According to Recording Industry Association of America, he has sold 55.3 million albums and an additional 4 million under his alias Makaveli with " The Don Killuminati", making him the second best-selling hip-hop artist in history. In 2001, Guinness World Records hailed him as the then Best-selling artist of rap in the US. Throughout his career and posthumously, Shakur sold more than 75 million records worldwide. I’ll definitely be coming back to this one.The discography of American rapper Tupac Shakur consists of 11 studio albums. It’s a great and an emotional track, reminds me of “White Man’z World”. Sounds more like a skit that just samples vocals and interviews (some of which were already used on this and other version of the album) over a decent beat.įinal track, and once again a track that did not appear on the other version. Everything else is exactly the same.Īnother track that did not appear on the other version. Slightly different intro and outro used here, and the bassline is also slightly different (might be the same but sounds different to me, because the beat also isn’t as polished, which makes the bass stronger). Might be the sample/s used here (which, I believe by listening to it, samples Michael Jackson’s “Human Nature”). And I don’t know why but it sounds familiar, even though I know that I’ve never heard it before. Very nice track, but I don’t know if it belongs on the album. Yet another track that did not make the other release that also sounds upbeat but less than “Lost Souls”. The other version is better, but something about this one is kinda creepy and haunting… ![]() The beat is also very similar but slightly different, in the way that it is slower, has slightly different melodies and is not as polished. The intro almost identical, but is cleaner on this one and just slightly different. ![]() I also realize that “To Live & Die in L.A.” is upbeat, but it still feels like it belongs on the album. All I know is that this track did not make the other release, and that it’s an enjoyable track but doesn’t belong on the album, as the beat is too upbeat for the rest of the album. That’s it.Īlternate version? I haven’t even heard the original version so I can’t compare them. The only difference I see here is the beat doesn’t sound as polished as the other one. See Also 2Pac - Holler If Ya Hear Me (Official US Cassette Single) (January 29, 1993) The beat also sounds not as polished as the other one, but it’s not very noticeable unless you really pay attention to it. Anyway, the intro uses the same sample, but is clearer than the other one. For the record, I like the remixed one better.Īh, my favourite track off the album. ![]() Intro is also different, and so is the hook. The beat is very different than the remixed version, and it is also not polished. This track has a remix that is well known within his fanbase, called “Fuck Friendz”. Everything else is exactly the same, as far as I heard.Īnother track that didn’t appear on the other release. Beat is also slightly different, it doesn’t have the guitar during the hook in the background like the other does. Intro is different than the other one, that’s obvious right from the start. As for the track itself, the intro uses the same intro used for “To Live & Die in L.A.” and the beat is also not polished. ![]() Very good diss track though, nice and mellow beat but he goes hard on it and attacks many east coast artists. This diss song obviously didn’t make the other release.
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