2pacnbiggie
New member
5.Fuckin You Tonight
Featuring R Kelly
Produced By Daron Jones (of 112) and Puffy
Lil Cease: We just got locked up again, this is when police ran in the crib and found guns and weed. Next day, Puff bailed us out. We went straight out of jail to the studio - no belts, no laces in the shoes, no nothing.
D Roc: We had just got arrested so we was like "We fucked up. Gotta go make some money. Time to go to the studio."
Lil Cease: Puff told Big, "I'm up here with R Kelly. I'm trying to get the nigga on the album. Come fuck with this nigga." So we went straight there. R Kelly came into the studio and Big was kickin it, talking, and the next thing you know R Kelly was in the booth with his shirt off singing the hook to the song. Big didn't even have his vocals. We just wanted to get this nigga's voice on this album. The next day, Big wrote the verses to it.
6. Last Day
Featuring The Lox
Produced By Havoc, Co produced by Puff and Stevie J
Jadakiss: When we did "Last Days," we were still, I wouldnt say rookies, but we were new to the Bad Boy family. We got the call from Darren [Dean] from Ruff Ryders, our manager back then. He wanted us to go to Daddy's House. We didn't even know we was getting on a B.I.G. album, so when he called us to get on it, we was wild happy. We go down there, walk in, and it's smoky - they used to have it like the Shaolin Temple. Anyway, the beat's knocking, Junior M.A.F.I.A. was in there, and we was drinkin, smoking heavy, living the dream, like, "We about to get on a song with Big!"
Puff was the overseer, but song wise, Big could do whatever he wanted. He was like, "We just going to make a hard joint," cause it wasn't going to be a single. He just told us to do us, and let us rock. We probably took a little longer than usual, cause it was Big and we was probably a little nervous. But after we settled down, hit a couple blunts, we was good.
I had a verse I wanted to use, something that I had already. I was probably being lazy. I spit it to Big and he was like, "Nah Kiss, I know you can come harder than that. Don't use that one, make something right now." I was like, "Damn, Big told me to do it over. I know I got to come with another one." So I came with the joint I came with, and he was just feeling that shit crazy.
Big laid his verse last. He out smoked everybody. Niggas was on the floor all asleep and slumped over in the booth and he went in at like six, seven in the morning, and laid some crazy shit. We finally left right when they was setting up the mic and all of that. We was tired. We was young niggas. All that weed was killing us back then.
Havoc: I got a call from Puff, he asked for a record for Big and he wanted some street shit. The beat that ended up on the album wasn't the original beat that I had done. I did a beat that Puff liked and the reel had got stolen. So I had a whole new beat. Puff co produced it with me and then The Lox jumped on it. Puffy added like a string to it and like some weird funny sound. It was almost similiar to the original beat, but the original one was way better than that. I wish that could pop up now. I had made the beat from scratch, without putting it on disc and then saving it to disc. I just recorded it straight to reel and somebody hated, and stole the reel.
7. I Love The Dough
Featuring Jay Z and Angela Winbush
Produced By Easy Mo Bee
Nashiem Myrick: Jigga and Big, them niggas was really battling. Both of them don't write their rhymes down, they just say it in their heads. On the low, they was going at it. Not going at each other in the lyrics, but going at it skill wise. It was a sight to see. It was like, "Let me see what this nigga is going to do in the booth." You could tell they were testing each other.
Easy Mo Bee: I noticed that Puff was naying a lot of my joints, like, "Nah..." Then I was checking out what they were doing and I was like, OK, so that's the direction they're going in. They were taking a more commercial, R&B approach. The beats were tighter and cleaner, usuage of more keyboards. I came up to Puff like, "Remember this joint - Rene and Angela, "I Love You More?" Puff was like, "Yo, go hook it up nigga. I don't want to talk about it, hook it up." So I went and I hooked it up, drummed it up, ended up playing keyboards on the track and everything. I had no idea what Big was gonna put to it. I didn't even know he was gonna walk last minute in the studio and be like, "Yo, Mo, I'm doing this joint with Jigga!"
I'm looking up from the equipment, like, "Word? Aight." Big came in with Jay, and they start cross pacing. Imagine two people pacing back and forth, criss crossing each other, and not looking at each other, doing their writing process in their head, mumbling to themselves, getting their lyrics right and kickin it with each other in between. They was taking their time. It was me, D Dot and I dont remember the engineer. I remember Puff came in with some fly girl. After a while Big came over to me and was like, "Yo, me and Jay, we gonna go out for a little while. We'll be back. That night was the last time I saw Big. I waited and waited for them to come back, and it got so late, I just told D Dot like, "Ima break out." To this day, I wish I could've been there when Big, Jigga, and Angela Winbush did them vocals and everything. They had gone and got Angela Winbush, reiterating "I Love You More" to "I Love The Dough," I fell out. I was like, Oh man, they doing their thing. They went back and got the original girl. I know that was definately Puff's idea. They went and got the original artist. Have her sing the hook over, not just sing the hook over but reiterate and change the words up. I was happy with that.
