Finding unseen gems from musical history is pretty incredible – especially when it comes from the one and only Tupac Shakur. In February of 1995, the legendary emcee was charged with sexual assault, a charge he continued to refute in the courtroom. During his nine month stint in prison, he penned an in-depth essay which was addressed to young African Americans.

Sent directly to Death Row Records’ publicist and trusted friend Nina Bhadreshwar, Pac went on to say “Use it as you see fit. I am not granting this information to any other publication, not even Time & Rolling Stone”. Sadly, Death Row decided to can the story for unknown reasons, although some say it was to do with the image the label wanted to uphold for Pac.

The introspective letter titled Is Thug Life Dead ends brilliantly, promising a new record which he says, “When I touchtown it will shake the world!” If you didn’t already put two and two together, that ended up being his game-changing album All Eyez On Me. Tupac Shakur tragically died in a drive-by shooting a little more than a year after writing the essay.

The letter was estimated to receive around $50,000 but during the action ended up selling for a whopping $172,725 with just 31 bids. But you, lucky readers, can read it right here absolutely free of charge:

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Header Image: Rolling Stone
Article Images: Gold In Auctions

One of the more lighthearted moments to have come from the recent circus that is US politics and the three presidential debates, has been the hilarious meme comparing Senator Hillary Clinton’s outfits to some iconic looks from Death Row Records.

If you haven’t seen it, enjoy:

https://twitter.com/double_cupp_me/status/789088080426831872

On her 69th birthday, Clinton interestingly chose to stop by The Breakfast Club radio show for an in-depth interview with Charlemagne Tha God During the extensive chat, they discussed everything from Barack Obama to Donald Trump, to the support of Jay-Z and more. Even Stevie Wonder stopped by to sing her Happy Birthday, which was a pretty special surprise.

Charlamagne and co made sure to mention many of Obama’s close ties with the hip-hop community, including his recent boogie to Drake’s Hotline Bling. Jay-Z has also been announced to perform at a Clinton campaign concert in Ohio on November 4, following on from former President Bill Clinton’s appearance at Hov’s Made in America concert.

One of the funniest moments during the interview came when Clinton addressed the meme, which Charlamagne shared with her, showing her dressed in similar outfits to Tupac, Snoop Dogg and Suge Knight. Clinton laughed as Charlamagne asked if she was a fan of Death Row Records. She responded, “I think Death Row, and a lot of other fashion sources have influenced my look, don’t you?”

It’s interesting to see the presidential candidate engaging with the hip-hop media like this, perhaps in response to the close relationship that Obama has held with many notable members of the community, from inviting Frank Ocean Kendrick Lamar, Chance the Rpper and others to the White House, to sharing playlists of his favourite tunes.

Watch below – the meme mention comes in right after the 18 minute mark.

https://youtu.be/jH6IwKXJqmM

Image: Twitter

Tupac Shakur is the latest hip-hop artist to be nominated for entry into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. (Suck it, Gene Simmons.)

The late legend, often considered to be the greatest and most important rapper of all time, has been nominated in the first year of eligibility for an artist – 25 years.

Earlier this year saw gangsta rap legends N.W.A inducted into the Hall of Fame (by Kendrick Lamar, no doubt a future nominee himself). Hip-hop inductees have always been contentious, and only five have ever made the cut: Grandmaster Flash, Run-DMC, the Beastie Boys, Public Enemy and N.W.A.

Earlier this year saw the twentieth anniversary of Tupac’s assassination. A biopic is supposedly being released later this year, and while two trailers have been release, it has been delayed numerous times and there have been no recent updates.

The list of Hall of Fame nominees this year is incredible across all genres. Along with Tupac, first time nominees include Pearl Jam, Jane’s Addiction, Depeche Mode and Joan Baez. Meanwhile, Yes, Chic, Janet Jackson and Kraftwerk are among those who have been nominated in the past.

The full details about the ceremony and all nominees can be found here.

The inductees will be announced in December this year. The 2017 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame ceremony will take place next April at the Barclays Centre in Brooklyn, New York.

