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A gritty, grimy banger produced by QDIII. Here, 2Pac spits some of his most aggressive verses, dissing his East Coast rivals and celebrating the "Thug Life" code. Hussein Fatal delivers a standout verse that many fans claim rivals Pac’s intensity. The track is a reminder that the Outlawz weren't just followers; they were soldiers who could hold their own on a battlefield beat.
The story of Still I Rise is not a story of an album, but of a legacy. It showed that while you can kill the revolutionary, you cannot kill the revolution. Every time the bass kicked and Tupac’s voice growled, "Long live the rose that grew from concrete," he rose again—defiant, immortal, and still telling his truth. 2pac and outlawz still i rise album
Critically and commercially, the album was a significant success. It debuted at number six on the Billboard 200 and was eventually certified Platinum by the RIAA. Fans gravitated toward the unreleased chemistry found on Baby Don’t Cry (Keep Ya Head Up II), which acted as a spiritual successor to his 1993 hit, reinforcing his role as a champion for Black women and the disenfranchised. A gritty, grimy banger produced by QDIII