8. What's Beef?
Produced By Nashiem Myrick and Carlos Broady
Lil Cease: That was supposed to be the original Bone Thugs beat. Then one day Biggie was sitting there fucking with it by himself and he put three verses together and a hook and was like, "I'ma kick this song." It was easy to put together, but then again, Big made everything look easy. It wasn't really about nobody in particular. It's just explaining to niggas what real beef is. He was talking about a real beef when your family and your kids aint safe. He was putting it down on real gangsta street level on that song, not just thata regular thug level shit. When you're going to war with a nigga that's dangerous and you dangerous - that's the type of situation you gotta worry about. It was a real uppity up street record.
9. B.I.G. Interlude
Produced By Biggie and D Dot
Samples Schoolly D's "PSK (What Does It Mean)"
Schoolly D: I knew B.I.G. WAS GOING TO DO "PSK" justice. He was one of my favorite rappers. I think as flow goes, the world misses Biggie. The thing is, younger cats were coming up to me after my shows like, "Yeah, you doing Biggie's song." I'm like, "What the fuck are you talking about?!"
10. Mo Money Mo Problems
Featuring Puffy and Ma$e
Produced By Stevie J. and Puffy
Stevie J: Ma$e came to me in the studio one day with this "I'm Comin Out" sample. He's like, "When you gonna use this right here? Either my album, Puff album, or Big album?" So we laid the track first but nobody knew who was gonna get it. And then when Big came with the "B-I-G P-O-P-P-A!" What!? That was Big's joint. Everybody felt that.
11. Niggas Bleed
Produced By Nashiem Myrick, Carlos Broady, Puffy and Stevie J.
Nashiem Myrick: I think this was done after Pac died. I did that in Daddy's House. This is one of the songs that Big took a while on. After he did the first verse, he waited for a while, and came back and did the rest.
Carlos Broady: Actually, that was a joint we jacked. I had to play it over. I'm not telling [the name of the record we sampled]. I don't think that joint was cleared.
Featuring R Kelly
Produced By Daron Jones (of 112) and Puffy
Lil Cease: We just got locked up again, this is when police ran in the crib and found guns and weed. Next day, Puff bailed us out. We went straight out of jail to the studio - no belts, no laces in the shoes, no nothing.
D Roc: We had just got arrested so we was like "We fucked up. Gotta go make some money. Time to go to the studio."
Lil Cease: Puff told Big, "I'm up here with R Kelly. I'm trying to get the nigga on the album. Come fuck with this nigga." So we went straight there. R Kelly came into the studio and Big was kickin it, talking, and the next thing you know R Kelly was in the booth with his shirt off singing the hook to the song. Big didn't even have his vocals. We just wanted to get this nigga's voice on this album. The next day, Big wrote the verses to it.
6. Last Day
Featuring The Lox
Produced By Havoc, Co produced by Puff and Stevie J
Jadakiss: When we did "Last Days," we were still, I wouldnt say rookies, but we were new to the Bad Boy family. We got the call from Darren [Dean] from Ruff Ryders, our manager back then. He wanted us to go to Daddy's House. We didn't even know we was getting on a B.I.G. album, so when he called us to get on it, we was wild happy. We go down there, walk in, and it's smoky - they used to have it like the Shaolin Temple. Anyway, the beat's knocking, Junior M.A.F.I.A. was in there, and we was drinkin, smoking heavy, living the dream, like, "We about to get on a song with Big!"
Puff was the overseer, but song wise, Big could do whatever he wanted. He was like, "We just going to make a hard joint," cause it wasn't going to be a single. He just told us to do us, and let us rock. We probably took a little longer than usual, cause it was Big and we was probably a little nervous. But after we settled down, hit a couple blunts, we was good.
I had a verse I wanted to use, something that I had already. I was probably being lazy. I spit it to Big and he was like, "Nah Kiss, I know you can come harder than that. Don't use that one, make something right now." I was like, "Damn, Big told me to do it over. I know I got to come with another one." So I came with the joint I came with, and he was just feeling that shit crazy.
Big laid his verse last. He out smoked everybody. Niggas was on the floor all asleep and slumped over in the booth and he went in at like six, seven in the morning, and laid some crazy shit. We finally left right when they was setting up the mic and all of that. We was tired. We was young niggas. All that weed was killing us back then.