Read more: Remembering Tupac 20 years on

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mb1ZvUDvLDY

Image: Rock & Roll Hall of Fame

This week marks twenty years since the death of Tupac Shakur, one of the most enduring and influential rappers of all time. In the two decades since his assassination, endless conspiracy theories have sprung up about whether or not he’s still alive, and if not, who shot him (Read more about musical conspiracy theories here)

Released posthumously just two months after his death, Tupac’s 5th and final album, The Don Killuminati: The 7 Day Theory, was put out under the name of an alter ego he had already introduced on All Eyez On Me, Makaveli. The release added fuel to the theory that Tupac had not died and would instead continue to release music under the name Makaveli following The 7 Day Theory. The album itself was noticeably darker, with a kind of urgent sombreness to it. Written, recorded and mixed in just seven days, he captured a kind of frantic, manic feel, and to this day the album is crucially canonical for hip-hop. Even in death, the alter ego ensured that he was leaving behind an altogether provocative – and for some, threatening – legacy in tandem with his Tupac releases.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nkJA6SYwa94

While time has proven that there Tupac has indeed died, and that there’s no more to come from a reinvented Makaveli, the album itself proved a study in the art of creating and cultivating an alter ego – an exercise musicians of all genres have engaged in. From 19th century composer Robert Schumann’s three characters to Beyoncé’s Sasha Fierce, alter egos have allowed musicians to explore other parts of themselves and their art for centuries.

Both a critic and a composer, it has been said that Schumann created two alter egos who informed his music, though he wrote as a critic championing the young composers of the Romantic era under three names in total. The two vastly different characters allowed him to explore different aspects of music his own. The first, Florestan was Schumann’s extrovert: exuberant and utterly passionate, he was characterised by a quickened, somewhat frenetic pace. The second, Eusebius, was his introvert: a more considered and soft tone, he allowed Schumann a more lyrical and contemplative approach. Though they informed his writing well before his music, these two alter-egos no doubt represented and tapped into different aspects of Schumann’s art. He used these two characters to separate his thoughts as a critic, as well as to explore different sounds and emotions through his own compositions. Indeed, just as it is safe to assume he wasn’t the first musician to create one or more alter egos, he certainly wasn’t the last.

One of the most iconic and one of the first to spring to mind is none other than the late, great David Bowie and his alter ego Ziggy Stardust, who was introduced on the singer’s fifth album, The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars.

The chart-topping album followed the antics of Bowie’s bisexual rock-star extraterrestrial, Ziggy Stardust, the most famous of his many personas. Through the cultivation of such an extraordinarily out-there character, Bowie was able to delve into themes of sexual exploration and social commentary, further sparking conversation surrounding Bowie’s own sexuality. The album, while met with controversy has since been heralded as one of the greatest records of all time. A seminal work not only for Bowie, but for those to come after him. 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XXq5VvYAI1Q

While Bowie and Ziggy Stardust, like Schumann and his two alter egos, are relatively easy to differentiate between, the lines can sometimes become blurred between artist and alter ego. Take Eminem, a rapper who has taken things further than having a few different stage-names. He has created entire personas for albums and uses them to explore themes and styles.

The late 90s introduced us to his alter ego, Slim Shady in all his violent aggression –  a character who went places Eminem couldn’t and who gripped the attention of the music world so tightly it was often difficult to separate the character from the creator. The lines between Slim and Eminem because blurred and almost undecipherable to the mainstream media, who famously demonised Eminem from early on, and refused to let go. His Slim Shady persona was so well defined, so memorably vulgar and polarising that his 2002 album The Eminem Show referred directly to the strength creating a character – or more than one – can have, whether positive or negative. 

Having seemingly moved on from Slim Shady, the lead single from the album is Eminem lamenting, however humorously that he’d “created a monster, ’cause nobody wants to see Marshall no more/They want Shady, I’m chopped liver.”  A sentiment that was echoed over ten years later on Monster – his Marshall Mathers LP2 collaboration with Rihanna. 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eJO5HU_7_1w

While Eminem wrestled with finding some kind of balance between himself and Slim Shady, other artists were going ham exploring fully formed alternative identities from album to album. It often happens to aid the identity of a full concept album, either one exploring a particular story or theme, such as Alex Cameron‘s new album Jumping The Shark in which he portrays a washed up celebrity has-been.

Emo icons My Chemical Romance have adopted various themed personas in efforts to play out different concepts. Creating two fine concept albums in Welcome to the Black Parade and Danger Days: The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys. The first album a rock opera of kinds, focused on the story of a dying cancer patient a they sought out redemption and revenge before death inevitably came for them. The later album’s concept was that of a gang of rebels living in a Blade Runner referencing post-apocalyptic California as they each undertook the characters of their Killjoys alter egos: Party Poison (Gerard Way), Jet Star (Ray Toro), Fun Ghoul (Frank Iero), and Kobra Kid (Mikey Way) – all of whom can be seen across the music videos the album produced.

Another common use for alter egos is to introduce fans to a vastly different musical style, attitude and often, appearance, of an artist. This is particularly prevalent in pop music, in which artists reinvent themselves, often from album to album. 

