2pac Ru Still Down Full Album Zip

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2Pac – 1997 – R U Still Down? (Remember Me) (2 CD) Posted on May 7, 2018 May 7, 2018 by DJ Namaximum Leave a comment. R U Still Down (Remember Me) (4:08) 04. 2Pac - R U Still Down? (Remember Me. Shipment and guaranteed to play or will be refunded in full. This is a great album. 'R U Still Down' is very.

Check out our first collection on our new store! R U Still Down? (Remember Me) is the second posthumous album by 2Pac, released in 1997, and the first to be finished without his creative input.

Her son having left a large body of work behind, this was the first release from his mother's imprint Amaru Entertainment, set up to control 2Pac's posthumous releases. Shortly after 2Pac died, there were rumors that hundreds of unreleased songs remained in the vaults; a mere two months after his death, the first posthumous record, The Don Killuminati: The 7 Day Theory, appeared. Death Row released the record, and shortly afterward, 2Pac's mother, Afeni Shakur, gained the rights to all of his unreleased recordings from both the Interscope and Death Row labels. She founded the Amaru label and released the double-disc R U Still Down? (Remember Me) in late 1997.

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Shortly after died, there were rumors that hundreds of unreleased songs remained in the vaults; a mere two months after his death, the first posthumous record,, appeared. Soulja boy mp3 songs download 128kbps.com. Death Row released the record, and shortly afterward, 's mother,, gained the rights to all of his unreleased recordings from both the Interscope and Death Row labels. She founded the Amaru label and released the double-disc in late 1997. Culled from 's unreleased Interscope recordings between 1992 and 1994, including several tracks that have had backing musical tracks 'reconstructed,' doesn't have the aura of exploitation that haunts the album, but it isn't much better, either.

For the most part, sounds good, spinning out rhymes that are alternately clever or startling, but he eventually begins repeating himself and running out of ideas. That's much better than the music itself, which is pretty much standard-issue gangsta rap that never deviates from the course. There are enough hidden gems to make it worthwhile for hardcore fans, but it doesn't necessarily bode well for the Amaru label's series of unreleased recordings. If this mediocre mess is the top of the heap, they'll truly be hurting for strong material once they reach the bottom of the allegedly hundreds of unreleased recordings.