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The Notorious B.I.G.

Christopher George Latore Wallace (May 21, 1972 – March 9, 1997), better known by his stage names the Notorious B.I.G., Biggie Smalls, or simply Biggie,[2] was an American rapper. Rooted in East Coast hip hop and particularly gangsta rap, he is cited in various media lists as being one of the greatest rappers of all time. Wallace became known for his distinctive laid-back lyrical delivery, offsetting the lyrics' often grim content. His music was often semi-autobiographical, telling of hardship and criminality, but also of debauchery and celebration.[3]

The Notorious B.I.G.
Wallace in 1997
Born
Christopher George Latore Wallace

(1972-05-21)May 21, 1972
DiedMarch 9, 1997(1997-03-09) (aged 24)
Cause of deathDrive-by homicide (gunshot wound)
Other names
  • Biggie Smalls
  • Biggie
  • Frank White
  • Big
  • Big Poppa
  • MC CWest
Occupations
  • Rapper
  • songwriter
  • record producer
Years active1992–1997
Spouse
(m. 1994; sep. 1996)
[1]
PartnerCharli Baltimore (1995–1997)[a]
Children2, including C. J.
AwardsFull list
Musical career
Genres
Labels
Formerly of
  • The Commission

Born and raised in Brooklyn, New York City, Wallace signed to Sean "Puffy" Combs' label Bad Boy Records as it launched in 1993, and gained exposure through features on several other artists' singles that year. His debut album Ready to Die (1994) was met with widespread critical acclaim, and included his signature songs "Juicy" and "Big Poppa". The album made him the central figure in East Coast hip hop, and restored New York's visibility at a time when the West Coast hip hop scene was dominating hip hop music.[4] Wallace was awarded the 1995 Billboard Music Awards' Rapper of the Year.[5] The following year, he led his protégé group Junior M.A.F.I.A., a team of himself and longtime friends, including Lil' Kim, to chart success.

During 1996, while recording his second album, Wallace became ensnarled in the escalating East Coast–West Coast hip hop feud. Following Tupac Shakur's murder in Las Vegas in September 1996, speculations of involvement in Shakur's murder by criminal elements orbiting the Bad Boy circle circulated as a result of Wallace's public feud with Shakur. On March 9, 1997, six months after Shakur's death, Wallace was murdered by an unidentified assailant in a drive-by shooting while visiting Los Angeles. Wallace's second album Life After Death, a double album, was released two weeks later. It reached number one on the Billboard 200, and eventually achieved a diamond certification in the United States.[6]

With two more posthumous albums released, Wallace has certified sales of over 28 million copies in the United States,[7] including 21 million albums.[8] Rolling Stone has called him the "greatest rapper that ever lived",[9] and Billboard named him the greatest rapper of all time.[10] The Source magazine named him the greatest rapper of all time in its 150th issue. In 2006, MTV ranked him at No. 3 on their list of The Greatest MCs of All Time, calling him possibly "the most skillful ever on the mic".[11] In 2020, he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

Life and career

1972–1991: Early life

Christopher George Latore Wallace was born at St. Mary's Hospital in the New York City borough of Brooklyn on May 21, 1972, the only child of Jamaican immigrant parents. His mother, Voletta Wallace, was a preschool teacher, while his father, Selwyn George Latore, was a welder and politician.[12][13] His father left the family when Wallace was two years old, and his mother worked two jobs while raising him. Wallace grew up at 226 St. James Place in Brooklyn's Clinton Hill,[14] near the border with Bedford-Stuyvesant.[12][15] Raised Catholic, Wallace excelled at Queen of All Saints Middle School, winning several awards as an English student. He attended St Peter Claver Church in the borough.[16] He was nicknamed "Big" because he was overweight by the age of 10.[17] Wallace claimed to have begun dealing drugs at about age 12. His mother, often at work, first learned of this during his adulthood.[18]

He began rapping as a teenager, entertaining people on the streets, and performed with local groups, the Old Gold Brothers as well as the Techniques.[19] His earliest stage name was MC CWest.[20] At his request, Wallace transferred from Bishop Loughlin Memorial High School in Fort Greene to George Westinghouse Career and Technical Education High School in Downtown Brooklyn, which future rappers Jay-Z and Busta Rhymes were also attending. According to his mother, Wallace was still a good student but developed a "smart-ass" attitude at the new school.[13] At age 17 in 1989, Wallace dropped out of high school and became more involved in crime. That same year in 1989, he was arrested on weapons charges in Brooklyn and sentenced to five years' probation. In 1990, he was arrested on a violation of his probation.[21] A year later, Wallace was arrested in North Carolina for dealing crack cocaine. He spent nine months in jail before making bail.[18]

1991–1994: Early career and first child

After release from jail, Wallace made a demo tape, Microphone Murderer, while calling himself Biggie Smalls, alluding both to Calvin Lockhart's character in the 1975 film Let's Do It Again and to his own stature and obesity, 6 feet 3 inches (1.91 m) and 300 to 380 pounds (140 to 170 kg).[22] Although Wallace reportedly lacked real ambition for the tape, local DJ Mister Cee, of Big Daddy Kane and Juice Crew association, discovered and promoted it, thus it was heard by The Source rap magazine's editor in 1992.[21]

In March, The Source column "Unsigned Hype", dedicated to airing promising rappers, featured Wallace.[23] He then spun the attention into a recording.[23] Upon hearing the demo tape, Sean "Puffy" Combs, still with the A&R department of Uptown Records, arranged to meet Wallace. Promptly signed to Uptown, Wallace appeared on labelmates Heavy D & the Boyz's 1993 song "A Buncha Niggas".[19][24] Mid-year, or a year after Wallace's signing, Uptown fired Combs, who, a week later, launched Bad Boy Records,[25] instantly Wallace's new label.[26]

On August 8, 1993, Jan Jackson, Wallace's long-time girlfriend, gave birth to his first child, T'yanna,[26] although the couple had parted by then.[27] Himself a high-school dropout, Wallace promised his daughter "everything she wanted", reasoning that if only he had that in childhood, he would have graduated at the top of his class.[28] Wallace continued dealing drugs, but Combs discovered this, and obliged him to stop.[19] Later that year, Wallace gained exposure on a remix of Mary J. Blige's single "Real Love". Having found his moniker Biggie Smalls already claimed, he took a new one, holding for good, The Notorious B.I.G.[29]

Around this time, Wallace became friends with fellow rapper Tupac Shakur. Lil' Cease recalled the pair as close, often traveling together whenever they were not working. According to him, Wallace was a frequent guest at Shakur's home and they spent time together when Shakur was in California or Washington, D.C.[30] Yukmouth, an Oakland emcee, claimed that Wallace's style was inspired by Shakur.[31]

The "Real Love" remix single was followed by another remix of a Mary J. Blige song, "What's the 411?" Wallace's successes continued, if to a lesser extent, on remixes of Neneh Cherry's song "Buddy X" and of reggae artist Super Cat's song "Dolly My Baby", also featuring Combs, all in 1993. In April, Wallace's solo track "Party and Bullshit" was released on the Who's the Man? soundtrack.[32] In July 1994, he appeared alongside LL Cool J and Busta Rhymes on a remix of his own labelmate Craig Mack's "Flava in Ya Ear", the remix reaching No. 9 on the Billboard Hot 100.[33]