Pop singer Christina Aguilera underwent a transformation for her 2001 album Stripped, fully committing to her alter ego Xtina culminating in tattooing the name across the back of her neck. The album opens with “waited a long time for like, feels right now/allow me to introduce myself” as she does away with her sweet, bubblegum pop persona in favour for a more empowered, bold sound and attitude – perhaps no better illustrated than in her single Fighter. It’s a method that has served Aguilera well throughout her career – while Xtina was the first and arguably the most finessed of her alter egos, she has immersed herself fully into a new character come each album. She introduced Baby Jane (based on the character from the 1962 movie Whatever Happened to Baby Jane?) in 2006 following a couple of years of embracing a more retro-aesthetic. The single Candyman and other singles off the album cemented Baby Jane’s big-band-goes-mid-2000s-pop niche. 

The many looks of Xtina. Image: TMZ

The many looks of Xtina. Image: TMZ 

Beyoncé too, has played her hand at establishing an alter ego, most notably when she gave her more sensual, aggressive on-stage alter ego Sasha Fierce an entire album. On I Am… Sasha Fierce, Beyoncé didn’t hold back, demanding attention and equality within a relationship and pushing ultimately controversial (think the conversation surrounding whether or not Single Ladies is a feminist anthem) content into the limelight. As time has gone on, Sasha Fierce, whether or not she remains a part of Beyoncé’s creative process, has informed the singer’s work, the strength and “take no shit” attitude she promotes evident even in her most recent work. 

One of the most fascinating aspects of musical alter egos is that they are prevalent throughout every style of music around. Look at metal bands like Gwar and Slipknot, who have built entire careers around masked characters and dramatic, often gruesome costumes, with matching lyrics, interview footage and so on. 

Another practice we’ve seen occur increasingly often of late has come from artists introducing their “real selves”, as though implying their previous output had adopted an identity. The latest example of this is Chet Faker announcing that he’ll now be releasing music under his real name, Nick Murphy, as if Chet Faker had been a separate identity. Lady Gaga just announced a new album titled Joanne, which is her middle name, and Young Thug just released music under his own real name, Jeffery. While these changes don’t indicates a fully formed alter ego, they nevertheless employ similar techniques to comfortably and easily shift their music into a new space with a new identity.

This practice of creating and exploring a character in order to explore different aspects of one’s musical output has endured in the time since Schumann’s death. Artists can see the value and freedom in having more than one persona when creating their art, with many turning to an alter ego in order to produce entire careers and concept albums. A clever and creative way to not only express oneself in new ways, but to keep musical output dynamic and ever-changing, it’s one of music’s most interesting tools across almost every style imaginable. 

Image: Rolling Stone

Tupac Shakur died twenty years ago today. Hip-hop is sitting solemnly this week, as we remember the life and death of the great Makaveli.

Among the tributes, articles, investigations and conspiracies pouring out today, the upcoming Tupac biopic All Eyez On Me has shared its second official theatrical trailer. The first was released to coincide with his 45th birthday earlier this year – and no, it’s not the unauthorised Chinese version.

The film was initially schedule to be released this month, probably around now. However, it was pushed back until November, allegedly due to licensing issues for the track Ambitionz Az A Ridah, with production money owed to Dogg Pound‘s Daz Dillinger.

The biopic is now scheduled for a November release. However, considering the film (and many proposed Tupac films before it) has already faced many issues, it’s not going to be that surprising if there are more delays. The trailer leaves this open, concluding with the simple words “Coming Soon.”

The film is set to star Demetrius Shipp Jr as Tupac Shakur, Jamal Woolard as The Notorious B.I.G, who previously played the late rapper in his own biopic Notorious, Danai Gurira as Afenia Shakur, Stefon Washington as Puff Daddy, Grace Gibson as Faith Evans and more.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3ZlXHAbX3TY

Read Howl & Echoes feature article: Remembering Tupac: 20 years on

Read more: Celebrate Tupac’s “All Eyez On Me” Through Samples

Image: MTV

Even in death, Tupac Shakur and his music still reign supreme. This year marks the 20th since that fateful night in 1996, when the rapper was shot after a Mike Tyson fight in Las Vegas, losing his fight for life six days later on September 13, twenty years ago today.

