Tupac’s
Biography
Name:
Tupac Amaru Shakur
Date
Of Birth:
16th June, 1971
Place
Of Birth:
Brooklyn, New York
Date
Of Death:
September 13, 1996
Place
Of Death:
Las Vegas, Nevada
Height
:
5' 7"
Weight
:
165 lbs
Marital
Status :
Married, but separated
Occupation
:
Actor & Rapper.
Tupac's
Music Career in Short
Tupac
Amaru Shakur was born in 1971 in the Bronx. He moved to Baltimore to attend
its High School for the Performing Arts, where he began writing rap. He then
moved to Marin City, Calif., near Oakland, and continued to write and record.
As a member of the Grammy-nominated group Digital Underground he appeared in
1991 on the track "Same Song" from "This is an EP Release"
and on the album "Sons Of The P." That same year Shakur achieved
individual recognition with the album "2Pacalypse Now," which
spawned the successful singles "Trapped" and "Brenda's Got A
Baby." The album, with references to police officers being killed, drew
notoriety when a lawyer claimed a man accused of killing a Texas trooper had
been riled up by the record. Then-Vice President Dan Quayle targeted
"2Pacalypse Now" in his 1992 battle with Hollywood over traditional
values. Shakur followed up in 1993 with the strong selling album
"Strictly 4 My N.I.G.G.A.Z...," which produced the singles "I
Get Around," "Keep Ya Head Up," and "Papa'z Song."
That year he was nominated for an American Music Award as best new rap hip hop
artist. The next year he appeared with Thug Life on the "Above The
Rim" soundtrack and on the group's album "Volume 1." In a photo
on the album liner he framed his face between his two extended middle fingers.
While in prison last year he indicated he was rethinking his lifestyle.
"Thug Life to me is dead. If it's real, let somebody else represent it,
because I'm tired of it," Shakur told Vibe magazine. "I represented
it too much. I was Thug Life. While serving his sentence for sexual abuse,
Tupac's third solo release, "Me Against The World," spent four weeks
at number one. Life after Prison
After
eight months, Tupac's case was appealed, and Death Row head Suge Knight
promptly bailed Tupac out of jail, and took the opportunity to sign him to
Death Row Records. Tupac turned his troubles to a career that was bigger than
ever. His double album Death Row debut, "All Eyez On Me," sold more
than 5 million copies, scored a number one single, and included tracks with
new label mate, Snoop Doggy Dogg, and Dr. Dre. With three years past since
Snoop's last solo release, and the departure of Death Row Co-Founder, Dr. Dre,
to start his own label, Tupac became Death Row's artistic centerpiece, as well
as its biggest mouthpiece. Death Row and Tupac shared a common enemy: the New
York-based Bad Boy Entertainment. Tupac had earlier implicated Bad Boy
Producer, Sean "Puffy" Combs, and star artist, the Notorious B.I.G.,
in his 1994 shooting. But despite his taunts, Tupac realized danger could be
around the corner. Back in New York City for this year's Video Music Awards,
just three nights before he was shot in Las Vegas, Tupac surrounded himself
with bodyguards and clutched a walkie talkie throughout the evening as a
security precaution.
Tupac's
Good Side
The
media's portrayal of Tupac Shakur as a tattooed thug has focused public
attention on his alleged crimes instead of his music. In reality, this rapper,
raised in Marin City, California, by a Black Panther mother, is more complex
than his detractors like to admit. Shakur (who performs as 2Pac) is a talented
lyricist with a gift for storytelling. He continues to grow as a writer on his
hard-hitting new album, All Eyez on Me
(Death Row/Interscope), which benefits from West Coast-style production by
such artists as Dr. Dre. Recorded shortly after Shakur was released on bail
from a prison sentence for sexual assault, the double album shows a relatively
contemplative rapper who's ready to make peace with some of his demons. The
following list of positive lyrics from Eyez
and 2Pac's previous albums certainly doesn't make him a saint, but it does
reveal surprising emotional depth:
1.
"Life Goes On," All Eyez on
Me (Death Row/Interscope): In one of the most touching moments on his new
album, the rapper with "Thug Life" tatooed on his chest shows that
he isn't insensitive to the loss of those he loves: "How many brothers
fell victim to the streets / Rest in peace young ni**az / Is there heaven for
a G? / Be a lie if I told ya that I never thought of death / My ni**a, we the
last one's left / And life goes on."
2.
"Dear Mama," Me Against the
World (Interscope): An insightful 2Pac repents the stress that he's caused
his mother: "Mama, I finally understand / For a woman it ain't easy
trying to raise a man / You always was committed / A poor single mother on
welfare / Tell me how you did it / There's no way that I can pay you back /
But the plan is to show you that I understand. / You are appreciated."
3.
"Keep Ya Head Up," Strictly 4
My ni**az (Interscope): With a kind of compassion that is rare from any
performer - let alone a gangsta rapper - 2Pac advises: "Be real to our
women / And if we don't we'll have a race of babies / Who hate the ladies /
That make the babies / And since a man can't make one / He has no right to
tell a woman when and where to create one." Hard to believe this is the
guy who wrote "Wonda Why They Call U bi**h."
4.
"Brenda's Got a Baby," 2Pacalypse
Now (Interscope): This tearjerker from 2Pac's first album tells the story
of a 12-year-old trapped in the hopelessness of ghetto life and a teenage
pregnancy. "Now Brenda never really knew her moms / And her dad was a
junkie putting death into his arms / It's sad because I bet Brenda doesn't
know / Just cuz you're in the ghetto / Doesn't mean you can't grow."
5.
"Can U Get Away," Me Against
the World (Interscope): Playing the knight in shining armor, 2Pac
expresses his love for a woman who is mistreated by another man: "I
refuse to give up / Because I believe in what we share / You're living in
prison / And what he's giving can't compare."
6.
"I Ain't Mad at Cha," All
Eyez on Me (Death Row/Interscope): Despite the "f**k-it-all"
persona he often projects, 2Pac shows that he can also forgive. Over a catchy
beat, he raps, "I moved up out of the ghetto / So I 'ain't real now' /
They got so much to say / But I'm just laughing at cha / ni**az just don't
know / I ain't mad at cha." Pretty charitable for a guy who has been shot
five times.