1994: Ready to Die and marriage to Faith Evans

On August 4, 1994, Wallace married R&B singer Faith Evans, whom he had met eight days prior at a Bad Boy photoshoot.[34] Five days later, Wallace had his first pop chart success as a solo artist with double A-side, "Juicy / Unbelievable", which reached No. 27 as the lead single to his debut album.[35]

Ready to Die was released on September 13, 1994. It reached No. 13 on the Billboard 200 chart[36] and was eventually certified four times platinum.[37] The album shifted attention back to East Coast hip hop at a time when West Coast hip hop dominated US charts.[38] It gained strong reviews and has received much praise in retrospect.[38][39] In addition to "Juicy", the record produced two hit singles: the platinum-selling "Big Poppa", which reached No. 1 on the U.S. rap chart,[40] and "One More Chance", which sold 1.1 million copies in 1995.[41][42] Busta Rhymes claimed to have seen Wallace giving out free copies of Ready to Die from his home, which Rhymes reasoned as "his way of marketing himself".[43]

Wallace also befriended basketball player Shaquille O'Neal. O'Neal said they were introduced during a listening session for "Gimme the Loot"; Wallace mentioned him in the lyrics and thereby attracted O'Neal to his music. O'Neal requested a collaboration with Wallace, which resulted in the song "You Can't Stop the Reign". According to Combs, Wallace would not collaborate with "anybody he didn't really respect" and that Wallace paid O'Neal his respect by "shouting him out".[44] Wallace later met with O'Neal on Sunset Boulevard in 1997.[45] In 2015, Daz Dillinger, a frequent Shakur collaborator, said that he and Wallace were "cool", with Wallace traveling to meet him to smoke cannabis and record two songs.[46]

1995: Collaboration with Michael Jackson, Junior M.A.F.I.A., success and coastal feud

Wallace worked with pop singer Michael Jackson on the song "This Time Around", featured on Jackson's 1995 album HIStory: Past, Present and Future, Book I.[47] Lil' Cease later claimed that while Wallace met Jackson, he was forced to stay behind, with Wallace citing that he did not "trust Michael with kids" following the 1993 child sexual abuse allegations against Jackson.[48] Engineer John Van Nest and producer Dallas Austin recalled the sessions differently, saying that Wallace was eager to meet Jackson and nearly burst into tears upon doing so.[49]

In the summer, Wallace met Charli Baltimore and they became involved in a romantic relationship.[50] Several months into their relationship, she left him a voicemail of a rap verse that she had written and he began encouraging her to pursue a career in rap music.[51]

Wallace was booked to perform in Sacramento. When his group arrived at the venue there weren't many people there, and when they started performing they were getting coins tossed at them. When they left they were held at gunpoint in the venue's parking lot, allegedly set up by E-40's goons, who were angry about an interview Wallace did with a Canadian magazine. When asked to rank a handful of artists on a scale from one to 10, Wallace gave E-40 a zero. One of Wallace's entourage said to get E-40 on the phone, Wallace explained how they had "got him drunk" and had got him "to say anything", E-40 told his men to stand down and safely escorted them to the airport.[52]

In August 1995, Wallace's protégé group, Junior M.A.F.I.A. ("Junior Masters At Finding Intelligent Attitudes"), released their debut album Conspiracy. The group consisted of his friends from childhood and included rappers such as Lil' Kim and Lil' Cease, who went on to have solo careers.[53] The record went gold and its singles, "Player's Anthem" and "Get Money", both featuring Wallace, went gold and platinum. Wallace continued to work with R&B artists, collaborating with R&B groups 112 (on "Only You") and Total (on "Can't You See"), with both reaching the top 20 of the Hot 100. By the end of the year, Wallace was the top-selling male solo artist and rapper on the U.S. pop and R&B charts.[19] In July 1995, he appeared on the cover of The Source with the caption "The King of New York Takes Over", a reference to his alias Frank White, based on a character from the 1990 film King of New York.[54][55] At the Source Awards in August 1995, he was named Best New Artist (Solo), Lyricist of the Year, Live Performer of the Year, and his debut Album of the Year.[56] At the Billboard Awards, he was Rap Artist of the Year.[21]

In his year of success, Wallace became involved in a rivalry between the East and West Coast hip hop scenes with Shakur, now his former friend. In an interview with Vibe in April 1995, while serving time in Clinton Correctional Facility, Shakur accused Uptown Records' founder Andre Harrell, Sean Combs, and Wallace of having prior knowledge of a robbery that resulted in him being shot five times and losing thousands of dollars worth of jewelry on the night of November 30, 1994. Though Wallace and his entourage were in the same Manhattan-based recording studio at the time of the shooting, they denied the accusation.[57]

Wallace said: "It just happened to be a coincidence that he [Shakur] was in the studio. He just, he couldn't really say who really had something to do with it at the time. So he just kinda' leaned the blame on me."[58] In 2012, a man named Dexter Isaac, serving a life sentence for unrelated crimes, claimed that he attacked Shakur that night and that the robbery was orchestrated by entertainment industry executive and former drug trafficker, Jimmy Henchman.[59]

Following his release from prison, Shakur signed to Death Row Records on October 15, 1995. This made Bad Boy Records and Death Row business rivals, and thus intensified the quarrel.[60]

1996: More arrests, accusations regarding Shakur's death, car accident and second child

On March 23, 1996, Wallace was arrested outside a Manhattan nightclub for chasing and threatening to kill two fans seeking autographs, smashing the windows of their taxicab, and punching one of them.[21] He pleaded guilty to second-degree harassment and was sentenced to 100 hours of community service. In mid-1996, he was arrested at his home in Teaneck, New Jersey, for drug and weapons possession charges.[21]

During the recording for his second album, Wallace was confronted by Shakur for the first time since "the rumors started" at the Soul Train Awards and a gun was pulled.[61]

In June 1996, Shakur released "Hit 'Em Up", a diss track in which he claimed to have had sex with Faith Evans, who was estranged from Wallace at the time, and that Wallace had copied his style and image. Wallace referenced the first claim on Jay-Z's "Brooklyn's Finest", in which he raps: "If Faye have twins, she'd probably have two 'Pacs. Get it? 2Pac's?" However, he did not directly respond to the track, stating in a 1997 radio interview that it was "not [his] style" to respond.[58]

On September 7, 1996, Shakur was shot multiple times in a drive-by shooting in Las Vegas and died six days later. Rumors of Wallace's involvement with Shakur's murder spread. In a 2002 Los Angeles Times series titled "Who Killed Tupac Shakur?", based on police reports and multiple sources, Chuck Philips reported that the shooting was carried out by a Compton gang, the Southside Crips, to avenge a beating by Shakur hours earlier, and that Wallace had paid for the gun.[62][63]

Los Angeles Times editor Mark Duvoisin wrote that "Philips' story has withstood all challenges to its accuracy, ... [and] remains the definitive account of the Shakur slaying."[64] Wallace's family denied the report,[65] producing documents purporting to show that he was in New York and New Jersey at the time. However, The New York Times called the documents inconclusive, stating:

The pages purport to be three computer printouts from Daddy's House, indicating that Wallace was in the studio recording a song called Nasty Boy on the night Shakur was shot. They indicate that Wallace wrote half the session, was in and out/sat around and laid down a ref, shorthand for a reference vocal, the equivalent of a first take. But nothing indicates when the documents were created. And Louis Alfred, the recording engineer listed on the sheets, said in an interview that he remembered recording the song with Wallace in a late-night session, not during the day. He could not recall the date of the session but said it was likely not the night Shakur was shot. We would have heard about it, Mr. Alfred said."[66]

