
It was titled 2Pacalypse Now and saw light in 1992, making a lot of noise with the single Brenda's Got A Baby. Soon Tupac not only danced, but also rapped with the Digital Underground on their disc, composing his own debut work in spare time. In 1990, Shakur got acquainted with the members of the rap band Digital Underground, becoming their back-up dancer. There he went to the Tamaplais High School, but dropped out. However, Tupac did not finish the school as he had to move again with the family because of his mother's drug-addiction. Being a teenager, Shakur managed to enter the prestigious Baltimore School For The Arts, where he studied jazz, ballet and acting, performing in Shakespeare's plays. Tupac's childhood consisted of constant travels along the USA his family had problems with the law and lived in poverty. Only at the age of three months the boy was called by his real name in honor of Indian Tupac Amaru II, who lead the riot of Inks against Spanish invaders and was later convinced to death. Tupac's mother, Afeni Shakur, called him Lesane Parish Crooks at birth, concealing their kin in fear for his life, as Black Panthers had many foes. Tupac Amaru Shakur was the son of two Black Panthers members, who split before his birth. In 1997, just a year after his death, his label decided to release a double disc of leftover. These are after all outtakes and occasionally you can tell why they were left off the original albums but still, not bad. R U Still Down? (Remember Me), an Album by 2Pac. The song was sampled by fellow American rapper Nas in his 2008 song Black President. 2Pac I Wonder If Heaven Got a Ghetto: I Wonder If Heaven Got a Ghetto is an R&B/Hip hop song by American rapper 2Pac, released posthumously in 1997 as the first single from his sixth (6 th) studio album R U Still Down? (Remember Me).

While not as solid as his earlier LPs, it's still far better than many of the pieced. Released: Nov 1997 Label: Interscope Hitting the streets just a year after Tupac's murder R U Still Down? Sports 26 G'd up selections from the live-fast-die-young rap icon.
