs are a great intro to the bay area northern Cali rap
@odogg68997 ай бұрын
Should do some of his interviews.
@MandipKhuttan7 ай бұрын
Pac rest in peace
@bankrollwels26 күн бұрын
He wasn't a gangster he was a guy that spoke truth in his music.... his rapper image was tough looking, but he himself was a down to earth person, highly misunderstood by people like you and others that didn't understand what he was talking about
@davisrichard34404 ай бұрын
Makaveli.... Hold your head is a frat song to react too!
@ChosenOne559_7 ай бұрын
DJ Quick produced almost all his songs.
@oragbaikechukwu74587 ай бұрын
Not true
@ChosenOne559_7 ай бұрын
@@oragbaikechukwu7458 DJ QUICK produced all of his own records. Not every Tupac record. If that’s what you’re saying. DJ quick would write,produce,mix he did it all.
@Nuesence243 ай бұрын
My favorite song of all time🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
@femijon7777 ай бұрын
Quick on de beat 🔥
@haseebzahoor47707 ай бұрын
Classic Tune by 2PAC❤
@kielhall83637 ай бұрын
Dope 🫡✊🏿🙏🏿 R.I.P 2-,PAC 🙏🏿 Kungu Fu Kenny keep me your legacy alive peace and Mr. Lamar the culture will always be with you
@bigt41357 ай бұрын
Greatest album ever.
@BluCollarKutthroatEST833 ай бұрын
Pac was a poet drama kid who went to art school , he then played a character as a papper and slowly became him
@ArcCahlon5 ай бұрын
honestly 90-95% of what Pac speaks is him the other 5-10% is his life on the streets. his life was never easy but he used that to propel himself. he is a legend because he never spoke to be famous he became famous for how he spoke
@alexgibson79607 ай бұрын
In case you're wondering, Richard Pryor is the one talking in the background
@CaptainJonLuckPickard7 ай бұрын
Someone once said that other rappers do things and then rap about it, and that 2pac rapped about things and then did it. Just to put into perspective, all the community type things he rapped about, and all the revolutionary things he said were true to life. He started youth sports leagues with other famous rappers for kids who stayed in school, did outreach and all kinds of things that never got any coverage. He also was heavily involved in the black power movements, doing speeches and the whole thing. In the south he came to the aid of a black motorist being harassed by the police, and it resulted in him shooting and wounding two cops, walking away and then beating the charges. 2Pac was by far the realest rapper. Of course he embellished like every rapper who ever lived, but he also walked the walk.
@nuce7922 күн бұрын
This is art open to interpretation
@Tloman73agc7 ай бұрын
DJ Quik has always been a producer.
@moisesgaribay48937 ай бұрын
True poetic
@yankeewz83777 ай бұрын
I like how you can't contain your smile and desperately try to hold your East coast bias. Welcome to Tupac and the best side lol
@aya9af7 ай бұрын
Right?! Seems like bruh be holdin tight to that bias 😂. But given his NY locale and era, I get it. Took me a minute to listen to Big, esp after Pac died. Pac wuz it 4 me, R.I.P. ✌🏾🕊
@kayadavid10377 ай бұрын
Pac was born & mostly raised in NYC.
@wisdomafoolweakness33917 ай бұрын
Pac is real like bones marrow and flesh and blood that's how real he is and the kind of thug he means is different than what the streets means but he can relate to the streets a lot cause they like most of the things that he like but separate on most I won't doubt that Pac love Malcom X and that he get is thug behavior from him cause X was a gun ready guy to protect his
@DonTiberius357 ай бұрын
Haha, what you see is what you get with pac, depending on witch mood or pac you're depending on that day 😂💯🐐
@omranmkv7 ай бұрын
Dj quik is mainly producer more than A rapper. Legendary
@leonvlad32417 ай бұрын
pac said it himself that he is not the greatest but the realest artist ever ,...
@jeffreycoleman89737 ай бұрын
You have to get DJ Quik his props. One of the best producers ever underrated but he's a Lyricist has some bangers can produce a album. He did his he did his thing on All Eyez on Me put his trademark on it. People don't give him a lot of credit for it.