Evans remembered her husband calling her on the night of Shakur's death and crying from shock. She said: "I think it's fair to say he was probably afraid, given everything that was going on at that time and all the hype that was put on this so-called beef that he didn't really have in his heart against anyone." Wayne Barrow, Wallace's co-manager at the time, said Wallace was recording the track "Nasty Boy" the night Shakur was shot.[67] Shortly after Shakur's death, he met with Snoop Dogg, who claimed that Wallace declared he never hated Shakur.[68]

Two days after the death of Shakur, Wallace and Lil' Cease were arrested in Brooklyn for smoking marijuana in public and had their car repossessed.[69] The next day, the dealership chose them a Chevrolet Lumina rental SUV as a substitute, despite Lil' Cease's objections. The vehicle had brake problems but Wallace dismissed them.[70] The car collided with a rail in New Jersey, shattering Wallace's left leg, Lil' Cease's jaw and leaving Charli Baltimore with numerous injuries.[71]

Wallace spent months in a hospital following the accident. He was temporarily confined to a wheelchair,[19] forced to use a cane,[57] and had to complete physiotherapy. Despite his hospitalization, he continued to work on the album. The accident was referred to in the lyrics of "Long Kiss Goodnight": "Ya still tickle me, I used to be as strong as Ripple be / Til Lil' Cease crippled me."[72]

On October 29, 1996, Evans gave birth to Wallace's son, Christopher "C.J." Wallace Jr.[26] The following month, Junior M.A.F.I.A. member Lil' Kim released her debut album, Hard Core, under Wallace's direction while the two were having a "love affair".[19] Lil' Kim recalled being Wallace's "biggest fan" and "his pride and joy".[73] In a 2012 interview, Lil' Kim said Wallace had prevented her from making a remix of the Jodeci single "Love U 4 Life" by locking her in a room. According to her, Wallace said that she was not "gonna go do no song with them",[74] likely because of the group's affiliation with Tupac and Death Row Records.

1997: Life After Death

On January 27, 1997, Wallace was ordered to pay US$41,000 in damages following an incident involving a friend of a concert promoter who claimed Wallace and his entourage beat him following a dispute in May 1995.[75] He faced criminal assault charges for the incident, which remains unresolved, but all robbery charges were dropped.[21] Following the events, Wallace spoke of a desire to focus on his "peace of mind" and his family and friends.[76]

In February 1997, Wallace traveled to California to promote his album Life After Death and to record a music video for its lead single, "Hypnotize". That month Wallace was involved in a domestic dispute with girlfriend Charli Baltimore at the Four Seasons hotel, over pictures of Wallace and other girls. Wallace had told Lil' Cease the night prior to take the bag with the photos out of the room, but she had not. Charli Baltimore ended up throwing Wallace's ring and watch from the hotel window. They later found the watch but did not recover the ring.[77]

Death

On March 8, 1997, Wallace attended Soul Train Awards after-party hosted by Vibe and Qwest Records at the Petersen Automotive Museum.[57] Guests included Evans, Aaliyah and members of the Bloods and Crips gangs.[17] The next day at 12:30 a.m. PST, after the fire department closed the party early due to overcrowding, Wallace left with his entourage in two GMC Suburbans to return to his hotel.[78] He traveled in the front passenger seat alongside associates Damion "D-Roc" Butler, Lil' Cease, and driver Gregory "G-Money" Young. Combs traveled in the other vehicle with two bodyguards. The two trucks were trailed by a Chevrolet Blazer carrying Bad Boy director of security Paul Offord.[17][79]

By 12:45 a.m., the streets were crowded with people leaving the party. Wallace's SUV stopped at a red light 50 yards (46 m) from the Petersen Automotive Museum, and a black Chevy Impala pulled up alongside it. The Impala's driver, an unidentified African-American man dressed in a blue suit and bow tie, rolled down his window, drew a 9 mm blue-steel pistol, and fired at Wallace's car. Four bullets hit Wallace, and his entourage subsequently rushed him to Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, where doctors performed an emergency thoracotomy, but he was pronounced dead at 1:15 a.m.[17] He was 24 years old. His autopsy, which was released 15 years after his death, showed that only the final shot was fatal; it entered through his right hip and struck his colon, liver, heart, and left lung before stopping in his left shoulder.[80]

Wallace's funeral was held at the Frank E. Campbell Funeral Chapel in Manhattan on March 18. There were around 350 mourners at the funeral, including Lil' Cease, Queen Latifah, Mase, Faith Evans, SWV, Jay-Z, Damon Dash, DJ Premier, Charli Baltimore, Da Brat, Flavor Flav, Mary J. Blige, Lil' Kim, Run-D.M.C., DJ Kool Herc, Treach, Busta Rhymes, Salt-N-Pepa, DJ Spinderella, Foxy Brown, and Sister Souljah. David Dinkins and Clive Davis also attended the funeral.[81] After the funeral, his body was cremated and the ashes were given to his family.[82]

Posthumous releases

Sixteen days after his death, Wallace's double-disc second album was released as planned. Originally titled Life After Death...'Til Death Do Us Part and later shortened to Life After Death,[83] the album hit No. 1 on the Billboard 200 charts after making a premature appearance at No. 176 due to street-date violations. The record album featured a much wider range of guests and producers than its predecessor.[84] It gained strong reviews and in 2000 was certified Diamond by the RIAA.

Its lead single, "Hypnotize", was the last music video recording in which Wallace would participate. His biggest chart success was with its follow-up "Mo Money Mo Problems", featuring Sean Combs (under the rap alias "Puff Daddy") and Mase. Both singles reached No. 1 on the Hot 100, making Wallace the first artist to achieve this feat posthumously.[19] The third single, "Sky's the Limit", featuring the band 112, was noted for its use of children in the music video, directed by Spike Jonze, who were used to portray Wallace and his contemporaries, including Combs, Lil' Kim, and Busta Rhymes. Wallace was named Artist of the Year and "Hypnotize" Single of the Year by Spin magazine in December 1997.[85]

In mid-1997, Combs released his debut album, No Way Out, which featured Wallace on five songs, notably on the fifth single "Victory". The most prominent single from the record album was "I'll Be Missing You", featuring Combs, Faith Evans and 112, which was dedicated to Wallace's memory. At the 1998 Grammy Awards, Life After Death and its first two singles received nominations in the rap category. The album award was won by Combs's No Way Out and "I'll Be Missing You" won the award in the category of Best Rap Performance by a Duo or Group in which "Mo Money Mo Problems" was nominated.[86]

In 1996, Wallace started putting together a hip hop supergroup, the Commission, which consisted of himself, Jay-Z, Lil' Cease, Combs, and Charli Baltimore. The Commission was mentioned by Wallace in the lyrics of "What's Beef" on Life After Death and "Victory" from No Way Out, but a Commission album was never completed. A track on Duets: The Final Chapter, "Whatchu Want (The Commission)", featuring Jay-Z, was based on the group.

