Conspiracy (1995) Biggie’s Role: Executive Producer & Featured Vocalist
When discussing the pantheon of Hip Hop royalty, the conversation inevitably begins and ends with Christopher Wallace, better known to the world as The Notorious B.I.G. (and his early alias, Biggie Smalls ). In a career tragically cut short by his murder in 1997 at the age of 24, Biggie Smalls released only two studio albums. However, those two albums— Ready to Die and Life After Death —are widely considered the twin peaks of East Coast Hip Hop, frequently landing at the top of "Greatest Albums of All Time" lists. The Notorious B.I.G. -Biggie Smalls- - Discogra...
Today, is ubiquitous. You hear Juicy at wedding receptions. You hear Hypnotize at baseball stadiums. You hear Ten Crack Commandments in film school editing classes. His two core albums have sold over 30 million copies worldwide. However, those two albums— Ready to Die and
Released just 16 days after his murder, Life After Death is a sprawling, 24-track double album. It is a darker, more cinematic expansion of Ready to Die . Contrary to the title, the album felt like a celebration of life, wealth, and survival, though its lyrics are eerily prescient of his demise. You hear Hypnotize at baseball stadiums
If you only listen to one album in Biggie’s catalog, this is it. Ready to Die is a concept album chronicling the cycle of poverty, crime, depression, and hedonism in Brooklyn’s Clinton Hill projects. It begins with the sound of a baby crying (birth) and ends with a gunshot and flatline (death).