Tupac was one of the most outspoken and prolific rappers of all time. One of the most multitalented artists of all time, he was a rapper, a poet, a producer, an actor, an activist, a nice-guy, a thug, a legend, a prophet, and he was also a man taken way before his time. Despite his ‘Thug Life’ attitude and numerous assault charges, he was a man of the people. “He represented, more than anything … that angst for people who felt oppression and poverty or felt marginalised,” MC Khaled M said. “He was the voice of the voiceless. Up until this day, I don’t think we have a hip-hop artist being able to replicate … his depth and passion.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r9uEtplq6CI

The emotion he put into his music, his social commentary, and his call-to-action approach to telling stories of inner-city life are still as relevant today as they were in the early 90s. Tupac set the bar for hardened gangsta rappers, but also showed us that it was okay to drop your guard and show emotion sometimes too.

Tupac had many dedicated fans, some who have concocted numerous conspiracy theories surrounding his death. Many of these hinge around his seemingly prophetic lyrics and his name change from Tupac to Makaveli, as seen on the writing on the sleeve of his final album (which came out after he died), The Don Killuminati: The 7 Day Theory: “Exit Tupac, Enter Makaveli.”

While everyone would surely love for Tupac to secretly be hiding in exile in Cuba with Elvis, Bowie, and Prince, common sense dictates that, everything else aside, there is no way he could have remained this silent for twenty years. No way he could have sat by and said nothing with all that is going on in the world.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5VL2ZkK7rSI

In the twenty years since Tupac last graced this earth, there have been plenty of rappers who have enjoyed the same (and more) levels of success, though arguably none have had the lasting impact on music and popular culture that Tupac has. Tupac is still being honoured today. Before his death, he drafted a logo and theme for a restaurant, with the hopes of opening up ‘The Powamekka Café’ – a music-themed restaurant where artists could feature their own recipes. Two decades later, Take 3 will finally bring his vision to life. Take 3, a restaurant based in Fresno, California, will pay tribute by opening the ‘The Powamekka Café’ pop-up restaurant today on September 13.

Later this year, the Tupac biopic will hit theatres too – hopefully it will depict the everlasting Tupac that us 90s hip-hop kids grew up listening to, and the new generation of hip-hop heads can see why there is still such love for the man and the era he helped define.

Most ordinary people remember Tupac and honour his memory and music by putting one of his CDs into the stereo and rapping away; by buying his posthumously released albums and tributes, or by watching Above The Rim.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y1LXb8RAOtA

No matter how many times I hear songs like Baby Don’t Cry, I Ain’t Mad At Cha, Changes, or Brenda’s Got A Baby, they still evoke the same raw emotions in me that they always have. It’s difficult to believe it has been twenty years. The tributes will undoubtedly flood in overnight, and this will be but one in a plethora.

Growing up playing sport and listening to hip-hop, it was hard to come to terms with emotions I was having. The man that hip-hop and basketball were raising me to be was a hardened, don’t-show-emotion, feelings-are-for-the-weak, misogynistic type of man. It was important to have people like Tupac in my life to show me that even the hardest of men can say beautiful things; to be ‘the rose that grew from the concrete’.

Tupac was, and forever will be, one of the greatest men, teachers, and rappers of all time. Gone but never forgotten – twenty years on, I hope you’re still resting, homie.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eXvBjCO19QY

Image: Biography.com

Due to licensing issues, the forthcoming Tupac biopic, All Eyez On Me, has been delayed. It was expected to be released in September this year, but is now projected to premiere later in the year.

According to NME, the film’s production team are facing licensing issues for the track Ambitionz Az A Ridah, off the album after which the biopic is named. Dogg Pound‘s Daz Dillinger contributed to production on the track and has claimed rights, which are currently being disputed by publishers BMG, who argue that they are the sole owners. Dillinger is alleging that BMG owes him $75,000.

The biopic is now scheduled for a November release. However, considering the film (and many proposed Tupac films before it) has already faced many issues, it’s not going to be that surprising if there are more delays.

The film is set to star Demetrius Shipp Jr as Tupac Shakur, Jamal Woolard as The Notorious B.I.G, who previously played the late rapper in his own biopic, Notorious, Danai Gurira as Afenia Shakur, Stefon Washington as Puff Daddy, Grace Gibson as Faith Evans and more.

UPDATE: Daz Dillinger refutes the claim.

Earlier this year on what would’ve been Tupac’s 45th birthday, the production team released the film’s first official trailer. Watch below:

https://youtu.be/lQ0Tj2NgtaE

Image: The Source

The notion of a major Tupac biopic, or film, or documentary is probably one of the most mythical non-events in hip-hop’s history. The number of times it’s been rumoured, restarted, cast, confirmed, canned, or failed has led it to become a thing of legend. So the news that not only is a Tupac biopic confirmed and finished filming in April, but that an actual trailer is available to watch right now, is kind of awesome.

As we have previously reported, the biopic is to be called All Eyez on Me. This particular film has had a number of incarnations in itself, but earlier this year was confirmed, with Demetrius Shipp Jr cast in the starring role.