In December 1999, Bad Boy released Born Again. The album consisted of previously unreleased material mixed with new guest appearances, including many artists Wallace had never collaborated with in his lifetime. It gained some positive reviews, but received criticism for its unlikely pairings; The Source describing it as "compiling some of the most awkward collaborations of his career".[87] Nevertheless, the album sold 2 million copies. Wallace appeared on Michael Jackson's 2001 album, Invincible.[88][89]

Over the course of time, his vocals were heard on hit songs such as "Foolish" and "Realest Niggas" by Ashanti in 2002, and the song "Runnin' (Dying to Live)" with Shakur the following year. In 2005, Duets: The Final Chapter continued the pattern started on Born Again, which was criticized for the lack of significant vocals by Wallace on some of its songs.[90][89] Its lead single "Nasty Girl" became Wallace's first UK No. 1 single. Combs and Voletta Wallace have stated the album will be the last release primarily featuring new material.[91]

A duet album, The King & I, featuring Evans and Notorious B.I.G., was released on May 19, 2017, which largely contained previously unreleased music.[92]

Musical style

Vocals

Wallace mostly rapped in a deep tone described by Rolling Stone as a "thick, jaunty grumble",[93] which went even deeper on Life After Death.[94] He was often accompanied on songs with ad libs from Sean "Puffy" Combs. In The Source's "Unsigned Hype" column, his style was described as "cool, nasal, and filtered, to bless his own material".[95] AllMusic described Wallace as having "a talent for piling multiple rhymes on top of one another in quick succession".[40]

Time magazine wrote that he rapped with an ability to "make multi-syllabic rhymes sound smooth",[39] while Krims described his rhythmic style as "effusive".[96] Before starting a verse, Wallace sometimes used onomatopoeic vocables to warm up his voice, for example "uhhh" at the beginning of "Hypnotize" and "Big Poppa", and "what" after certain rhymes in songs such as "My Downfall".[97]

Lateef of Latyrx notes that Wallace had "intense and complex flows".[98] Fredro Starr of Onyx said that he was "a master of the flow",[99] and Bishop Lamont stated that he mastered "all the hemispheres of the music".[100] Wallace also often used the single-line rhyme scheme to add variety and interest to his flow.[98] Big Daddy Kane suggested that Wallace did not need a large vocabulary to impress listeners, stating that he "just put his words together a slick way and it worked real good for him".[101]

Wallace was known to compose lyrics in his head rather than write them down on paper, in a similar way to Jay-Z.[102][103] He would occasionally vary from his usual style. On "Playa Hater", he sang in a slow falsetto.[104] On "Notorious Thugs", his collaboration with Bone Thugs-n-Harmony, he modified his style to match the rapid rhyme flow of the group.

Themes and lyrics

Wallace's lyrical topics and themes included mafioso tales ("Niggas Bleed"), his drug-dealing past ("Ten Crack Commandments"), materialistic bragging ("Hypnotize"), humor ("Just Playing (Dreams)"),[105] and romance ("Me & My Bitch").[105] In 2004, Rolling Stone named him as "one of the few young male songwriters in any pop style writing credible love songs".[94] In the book How to Rap, rapper Guerilla Black described how Wallace was able to both "glorify the upper echelon"[106] and "[make] you feel his struggle".[107]

The New York Times journalist Touré wrote in 1994, that Wallace's lyrics "[mixed] autobiographical details about crime and violence with emotional honesty".[18] Marriott of The New York Times wrote in 1997 that Wallace's lyrics were not strictly autobiographical and that he "had a knack for exaggeration that increased sales".[21] Wallace wrote that his debut album was "a big pie, with each slice indicating a different point in [his] life involving bitches and niggaz... from the beginning to the end".[108]

Rolling Stone described Ready to Die as a contrast of "bleak" street visions and being "full of high-spirited fun, bringing the pleasure principle back to hip-hop".[94] AllMusic wrote of "a sense of doom" in some of his songs, and the New York Times noted some songs being "laced with paranoia".[40][109] Wallace described himself as feeling "broke and depressed" when he made his debut.[109] The final song on Wallace's debut album, "Suicidal Thoughts", featured his "character" contemplating suicide and concluded with him doing it.[94]

On Life After Death, Wallace's lyrics went "deeper".[94] Krims explained how upbeat, dance-oriented tracks (which featured less heavily on his debut) alternate with "reality rap" songs on the record and suggested that he was "going pimp" through some of the lyrical topics of the former.[96] XXL magazine wrote that Wallace "revamped his image" through the portrayal of himself between the albums, going from "mid-level hustler" on his debut to "drug lord" on his second album.[110]

AllMusic wrote that the success of Ready to Die is "mostly due to Wallace's skill as a storyteller".[40] In 1994, Rolling Stone described his ability in this technique as painting "a sonic picture so vibrant that you're transported right to the scene".[38] On Life After Death, he notably demonstrated this skill on the song "I Got a Story to Tell", creating a story as a rap for the first half of the song and then retelling the same story "for his boys" in conversation form.[104]

Legacy

Graffiti of the Notorious B.I.G
 
Mural of the Notorious B.I.G at 5 Pointz
 
A mural in Brooklyn
 
A stencil of the Notorious B.I.G. in Asakusa, Tokyo

Considered one of the greatest rappers of all time, Wallace was described by AllMusic as "the savior of East Coast hip-hop".[19] The Source magazine named him the greatest rapper of all time in its 150th issue in 2002.[111][112] In 2003, when XXL magazine asked several hip hop artists to list their five favorite MCs, Wallace appeared on more rappers' lists than anyone else. In 2006, MTV ranked him at No. 3 on their list of The Greatest MCs of All Time, calling him possibly "the most skillful ever on the mic".[11]

Editors of About.com ranked him at No. 3 on their list of the Top 50 MCs of Our Time (1987–2007).[113] In 2012, The Source ranked him No. 3 on their list of the Top 50 Lyrical Leaders of all time.[114] Rolling Stone has referred to him as the "greatest rapper that ever lived".[115] In 2015, Billboard named Wallace as the greatest rapper of all time.[10]

Wallace's lyrics have been sampled and quoted by a variety of artists, including Jay-Z, 50 Cent, Alicia Keys, Fat Joe, Nelly, Ja Rule, Eminem, Lil Wayne, Game, Clinton Sparks, Michael Jackson, and Usher.

At the 2005 MTV Video Music Awards, Combs and Snoop Dogg paid tribute to Wallace by hiring an orchestra to play while the vocals from "Juicy" and "Warning" played on the arena speakers.[116] At the 2005 VH1 Hip Hop Honors, a tribute to Wallace headlined the show.[117]

Wallace had begun to promote a clothing line called Brooklyn Mint, which was to produce plus-sized clothing, but it fell dormant after he died. In 2004, his managers Mark Pitts and Wayne Barrow launched the clothing line with help from Jay-Z, selling T-shirts with images of Wallace on them. A portion of the proceeds go to the Christopher Wallace Foundation and to Jay-Z's Shawn Carter Scholarship Foundation.[118] In 2005, Voletta Wallace hired branding and licensing agency Wicked Cow Entertainment to guide the estate's licensing efforts.[119] Wallace-branded products on the market include action figures, blankets, and cell phone content.[120]

The Christopher Wallace Memorial Foundation holds an annual black-tie dinner ("B.I.G. Night Out") to raise funds for children's school equipment and to honor Wallace's memory. For this particular event, because it is a children's schools' charity, "B.I.G." is also said to stand for "Books Instead of Guns".[121]

There is a large portrait mural of Wallace as Mao Zedong on Fulton Street in Brooklyn a half-mile west from Wallace's old block.[122] A fan petitioned to have the corner of Fulton Street and St. James Place, near Wallace's childhood home renamed in his honor, garnering support from local businesses and attracting more than 560 signatures.[122]

A large portrait of Wallace features prominently in the Netflix series Luke Cage, due to the fact that he served as muse for the creation of the Marvel Cinematic Universe's version of Marvel Comics character Cornell "Cottonmouth" Stokes.

