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2pac killuminati song
2pac killuminati song











2pac killuminati song
  1. 2PAC KILLUMINATI SONG PLUS
  2. 2PAC KILLUMINATI SONG SERIES

Talkin to me beggin me to just, take you around The only girl that I adore, everything I’m askin for I would trade my life for yours, behind closed doors While unleashin on the old timers, that’s on my mama Love to watch you at a block party, beggin for drama When you bust a nut, niggaz be duckin or takin numbers “I love finger fuckin you, all of a sudden I’m hearin thunder As an ode to weaponry it rivals “I Gave You Power” by Nas and as an ode to thug girls it’s the West coast sequel to Notorious B.I.G.’s infamous “Me and My Bitch”: Although the sound of his lady firing off an automated weapon and grunting like Master P is quasi-comical, it makes sense when you consider that this clever song is a double-entendre comparing his weapons of choice to a female lover. For each song like “Toss it Up” featuring K-Ci and JoJo that sounds pop, hardcore anthems like “Me and My Girlfriend” bring things into balance. “Don Killuminati” strikes a nice balance between a hardcore Shakur at his most thugged out with songs that betray his intelligence and also give tastes of why “All Eyez On Me” crossed over so successfully. God promised, she’s just takin her time.” Makin legends off the shit we did, still bullshittin I split the blunt and rolled the fat one, I’m deadly - Babylon bewareĬomin from the Pharoahe’s kids, retaliation We got addicted had to leave the burbs, back in the ghettoĭoin wild shit, lookin at the sun don’t payĬriminal mind all the time, wait for Judgment Day Tell me I ain’t God’s son, nigga mom a virgin

2PAC KILLUMINATI SONG PLUS

Plus the media be crucifying brothers severly Put my soul on it, I’m fightin devil niggaz daily “We probably in Hell already, our dumb asses not knowinĮverybody kissin ass to go to heaven ain’t goin A quote from the latter may help illustrate: The social commentary of songs like “White Man’z World” and “Blasphemy” is often overlooked due to this album’s trash-talking, but they rank as some of his most intense work. In fact for a posthumous album, it’s sadly ironic that the quality of Shakur’s writing seemed to have been elevated to a higher level. Whether you agree with his premise or not, it makes the lyrical content of “Don Killuminati” anything but boring. Why was Shakur calling out so many rappers? Was it to stir up controversy and generate sales? Did he have legitimate beefs with every single one? We may never know for sure, but other bootleg “Makaveli” albums seem to indicate he felt “Hit Em Up” was a big enough underground hit to build on the formula and repeat it, real gripes or not. When Nas rapped “can’t believe I heard my name the realest shit you ever wrote,” on the song “We Will Survive” it was THAT 2Pac song he referred to. “Against All Odds” takes shots at ALL of them and for good measure substitutes Puffy for Biggie. Both “Toss it Up” and “To Live and Die in L.A.” call out ex-Death Row producer Dr. The introduction of the album ALONE name checks Nas, Mobb Deep, Biggie and Jay-Z as enemies. The infamous diss record “Hit Em Up” released while he was alive was the iceberg’s tip of verbal assaults found throughout this record. Shakur himself may have chosen the alter-ego from being inspired by reading this treatise, but contrary to popular belief Machiavelli did not fake his OWN death – he died quietly and in poor health in June of 1527 almost 450 years before Shakur was even born.Īnother notable side of this posthumous album was the sheer amount of venom poured out through Shakur’s lyrics. Renaissance writer Niccolo Machiavelli wrote a now infamous treatise called “The Prince” which advocated deception to fool your enemies and advance political causes. To them, he obviously faked his own death to avoid his enemies as well as more jail-time, and his very alias “Makaveli” was proof. While the truth is that Shakur was a prodigiously prolific writer with a penchant for marathon recording sessions in the studio, people seemed hard- pressed to accept that he had a whole album worth of material ready to go before he died.

2pac killuminati song

What followed was a firestorm of controversies related to the album the best known of these being the theories that Tupac Shakur never really died. The always unconventional Death Row Records shared no such sentiments. Even those who expected a disc of his unreleased songs or a “Greatest Hits” retrospective would have waited until ’97 when a “respectable” amount of time had gone by since he passed. Coming only eight weeks after the rapper was shot and in the same year as his massive “All Eyez On Me” double album, the new album and alias caught industry insiders by surprise.

2PAC KILLUMINATI SONG SERIES

Tupac Shakur’s “Makaveli” CD was the first in a long series of posthumous recordings (bootleg and otherwise) released after his death in September of 1996.













2pac killuminati song