@jordankwateiowoo40287 ай бұрын
Pac all day everyday Rip Legend 🙏
@Makaveli13Xroy7 ай бұрын
"him and dmx are probably the only 2 that can attack a verse like that" Absolutely the reason why i have both of them tattoo'ed on my right arm , actually just finished my pac tattoo last weekend RIP
@Iaintthesharpesttoolintheshed2 ай бұрын
It’s my favorite song on this album
@32PIRATE7 ай бұрын
Легенда ❤ в 2002-2003 годах помню в баскетбол играли под его трэки ❤
@GEE7EVАй бұрын
His name is "DJ" QUIK. But yes he raps too. One of his first sond Born and Raised in Compton you should check out. But he produced alot of his own songs and others
@acharoland58695 ай бұрын
You have to react to "Thug Style" . Catch a feel of Tupac's legendary talent. TUPAC= GOAT for ever.
@WlodiO27 ай бұрын
HE - how real is 2pac? 2pac: thuggin is in my spirit
@kanej337 ай бұрын
He doesn't embellish it really as much as he speaks on other people's experiences and everyone interprets them as his own
@loutlaw85419 сағат бұрын
DJ Quik is a rapper and producer.
@AssassinKing302 ай бұрын
Rip the crowd like a phone number 😂😂😂 #Bars
@KingstonHawke7 ай бұрын
Hustling doesn't imply lying. And he said "game of craps" not crack. He's saying that he sells knowledge. And to be clear, Tupac was probably the most authentic mainstream rapper of all time. Just look at his life story, and how staying that true to it, kept him in legal trouble, street drama, and eventually got him killed. So many people think he faked his death because he was predictive of his death. But when you study his life it makes sense that he knew death was coming. There's no way he could stay authentic to himself and not get killed or end up in jail. He was so critical of wrong doing that he made an insane amount of powerful enemies. Politicians, local police, drug kingpins, and known killers in the street. Tupac never hid from any of them. What he did was align himself with the biggest street general he around, and in return for that army inherited all of Suge's gang beefs. No one can honestly study Tupac's thought process and conclude he was anything but authentic. As if just because he went to art school he can't also be street.
@bryanstephens12957 ай бұрын
Bout time you listen to the real 💯 no one better 🎤🎤🎤🎤🎤
@rickyrichreacts96677 ай бұрын
Whenever I tell someone that said pac isn’t a great rapper I tell them to listen to this😂
@SamuelSivak-xo6ns7 ай бұрын
Niggas is trippin pac is greatest off all time
@SamuelSivak-xo6ns7 ай бұрын
niggas hate on pac because is greatest Rapper off all time
@shungun41127 ай бұрын
I'm going to take a wild guess and say that your from new York. the boogie down Bronx to be more specific son
@rickyrichreacts96677 ай бұрын
@@shungun4112 you’re way off. I live in Cali
@JustMe-ws2pe7 ай бұрын
Dj Quick is a legendary producer fam.
@50Deuce5023 ай бұрын
Listen to his vibe interview in its entirety... he addresses a lot of your questions in it.
@Roby31197 ай бұрын
1 o his best songs next to lifes so hard
@Nomadd177 ай бұрын
Quik made his own beats he's a beast
@ItsDesm7 ай бұрын
On him mentioning lyrics as a hustle... In many songs he speaks about the symbolism of him moving on from selling drugs to selling rhymes yet keeping the same mentality. He was always authentic though, some would say so much so that it was to his detriment and maybe also led to his demise. It was an image that he was responsible for with his background and behavior but the media also had it's own narrative and he figured that if he's going to be labeled a specific thing, then at least make the best of it. After getting sentence to prison and the attempt on his life, he sort of embraced the notoriety. Plus him having read The Art of War and Machiavelli while in prison put him on a more "militant" mindset of taking advantage of once positions. That's why he nicknames himself Makaveli around the time of this album and recorded non stop leading to this double album and a ton of other material. One last thing on "how much is him vs a character"... Tupac rapped from multiple perspectives, to the extend that some songs had him playing completely different people. Was example is the song "16 on Death Row" where he takes the perspective of a 16 year old kid that's sentenced to be executed. While he may not have lived some of the exact things he raps about, those things would still be based on things he saw an experienced in his environment. His empathy and ability to express those things only added to his artistry
@marvtavarez7 ай бұрын
Please react to “Under Pressure” and “Hard On A Nigga” both a truly underrated tracks that true fans till this day mention !