In 2018, a movie chronicling LAPD detective Russell Poole's investigation of Wallace's murder was released. City of Lies is based on journalist Randall Sullivan's book "LAbrynith" and explores the corruption and cover-ups within LAPD that surround Wallace's case. Voletta Wallace believed that Poole was honest and wasn't given the chance to do his job. She supported the movie by appearing as herself.[123]

In August 2020, Wallace's son, C.J., released a house remix of his father's hit "Big Poppa".[124]

A March 2021 Netflix documentary Biggie: I Got a Story to Tell, executive-produced by Voletta Wallace and Combs, focuses on B.I.G.'s life before he rose to fame as "The King of New York", and features "unprecedented access granted by the Wallace estate".[125]

Biopic

Notorious is a 2009 biographical film about Wallace and his life that stars rapper Jamal Woolard as Wallace. The film was directed by George Tillman Jr. and distributed by Fox Searchlight Pictures. Producers included Sean Combs, Wallace's former managers Wayne Barrow and Mark Pitts, as well as Voletta Wallace.[126] On January 16, 2009, the movie's debut at the Grand 18 theater in Greensboro, North Carolina was postponed after a man was shot in the parking lot before the show.[127] The film received mixed reviews and grossed over $44 million worldwide.[128][129]

In early October 2007, open casting calls for the role of Wallace began.[130] Actors, rappers and unknowns all tried out. Beanie Sigel auditioned[131] for the role, but was not picked. Sean Kingston claimed that he would play the role of Wallace, but producers denied it.[132] Eventually, it was announced that rapper Jamal Woolard was chosen to play Wallace[133] while Wallace's son, Christopher Wallace Jr. was cast to play Wallace as a child.[134]

Other cast members include Angela Bassett as Voletta Wallace, Derek Luke as Sean Combs, Antonique Smith as Faith Evans, Naturi Naughton as Lil' Kim, and Anthony Mackie as Tupac Shakur.[135] Bad Boy also released a soundtrack album to the film on January 13, 2009; it contains many of Wallace's hit singles, including "Hypnotize" and "Juicy", as well as rarities.[136]

Discography

Studio albums
Collaboration album
Posthumous collaboration album
Posthumous compilation albums

Media

Filmography

  • The Show (1995) as himself
  • Rhyme & Reason (1997 documentary) as himself
  • Biggie & Tupac (2002 documentary) archive footage
  • Tupac Resurrection (2004 documentary) archive footage
  • Notorious B.I.G. Bigger Than Life (2007 documentary) archive footage
  • Notorious (2009) archive footage
  • All Eyez on Me (2017) archive footage
  • Quincy (2018 documentary) archive footage
  • Biggie: The Life of Notorious B.I.G. (2017 documentary) archive footage
  • Biggie: I Got a Story to Tell (2021 documentary) archive footage

Television appearances

  • New York Undercover (1995) as himself
  • Martin (1995) as himself
  • Who Shot Biggie & Tupac? (2017) archive footage
  • Unsolved (2018) archive footage

Awards and nominations

Award Year of ceremony Nominee/work Category Result
The Source Hip-Hop Music Awards[137] 1995 The Notorious B.I.G. New Artist of the Year, Solo Won
The Notorious B.I.G. Lyricist of the Year Won
The Notorious B.I.G. Live Performer of the Year Won
Ready To Die Album of the Year Won
Billboard Music Awards [138][139] 1995 The Notorious B.I.G. Rap Artist of the Year Won
"One More Chance/Stay with Me (Remix)" (with Faith Evans) Rap Single of the Year Won
1997 Life After Death R&B Album Won
Grammy Awards[140][141] 1996 "Big Poppa" Best Rap Solo Performance Nominated
1998 "Hypnotize" Best Rap Solo Performance Nominated
"Mo Money Mo Problems" (with Mase and Puff Daddy) Best Rap Performance by a Duo or Group Nominated
Life After Death Best Rap Album Nominated
MTV Video Music Awards[142][143] 1997 "Hypnotize" Best Rap Video Won
1998 "Mo Money Mo Problems" (with Mase and Puff Daddy) Best Rap Video Nominated
Soul Train Music Awards[144][145] 1996 "One More Chance/Stay With Me (Remix)" (with Faith Evans) R&B/Soul or Rap Song of the Year Won
1998 Life After Death Best R&B/Soul Album - Male Won
Life After Death R&B/Soul or Rap Album of the Year Nominated
"Mo Money Mo Problems" (with Mase and Puff Daddy) Best R&B/Soul or Rap Music Video Nominated
Black Reel Awards[146] 2004 "Runnin' (Dying to Live)" (with Tupac Shakur) Best Original or Adapted Song Nominated
ASCAP Rhythm & Soul Music Awards[147][148][149] 2005 "Runnin' (Dying to Live)" (with Tupac Shakur) Top Soundtrack Song of the Year Won
2017 The Notorious B.I.G. ASCAP Founders Award Won
2020 "Sicko Mode" Winning Rap and R&B/Hip-Hop Songs Won
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame[150] 2020 The Notorious B.I.G. Performers Won

See also

References

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Notes

Further reading

  • Coker, Cheo Hodari (2004). Unbelievable: The Life, Death, and Afterlife of the Notorious B.I.G. New York: Three Rivers Press. ISBN 978-0-609-80835-1.
  • Wallace, Voletta; McKenzie, Tremell; Evans, Faith (foreword) (2005). Biggie: Voletta Wallace Remembers Her Son, Christopher Wallace, aka Notorious B.I.G. Atria. ISBN 978-0-7434-7020-9.

External links

  • The Notorious B.I.G. collected news and commentary at The New York Times
  • The Notorious B.I.G. at IMDb
  • FBI Records: The Vault – Christopher (Biggie Smalls) Wallace at vault.fbi.gov