Today would have been the late legend’s 45th birthday and to celebrate his legacy, and to get fans excited for the film, a trailer has been released.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lQ0Tj2NgtaE

In the trailer, we hear Afeni’s voice warning Pac about dangers of the world he’s living in and of being a black man, interspersed with scenes of money, guns, women and an audience chanting his name. We also see a brief moment of plot when he’s seen talking about exposing the truth of his story after death. I feel like this film is going to cause a lot of online arguments.

The film will also star Jamal Woolard as Biggie, who previously played the late rapper in his own biopic, Notorious, Danai Gurira as Afenia Shakur, Stefon Washington as Puff Daddy, Grace Gibson as Faith Evans and more.

All Eyez On Me is expected to be released on November 11 2016.

Image: VladTV

Last year, Power 106’s VinRican started the series Wax Only, where he takes classic hip-hop albums and mixes them side-by-side with the tracks they sample. So far, he has looked at Mobb Deep’s Infamous, Jay-Z’s The Blueprint, Snoop Dogg’s Doggystyle, Dr. Dre’s Chronic, A Tribe Called Quest’s Midnight Marauders, as well as J Dilla’s music and heaps more. Check out the YouTube channel here.

In February this year, Tupac’s All Eyez On Me turned 20-years-old. All Eyez On Me is one of the greatest hip-hop albums of all time and was rap’s first double LP. It encapsulated everything we knew and loved about the legendary Tupac, and features my favourite of his songs, I Ain’t Mad At Cha (why this album is so great lyrically is a different story for a different time).

In VinRican’s video below, he takes us on a journey through how some of the album’s tracks got their sound. He mixes the sampled song with Tupac’s songs, like Joeski Love’s Pee-Wee’s Dance with Ambitionz Az a Ridah; Cameo’s Candy with All About You; Bootsy’s Rubber Band’s I’d Rather Be With You with Rather Be Ya N****; and The O’Jays‘ Brandy with Life Goes On.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kXEgNt5UpH4

Hearing the records in their original form gives Tupac fans an insight into how the records were produced and shows the depth of musicality that producers such as Dr. Dre, Daz, DJ Quik, and Johnny J had in order to produce these classic tracks.

Now that Tupac has been immortalised yet again by the comparison of his sampled tracks with his actual songs, I can safely say that, for this classic album, “Life goes on”.

Image: ambrosiaforheads.com

In a never before seen interview with MTV, Tupac has dropped some truth from 1992 which reflects America’s political and economic climate from then, and which is unfortunately still true in 2016.

Tupac starts by calling out current Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump: “If you want to be successful, you want to be like Trump, it’s gimmie gimmie gimmie, push, push, push, push, step, step, step, crush, crush, crush,” Pac said. “That’s how it all is.”

We all knew Tupac was wise beyond his years on Earth, such as when he commented on the 2008 presidential elections in his song, Changes: “And although it seems heaven sent, we ain’t ready to see a Black president.”

He also predicted 9/11 in Good Die Young: “It was more than a tragedy/ Emotions be grabbin’ me/ Plane fell from the sky/ We tryin’ to figure what happened/ Burnin’ churches, fearin’ God who can be so cruel?” And don’t forget that he also predicted his own and Biggie Smalls’ death.

Of course, it’s all a matter of interpretation and is probably a reflection of the fact that America is still in need of change.

Pac continues, “It’s too much money here. I mean, nobody should be hitting the lotto for $36 million and we’ve got people starving in the streets … There’s no way Michael Jackson should have, or whoever Jackson should have, a million, thousand drupel billion dollars and there’s people starving. There’s no way!” Pac says in the interview. “There’s no way that people should own planes and there are people who don’t have houses.”

Pac was a scholar; his music has touched me and inspired me throughout my life. I could listen to the man speak or rap all day (and often have). It’s always a shame to think that the world lost such an activist just as his voice was starting to be heard.

“Even if you earned it, you still owe,” he says. “Look at me, I don’t have that mega money, but I feel guilty walking by somebody…If I have three-thousand dollars in my pocket, I feel like it’s wrong to give that person a quarter or a dollar.”

“Can you imagine someone has $32 million and this person has nothing?” he asks as he grows further outraged. “And you can sleep?” This is another point that can today be directed at Trump, who states he is worth $10 billion and has reportedly given no personal money to charity over the past five years.

If Pac were alive today, I believe he would have remained vocal and continued to call out those in charge for their injustices for not helping those less fortunate.

Check out the rest of Pac’s speech below.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GL-ZoNhUFmc

Image: YouTube