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Notorious big ready to die big papa
Notorious big ready to die big papa







notorious big ready to die big papa

"Poppa been smooth since days of Underoos / Never lose, never choose to, bruise crews who / Do something to us, talk go through us / Girls walk to us, wanna do us, screw us / Who us? Yeah, Poppa and Puff"Ĭould any other hardcore hip-hop master rap about Underoos and get away with it? Besides maybe Puff.

notorious big ready to die big papa

"Wallace was known to exaggerate from time to time," Coker writes in Unbelievable. Voletta was a Jehovah's Witness, so they technically didn't celebrate holidays, but exaggeration is good for street cred. "We used to fuss when the landlord dissed us / No heat, wonder why Christmas missed us / Birthdays was the worst days / Now we sip champagne when we thirsty"īiggie's mom, Voletta Wallace, clarified in Coker's biography that Christmas never really missed them, and Chrissy-Poo (Voletta's doting nickname for her son) never ate sardines for dinner. Here are the nine rhymes that prove Biggie was a hip-hop genius. "He would construct those intricately rhyming narratives inside his formidable brain, then step to the microphone and record them 'off the dome.'" "Unlike most other rappers, he never carried lyric notebooks into the studio," writes hip-hop journalist Cheo Hodari Coker, in Unbelievable: The Life, Death and Afterlife of the Notorious B.I.G. Instead, he riffed off the beat and came up with rhymes on the spot. He wrote down thoughts in a notebook, but he didn't bring it into the studio. Those freestyle roots would carry over into how he made rhymes in the studio. He freestyled on the avenue as a hobby until he recorded his first demo in 1991. In September 1994, Biggie released the first and only album during his lifetime, Ready to Die, on Combs' then-emerging Bad Boy label. But before long, his mixtape caught the attention of a young A&R man at Uptown Records: Sean Combs. By 15 he was selling crack, and by 17 he had dropped out of high school. Wallace grew up in the Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood, the only child of a first-generation American- Jamaican single mother. Nearly two decades after his death, Biggie is still the greatest rapper of all time. Christopher Wallace, the infamous Brooklyn-bred rapper, would have been 42 years old, had he survived the four gunshots that killed him in 1997. Monday marks the 18-year anniversary of the Notorious B.I.G.'s death.









Notorious big ready to die big papa