notorious, song, notorious, song, biggie, redirects, here, other, uses, biggie, disambiguation, christopher, george, latore, wallace, 1972, march, 1997, better, known, stage, names, notorious, biggie, smalls, simply, biggie, american, rapper, rooted, east, coa. For the song see Notorious B I G song Biggie redirects here For other uses see Biggie disambiguation Christopher George Latore Wallace May 21 1972 March 9 1997 better known by his stage names the Notorious B I G Biggie Smalls or simply Biggie 2 was an American rapper Rooted in East Coast hip hop and particularly gangsta rap he is cited in various media lists as being one of the greatest rappers of all time Wallace became known for his distinctive laid back lyrical delivery offsetting the lyrics often grim content His music was often semi autobiographical telling of hardship and criminality but also of debauchery and celebration 3 The Notorious B I G Wallace in 1997BornChristopher George Latore Wallace 1972 05 21 May 21 1972New York City U S DiedMarch 9 1997 1997 03 09 aged 24 Los Angeles California U S Cause of deathDrive by homicide gunshot wound Other namesBiggie SmallsBiggieFrank WhiteBigBig PoppaMC CWestOccupationsRappersongwriterrecord producerYears active1992 1997SpouseFaith Evans m 1994 sep 1996 wbr 1 PartnerCharli Baltimore 1995 1997 a Children2 including C J AwardsFull listMusical careerGenresHip hopgangsta rapEast Coast hip hopLabelsAtlantic Arista Bad Boy UptownFormerly ofThe CommissionBorn and raised in Brooklyn New York City Wallace signed to Sean Puffy Combs label Bad Boy Records as it launched in 1993 and gained exposure through features on several other artists singles that year His debut album Ready to Die 1994 was met with widespread critical acclaim and included his signature songs Juicy and Big Poppa The album made him the central figure in East Coast hip hop and restored New York s visibility at a time when the West Coast hip hop scene was dominating hip hop music 4 Wallace was awarded the 1995 Billboard Music Awards Rapper of the Year 5 The following year he led his protege group Junior M A F I A a team of himself and longtime friends including Lil Kim to chart success During 1996 while recording his second album Wallace became ensnarled in the escalating East Coast West Coast hip hop feud Following Tupac Shakur s murder in Las Vegas in September 1996 speculations of involvement in Shakur s murder by criminal elements orbiting the Bad Boy circle circulated as a result of Wallace s public feud with Shakur On March 9 1997 six months after Shakur s death Wallace was murdered by an unidentified assailant in a drive by shooting while visiting Los Angeles Wallace s second album Life After Death a double album was released two weeks later It reached number one on the Billboard 200 and eventually achieved a diamond certification in the United States 6 With two more posthumous albums released Wallace has certified sales of over 28 million copies in the United States 7 including 21 million albums 8 Rolling Stone has called him the greatest rapper that ever lived 9 and Billboard named him the greatest rapper of all time 10 The Source magazine named him the greatest rapper of all time in its 150th issue In 2006 MTV ranked him at No 3 on their list of The Greatest MCs of All Time calling him possibly the most skillful ever on the mic 11 In 2020 he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Contents 1 Life and career 1 1 1972 1991 Early life 1 2 1991 1994 Early career and first child 1 3 1994 Ready to Die and marriage to Faith Evans 1 4 1995 Collaboration with Michael Jackson Junior M A F I A success and coastal feud 1 5 1996 More arrests accusations regarding Shakur s death car accident and second child 1 6 1997 Life After Death 2 Death 3 Posthumous releases 4 Musical style 4 1 Vocals 4 2 Themes and lyrics 5 Legacy 5 1 Biopic 6 Discography 7 Media 7 1 Filmography 7 2 Television appearances 8 Awards and nominations 9 See also 10 References 11 Notes 12 Further reading 13 External linksLife and career1972 1991 Early life Christopher George Latore Wallace was born at St Mary s Hospital in the New York City borough of Brooklyn on May 21 1972 the only child of Jamaican immigrant parents His mother Voletta Wallace was a preschool teacher while his father Selwyn George Latore was a welder and politician 12 13 His father left the family when Wallace was two years old and his mother worked two jobs while raising him Wallace grew up at 226 St James Place in Brooklyn s Clinton Hill 14 near the border with Bedford Stuyvesant 12 15 Raised Catholic Wallace excelled at Queen of All Saints Middle School winning several awards as an English student He attended St Peter Claver Church in the borough 16 He was nicknamed Big because he was overweight by the age of 10 17 Wallace claimed to have begun dealing drugs at about age 12 His mother often at work first learned of this during his adulthood 18 He began rapping as a teenager entertaining people on the streets and performed with local groups the Old Gold Brothers as well as the Techniques 19 His earliest stage name was MC CWest 20 At his request Wallace transferred from Bishop Loughlin Memorial High School in Fort Greene to George Westinghouse Career and Technical Education High School in Downtown Brooklyn which future rappers Jay Z and Busta Rhymes were also attending According to his mother Wallace was still a good student but developed a smart ass attitude at the new school 13 At age 17 in 1989 Wallace dropped out of high school and became more involved in crime That same year in 1989 he was arrested on weapons charges in Brooklyn and sentenced to five years probation In 1990 he was arrested on a violation of his probation 21 A year later Wallace was arrested in North Carolina for dealing crack cocaine He spent nine months in jail before making bail 18 1991 1994 Early career and first child After release from jail Wallace made a demo tape Microphone Murderer while calling himself Biggie Smalls alluding both to Calvin Lockhart s character in the 1975 film Let s Do It Again and to his own stature and obesity 6 feet 3 inches 1 91 m and 300 to 380 pounds 140 to 170 kg 22 Although Wallace reportedly lacked real ambition for the tape local DJ Mister Cee of Big Daddy Kane and Juice Crew association discovered and promoted it thus it was heard by The Source rap magazine s editor in 1992 21 In March The Source column Unsigned Hype dedicated to airing promising rappers featured Wallace 23 He then spun the attention into a recording 23 Upon hearing the demo tape Sean Puffy Combs still with the A amp R department of Uptown Records arranged to meet Wallace Promptly signed to Uptown Wallace appeared on labelmates Heavy D amp the Boyz s 1993 song A Buncha Niggas 19 24 Mid year or a year after Wallace s signing Uptown fired Combs who a week later launched Bad Boy Records 25 instantly Wallace s new label 26 On August 8 1993 Jan Jackson Wallace s long time girlfriend gave birth to his first child T yanna 26 although the couple had parted by then 27 Himself a high school dropout Wallace promised his daughter everything she wanted reasoning that if only he had that in childhood he would have graduated at the top of his class 28 Wallace continued dealing drugs but Combs discovered this and obliged him to stop 19 Later that year Wallace gained exposure on a remix of Mary J Blige s single Real Love Having found his moniker Biggie Smalls already claimed he took a new one holding for good The Notorious B I G 29 Around this time Wallace became friends with fellow rapper Tupac Shakur Lil Cease recalled the pair as close often traveling together whenever they were not working According to him Wallace was a frequent guest at Shakur s home and they spent time together when Shakur was in California or Washington D C 30 Yukmouth an Oakland emcee claimed that Wallace s style was inspired by Shakur 31 The Real Love remix single was followed by another remix of a Mary J Blige song What s the 411 Wallace s successes continued if to a lesser extent on remixes of Neneh Cherry s song Buddy X and of reggae artist Super Cat s song Dolly My Baby also featuring Combs all in 1993 In April Wallace s solo track Party and Bullshit was released on the Who s the Man soundtrack 32 In July 1994 he appeared alongside LL Cool J and Busta Rhymes on a remix of his own labelmate Craig Mack s Flava in Ya Ear the remix reaching No 9 on the Billboard Hot 100 33 1994 Ready to Die and marriage to Faith Evans On August 4 1994 Wallace married R amp B singer Faith Evans whom he had met eight days prior at a Bad Boy photoshoot 34 Five days later Wallace had his first pop chart success as a solo artist with double A side Juicy Unbelievable which reached No 27 as the lead single to his debut album 35 Ready to Die was released on September 13 1994 It reached No 13 on the Billboard 200 chart 36 and was eventually certified four times platinum 37 The album shifted attention back to East Coast hip hop at a time when West Coast hip hop dominated US charts 38 It gained strong reviews and has received