Havoc: I got a call from Puff, he asked for a record for Big and he wanted some street shit. The beat that ended up on the album wasn't the original beat that I had done. I did a beat that Puff liked and the reel had got stolen. So I had a whole new beat. Puff co produced it with me and then The Lox jumped on it. Puffy added like a string to it and like some weird funny sound. It was almost similiar to the original beat, but the original one was way better than that. I wish that could pop up now. I had made the beat from scratch, without putting it on disc and then saving it to disc. I just recorded it straight to reel and somebody hated, and stole the reel.
7. I Love The Dough
Featuring Jay Z and Angela Winbush
Produced By Easy Mo Bee
Nashiem Myrick: Jigga and Big, them niggas was really battling. Both of them don't write their rhymes down, they just say it in their heads. On the low, they was going at it. Not going at each other in the lyrics, but going at it skill wise. It was a sight to see. It was like, "Let me see what this nigga is going to do in the booth." You could tell they were testing each other.
Easy Mo Bee: I noticed that Puff was naying a lot of my joints, like, "Nah..." Then I was checking out what they were doing and I was like, OK, so that's the direction they're going in. They were taking a more commercial, R&B approach. The beats were tighter and cleaner, usuage of more keyboards. I came up to Puff like, "Remember this joint - Rene and Angela, "I Love You More?" Puff was like, "Yo, go hook it up nigga. I don't want to talk about it, hook it up." So I went and I hooked it up, drummed it up, ended up playing keyboards on the track and everything. I had no idea what Big was gonna put to it. I didn't even know he was gonna walk last minute in the studio and be like, "Yo, Mo, I'm doing this joint with Jigga!"
I'm looking up from the equipment, like, "Word? Aight." Big came in with Jay, and they start cross pacing. Imagine two people pacing back and forth, criss crossing each other, and not looking at each other, doing their writing process in their head, mumbling to themselves, getting their lyrics right and kickin it with each other in between. They was taking their time. It was me, D Dot and I dont remember the engineer. I remember Puff came in with some fly girl. After a while Big came over to me and was like, "Yo, me and Jay, we gonna go out for a little while. We'll be back. That night was the last time I saw Big. I waited and waited for them to come back, and it got so late, I just told D Dot like, "Ima break out." To this day, I wish I could've been there when Big, Jigga, and Angela Winbush did them vocals and everything. They had gone and got Angela Winbush, reiterating "I Love You More" to "I Love The Dough," I fell out. I was like, Oh man, they doing their thing. They went back and got the original girl. I know that was definately Puff's idea. They went and got the original artist. Have her sing the hook over, not just sing the hook over but reiterate and change the words up. I was happy with that.
8. What's Beef?
Produced By Nashiem Myrick and Carlos Broady
Lil Cease: That was supposed to be the original Bone Thugs beat. Then one day Biggie was sitting there fucking with it by himself and he put three verses together and a hook and was like, "I'ma kick this song." It was easy to put together, but then again, Big made everything look easy. It wasn't really about nobody in particular. It's just explaining to niggas what real beef is. He was talking about a real beef when your family and your kids aint safe. He was putting it down on real gangsta street level on that song, not just thata regular thug level shit. When you're going to war with a nigga that's dangerous and you dangerous - that's the type of situation you gotta worry about. It was a real uppity up street record.
9. B.I.G. Interlude
Produced By Biggie and D Dot
Samples Schoolly D's "PSK (What Does It Mean)"
Schoolly D: I knew B.I.G. WAS GOING TO DO "PSK" justice. He was one of my favorite rappers. I think as flow goes, the world misses Biggie. The thing is, younger cats were coming up to me after my shows like, "Yeah, you doing Biggie's song." I'm like, "What the fuck are you talking about?!"
10. Mo Money Mo Problems
Featuring Puffy and Ma$e
Produced By Stevie J. and Puffy
Stevie J: Ma$e came to me in the studio one day with this "I'm Comin Out" sample. He's like, "When you gonna use this right here? Either my album, Puff album, or Big album?" So we laid the track first but nobody knew who was gonna get it. And then when Big came with the "B-I-G P-O-P-P-A!" What!? That was Big's joint. Everybody felt that.
11. Niggas Bleed
Produced By Nashiem Myrick, Carlos Broady, Puffy and Stevie J.
Nashiem Myrick: I think this was done after Pac died. I did that in Daddy's House. This is one of the songs that Big took a while on. After he did the first verse, he waited for a while, and came back and did the rest.
Carlos Broady: Actually, that was a joint we jacked. I had to play it over. I'm not telling [the name of the record we sampled]. I don't think that joint was cleared.
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