#6
"Nas is Coming"
It was the middle of the East-West war. Dre had left Death Row and I was a big fan of Dre’s and Dre liked my stuff.
A few years before, I was new and I went out and performed at this club that Prince owned in Los Angeles at the time. The club was hitting. It's right before the album dropped and I came out with a glass of Hennessy and a cigar,
and I said my stuff and I left and I think that impressed Dre. He saw the L.A. audience reacting well to it too,
and we talked and he was still at Death Row at this point.
Years later, I’m in the business and we're right in the middle of this East Coast-West Coast shit.
Dre just wanted to make music; he wasn’t really caught up in that shit. At the end of the day,
he's riding for his team, but he got to a point where there was internal beef on his side,
and he wanted to work and I wanted to work. The East and West wasn’t really too happy about that,
but we wanted to work together and "Nas Is Coming" was the first thing we did.
The whole East Coast-West Coast thing, I was just watching what was going on.
Tupac showed me a lot of respect on the intro to Makaveli—he called me the leader of the East Coast,
so me and him both had a mutual respect, and I didn’t want any East Coast-West Coast beef at all.
#7
"Hate Me Now"
After my first record, they were like,
"You can’t do it again. He can’t do this. He can’t do that. He’s not as big as this one.
He’s not as big as that one. He’ll never be around again. He’s too grimy. He’s too street.
He has a bad following. People around him start trouble."
I had a bad rap, so I blew that away with the second album. So now they mad at that,
and found a different reason to be mad at me.
So "Hate Me Now" was the appropriate record at the time.
#8
"Nastradamus"
The song was a EPMD sample and I just freestyled it. I was riding high off multi-platinum sales off I Am,
and just didn’t want to do anything but freestyle that single and put it out. We had a concept to make the video 3D,
but we didn’t figure out how to get all the glasses to people and time was against us.
Glasses were made, but obviously not enough for every household, so we fucked that one up a little bit.
On that album, there’s a couple of songs that have a certain sound to it that doesn’t sound like anything else I’ve done. And it was a gray area in my life and that album represents that gray area.
It was personal stuff that I'd rather not elaborate on. But I have nothing against that album.
I Am, [released earlier that year], was originally supposed to be a double album,
but the songs leaked and that killed it for me. I didn’t want to touch it.
I hated that because no one’s supposed to hear a song before it’s time, so if that happens,
I didn't fuck with the record. It’s over. The record never existed. So I went and started brand new music.
At the time, my brother Jungle was managing Noriega and Nature,
and he was getting a lot of beats from guys that were just blasting in the business,
like Dame Grease and Swizz Beatz, and those beats was ahead of their time and I didn’t understand them that well.
Then DMX and Nori really made them happen
and I was able to go grab Dame Grease, [who produced four songs from Nastradamus] and be like,
"Yo, work with me." The Nostradamus thing was about the end of the world being the year 2000,
so my record would be dropping right toward the end of the world.
#9
"Got Ur Self A..."
This one was just so huge to me and my then-manager Steve Stoute.
The Sopranos was our favorite thing and we were so happy that HBO gave us that.
[The song sampled Alabama 3's "Woke Up This Morning," the show's theme song.]
I love Goodfellas, but now it went from the movie theater to your household.
I was praying because I wanted to be the first one to use that sample because at that point,
everybody was watching The Sopranos.
We thought there would be nothing cooler than to have their theme song as my theme song,
and we were so happy to use it. Some people think that had something to do with the Jay Z beef,
but that one had nothing to do with any rapper. It was about who could use that sample first.
#10
"2nd Childhood"
How many grownups do you see every day that still act like children? It’s a shame.
In life, with your woman, your man, your family,
there’s grownups who you expect so much more from are just really nothing more than a child.
They're big kids and these are people with power I’m talking about, so "2nd Childhood" was very important.
"Nas is Coming"
It was the middle of the East-West war. Dre had left Death Row and I was a big fan of Dre’s and Dre liked my stuff.
A few years before, I was new and I went out and performed at this club that Prince owned in Los Angeles at the time. The club was hitting. It's right before the album dropped and I came out with a glass of Hennessy and a cigar,
and I said my stuff and I left and I think that impressed Dre. He saw the L.A. audience reacting well to it too,
and we talked and he was still at Death Row at this point.
Years later, I’m in the business and we're right in the middle of this East Coast-West Coast shit.
Dre just wanted to make music; he wasn’t really caught up in that shit. At the end of the day,
he's riding for his team, but he got to a point where there was internal beef on his side,
and he wanted to work and I wanted to work. The East and West wasn’t really too happy about that,
but we wanted to work together and "Nas Is Coming" was the first thing we did.
The whole East Coast-West Coast thing, I was just watching what was going on.
Tupac showed me a lot of respect on the intro to Makaveli—he called me the leader of the East Coast,
so me and him both had a mutual respect, and I didn’t want any East Coast-West Coast beef at all.
#7
"Hate Me Now"
After my first record, they were like,
"You can’t do it again. He can’t do this. He can’t do that. He’s not as big as this one.
He’s not as big as that one. He’ll never be around again. He’s too grimy. He’s too street.
He has a bad following. People around him start trouble."
I had a bad rap, so I blew that away with the second album. So now they mad at that,
and found a different reason to be mad at me.
So "Hate Me Now" was the appropriate record at the time.
#8
"Nastradamus"
The song was a EPMD sample and I just freestyled it. I was riding high off multi-platinum sales off I Am,
and just didn’t want to do anything but freestyle that single and put it out. We had a concept to make the video 3D,
but we didn’t figure out how to get all the glasses to people and time was against us.
Glasses were made, but obviously not enough for every household, so we fucked that one up a little bit.
On that album, there’s a couple of songs that have a certain sound to it that doesn’t sound like anything else I’ve done. And it was a gray area in my life and that album represents that gray area.
It was personal stuff that I'd rather not elaborate on. But I have nothing against that album.
I Am, [released earlier that year], was originally supposed to be a double album,
but the songs leaked and that killed it for me. I didn’t want to touch it.
I hated that because no one’s supposed to hear a song before it’s time, so if that happens,
I didn't fuck with the record. It’s over. The record never existed. So I went and started brand new music.
At the time, my brother Jungle was managing Noriega and Nature,
and he was getting a lot of beats from guys that were just blasting in the business,
like Dame Grease and Swizz Beatz, and those beats was ahead of their time and I didn’t understand them that well.
Then DMX and Nori really made them happen
and I was able to go grab Dame Grease, [who produced four songs from Nastradamus] and be like,
"Yo, work with me." The Nostradamus thing was about the end of the world being the year 2000,
so my record would be dropping right toward the end of the world.
#9
"Got Ur Self A..."
This one was just so huge to me and my then-manager Steve Stoute.
The Sopranos was our favorite thing and we were so happy that HBO gave us that.
[The song sampled Alabama 3's "Woke Up This Morning," the show's theme song.]
I love Goodfellas, but now it went from the movie theater to your household.
I was praying because I wanted to be the first one to use that sample because at that point,
everybody was watching The Sopranos.
We thought there would be nothing cooler than to have their theme song as my theme song,
and we were so happy to use it. Some people think that had something to do with the Jay Z beef,
but that one had nothing to do with any rapper. It was about who could use that sample first.
#10
"2nd Childhood"
How many grownups do you see every day that still act like children? It’s a shame.
In life, with your woman, your man, your family,
there’s grownups who you expect so much more from are just really nothing more than a child.
They're big kids and these are people with power I’m talking about, so "2nd Childhood" was very important.