much praise in retrospect 38 39 In addition to Juicy the record produced two hit singles the platinum selling Big Poppa which reached No 1 on the U S rap chart 40 and One More Chance which sold 1 1 million copies in 1995 41 42 Busta Rhymes claimed to have seen Wallace giving out free copies of Ready to Die from his home which Rhymes reasoned as his way of marketing himself 43 Wallace also befriended basketball player Shaquille O Neal O Neal said they were introduced during a listening session for Gimme the Loot Wallace mentioned him in the lyrics and thereby attracted O Neal to his music O Neal requested a collaboration with Wallace which resulted in the song You Can t Stop the Reign According to Combs Wallace would not collaborate with anybody he didn t really respect and that Wallace paid O Neal his respect by shouting him out 44 Wallace later met with O Neal on Sunset Boulevard in 1997 45 In 2015 Daz Dillinger a frequent Shakur collaborator said that he and Wallace were cool with Wallace traveling to meet him to smoke cannabis and record two songs 46 1995 Collaboration with Michael Jackson Junior M A F I A success and coastal feud Wallace worked with pop singer Michael Jackson on the song This Time Around featured on Jackson s 1995 album HIStory Past Present and Future Book I 47 Lil Cease later claimed that while Wallace met Jackson he was forced to stay behind with Wallace citing that he did not trust Michael with kids following the 1993 child sexual abuse allegations against Jackson 48 Engineer John Van Nest and producer Dallas Austin recalled the sessions differently saying that Wallace was eager to meet Jackson and nearly burst into tears upon doing so 49 In the summer Wallace met Charli Baltimore and they became involved in a romantic relationship 50 Several months into their relationship she left him a voicemail of a rap verse that she had written and he began encouraging her to pursue a career in rap music 51 Wallace was booked to perform in Sacramento When his group arrived at the venue there weren t many people there and when they started performing they were getting coins tossed at them When they left they were held at gunpoint in the venue s parking lot allegedly set up by E 40 s goons who were angry about an interview Wallace did with a Canadian magazine When asked to rank a handful of artists on a scale from one to 10 Wallace gave E 40 a zero One of Wallace s entourage said to get E 40 on the phone Wallace explained how they had got him drunk and had got him to say anything E 40 told his men to stand down and safely escorted them to the airport 52 In August 1995 Wallace s protege group Junior M A F I A Junior Masters At Finding Intelligent Attitudes released their debut album Conspiracy The group consisted of his friends from childhood and included rappers such as Lil Kim and Lil Cease who went on to have solo careers 53 The record went gold and its singles Player s Anthem and Get Money both featuring Wallace went gold and platinum Wallace continued to work with R amp B artists collaborating with R amp B groups 112 on Only You and Total on Can t You See with both reaching the top 20 of the Hot 100 By the end of the year Wallace was the top selling male solo artist and rapper on the U S pop and R amp B charts 19 In July 1995 he appeared on the cover of The Source with the caption The King of New York Takes Over a reference to his alias Frank White based on a character from the 1990 film King of New York 54 55 At the Source Awards in August 1995 he was named Best New Artist Solo Lyricist of the Year Live Performer of the Year and his debut Album of the Year 56 At the Billboard Awards he was Rap Artist of the Year 21 In his year of success Wallace became involved in a rivalry between the East and West Coast hip hop scenes with Shakur now his former friend In an interview with Vibe in April 1995 while serving time in Clinton Correctional Facility Shakur accused Uptown Records founder Andre Harrell Sean Combs and Wallace of having prior knowledge of a robbery that resulted in him being shot five times and losing thousands of dollars worth of jewelry on the night of November 30 1994 Though Wallace and his entourage were in the same Manhattan based recording studio at the time of the shooting they denied the accusation 57 Wallace said It just happened to be a coincidence that he Shakur was in the studio He just he couldn t really say who really had something to do with it at the time So he just kinda leaned the blame on me 58 In 2012 a man named Dexter Isaac serving a life sentence for unrelated crimes claimed that he attacked Shakur that night and that the robbery was orchestrated by entertainment industry executive and former drug trafficker Jimmy Henchman 59 Following his release from prison Shakur signed to Death Row Records on October 15 1995 This made Bad Boy Records and Death Row business rivals and thus intensified the quarrel 60 1996 More arrests accusations regarding Shakur s death car accident and second child On March 23 1996 Wallace was arrested outside a Manhattan nightclub for chasing and threatening to kill two fans seeking autographs smashing the windows of their taxicab and punching one of them 21 He pleaded guilty to second degree harassment and was sentenced to 100 hours of community service In mid 1996 he was arrested at his home in Teaneck New Jersey for drug and weapons possession charges 21 During the recording for his second album Wallace was confronted by Shakur for the first time since the rumors started at the Soul Train Awards and a gun was pulled 61 In June 1996 Shakur released Hit Em Up a diss track in which he claimed to have had sex with Faith Evans who was estranged from Wallace at the time and that Wallace had copied his style and image Wallace referenced the first claim on Jay Z s Brooklyn s Finest in which he raps If Faye have twins she d probably have two Pacs Get it 2Pac s However he did not directly respond to the track stating in a 1997 radio interview that it was not his style to respond 58 On September 7 1996 Shakur was shot multiple times in a drive by shooting in Las Vegas and died six days later Rumors of Wallace s involvement with Shakur s murder spread In a 2002 Los Angeles Times series titled Who Killed Tupac Shakur based on police reports and multiple sources Chuck Philips reported that the shooting was carried out by a Compton gang the Southside Crips to avenge a beating by Shakur hours earlier and that Wallace had paid for the gun 62 63 Los Angeles Times editor Mark Duvoisin wrote that Philips story has withstood all challenges to its accuracy and remains the definitive account of the Shakur slaying 64 Wallace s family denied the report 65 producing documents purporting to show that he was in New York and New Jersey at the time However The New York Times called the documents inconclusive stating The pages purport to be three computer printouts from Daddy s House indicating that Wallace was in the studio recording a song called Nasty Boy on the night Shakur was shot They indicate that Wallace wrote half the session was in and out sat around and laid down a ref shorthand for a reference vocal the equivalent of a first take But nothing indicates when the documents were created And Louis Alfred the recording engineer listed on the sheets said in an interview that he remembered recording the song with Wallace in a late night session not during the day He could not recall the date of the session but said it was likely not the night Shakur was shot We would have heard about it Mr Alfred said 66 Evans remembered her husband calling her on the night of Shakur s death and crying from shock She said I think it s fair to say he was probably afraid given everything that was going on at that time and all the hype that was put on this so called beef that he didn t really have in his heart against anyone Wayne Barrow Wallace s co manager at the time said Wallace was recording the track Nasty Boy the night Shakur was shot 67 Shortly after Shakur s death he met with Snoop Dogg who claimed that Wallace declared he never hated Shakur 68 Two days after the death of Shakur Wallace and Lil Cease were arrested in Brooklyn for smoking marijuana in public and had their car repossessed 69 The next day the dealership chose them a Chevrolet Lumina rental SUV as a substitute despite Lil Cease s objections The vehicle had brake problems but Wallace dismissed them 70 The car collided with a rail in New Jersey shattering Wallace s left leg Lil Cease s jaw and leaving Charli Baltimore with numerous injuries 71 Wallace spent months in a hospital following the accident He was temporarily confined to a wheelchair 19 forced to use a cane 57 and had to complete physiotherapy Despite his hospitalization he continued to work on the album The accident was referred to in the lyrics of Long Kiss Goodnight Ya still tickle me I used to be as strong as Ripple be Til Lil Cease crippled me 72 On October 29 1996 Evans gave birth to Wallace s son Christopher C J Wallace Jr 26 The following month Junior M A F I A member Lil Kim released her debut album Hard Core under Wallace s direction while the two were having a love affair 19 Lil Kim recalled being Wallace s biggest fan and his pride and joy 73 In a 2012 interview Lil Kim said Wallace had prevented her from making a remix of the Jodeci single Love U 4 Life by locking her in a room According to her Wallace said that she was not gonna go do no song with them 74 likely because of the group s affiliation with Tupac and Death Row Records 1997 Life After Death On January 27 1997 Wallace was ordered to pay US 41 000 in damages following an incident involving a friend of a concert promoter who claimed Wallace and his entourage beat him following a dispute in May 1995 75 He faced criminal assault charges for the incident which remains unresolved but all robbery charges were dropped 21 Following the events Wallace spoke of a desire to focus on his peace of mind and his family and friends 76 In February 1997 Wallace traveled to California to promote his album Life After Death and to record a music video for its lead single Hypnotize That month Wallace was involved in a domestic dispute with girlfriend Charli Baltimore at the Four Seasons hotel over pictures of Wallace and other girls Wallace had told Lil Cease the night prior to take the bag with the photos out of the room but she had not Charli Baltimore ended up throwing Wallace s ring and watch from the hotel window They later found the watch but did not recover the ring 77 DeathMain article Murder of the Notorious B I G On March 8 1997 Wallace attended Soul Train Awards after party hosted by Vibe and Qwest Records at the Petersen Automotive Museum 57 Guests included Evans Aaliyah and members of the Bloods and Crips gangs 17 The next day at 12 30 a m PST after the fire department closed the party early due to overcrowding Wallace left with his entourage in two GMC Suburbans to return to his hotel 78 He traveled in the front passenger seat alongside associates Damion D Roc Butler Lil Cease and driver Gregory G Money Young Combs traveled in the other vehicle with two bodyguards The two trucks were trailed by a Chevrolet Blazer carrying Bad Boy director of security Paul Offord 17 79 By 12 45 a m the streets were crowded with people leaving the party Wallace s SUV stopped at a red light 50 yards 46 m from the Petersen Automotive Museum and a black Chevy Impala pulled up alongside it The Impala s driver an unidentified African American man dressed in a blue suit and bow tie rolled down his window drew a 9 mm blue steel pistol and fired at Wallace s car Four bullets hit Wallace and his entourage subsequently rushed him to Cedars Sinai Medical Center where doctors performed an emergency thoracotomy but he was pronounced dead at 1 15 a m 17 He was 24 years old His autopsy which was released 15 years after his death showed that only the final shot was fatal it entered through his right hip and struck his colon liver heart and left lung before stopping in his left shoulder 80 Wallace s funeral was held at the Frank E Campbell Funeral Chapel in Manhattan on March 18 There were around 350 mourners at the funeral including Lil Cease Queen Latifah Mase Faith Evans SWV Jay Z Damon Dash DJ Premier Charli Baltimore Da Brat Flavor Flav Mary J Blige Lil Kim Run D M C DJ Kool Herc Treach Busta Rhymes Salt N Pepa DJ Spinderella Foxy Brown and Sister Souljah David Dinkins and Clive Davis also attended the funeral 81 After the funeral his body was cremated and the ashes were given to his family 82 Posthumous releasesSixteen days after his death Wallace s double disc second album was released as planned Originally titled Life After Death Til Death Do Us Part and later shortened to Life After Death 83 the album hit No 1 on the Billboard 200 charts after making a premature appearance at No 176 due to street date violations The record album featured a much wider range of guests and producers than its predecessor 84 It gained strong reviews and in 2000 was certified Diamond by the RIAA Its lead single Hypnotize was the last music video recording in which Wallace would participate His biggest chart success was with its follow up Mo Money Mo Problems featuring Sean Combs under the rap alias Puff Daddy and Mase Both singles reached No 1 on the Hot 100 making Wallace the first artist to achieve this feat posthumously 19 The third single Sky s the Limit featuring the band 112 was noted for its use of children in the music video directed by Spike Jonze who were used to portray Wallace and his contemporaries including Combs Lil Kim and Busta Rhymes Wallace was named Artist of the Year and Hypnotize Single of the Year by Spin magazine in December 1997 85 In mid 1997 Combs released his debut album No Way Out which featured Wallace on five songs notably on the fifth single Victory The most prominent single from the record album was I ll Be Missing You featuring Combs Faith Evans and 112 which was dedicated to Wallace s memory At the 1998 Grammy Awards Life After Death and its first two singles received nominations in the rap category The album award was won by Combs s No Way Out and I ll Be Missing You won the award in the category of Best Rap Performance by a Duo or Group in which Mo Money Mo Problems was nominated 86 In 1996 Wallace started putting together a hip hop supergroup the Commission which consisted of himself Jay Z Lil Cease Combs and Charli Baltimore The Commission was mentioned by Wallace in the lyrics of What s Beef on Life After Death and Victory from No Way Out but a Commission album was never completed A track on Duets The Final Chapter Whatchu Want The Commission featuring Jay Z was based on the group In December 1999 Bad Boy released Born Again The album consisted of previously unreleased material mixed with new guest appearances including many artists Wallace had never collaborated with in his lifetime It gained some positive reviews but received criticism for its unlikely pairings The Source describing it as compiling some of the most awkward collaborations of his career 87 Nevertheless the album sold 2 million copies Wallace appeared on Michael Jackson s 2001 album Invincible 88 89 Over the course of time his vocals were heard on hit songs such as Foolish and Realest Niggas by Ashanti in 2002 and the song Runnin Dying to Live with Shakur the following year In 2005 Duets The Final Chapter continued the pattern started on Born Again which was criticized for the lack of significant vocals by Wallace on some of its songs 90 89 Its lead single Nasty Girl became Wallace s first UK No 1 single Combs and Voletta Wallace have stated the album will be the last release primarily featuring new material 91 A duet album The King amp I featuring Evans and Notorious B I G was released on May 19 2017 which largely contained previously unreleased music 92 Musical styleVocals Only You Remix source source Wallace accompanied by ad libs from Sean Puff Daddy Combs uses onomatopoeic vocables and multi syllabic rhymes on his 1996 collaboration with R amp B group 112 Niggas Bleed source source Wallace tells vivid stories about his everyday life as a criminal in Brooklyn from Life After Death Problems playing these files See media help Wallace mostly rapped in a deep tone described by Rolling Stone as a thick jaunty grumble 93 which went even deeper on Life After Death 94 He was often accompanied on songs with ad libs from Sean Puffy Combs In The Source s Unsigned Hype column his style was described as cool nasal and filtered to bless his own material 95 AllMusic described Wallace as having a talent for piling multiple rhymes on top of one another in quick succession 40 Time magazine wrote that he rapped with an ability to make multi syllabic rhymes sound smooth 39 while Krims described his rhythmic style as effusive 96 Before starting a verse Wallace sometimes used onomatopoeic vocables to warm up his voice for example uhhh at the beginning of Hypnotize and Big Poppa and what after certain rhymes in songs such as My Downfall 97 Lateef of Latyrx notes that Wallace had intense and complex flows 98 Fredro Starr of Onyx said that he was a master of the flow 99 and Bishop Lamont stated that he mastered all the hemispheres of the music 100 Wallace also often used the single line rhyme scheme to add variety and interest to his flow 98 Big Daddy Kane suggested that Wallace did not need a large vocabulary to impress listeners stating that he just put his words together a slick way and it worked real good for him 101 Wallace was known to compose lyrics in his head rather than write them down on paper in a similar way to Jay Z 102 103 He would occasionally vary from his usual style On Playa Hater he sang in a slow falsetto 104 On Notorious Thugs his collaboration with Bone Thugs n Harmony he modified his style to match the rapid rhyme flow of the group Themes and lyrics Wallace s lyrical topics and themes included mafioso tales Niggas Bleed his drug dealing past Ten Crack Commandments materialistic bragging Hypnotize humor Just Playing Dreams 105 and romance Me amp My Bitch 105 In 2004 Rolling Stone named him as one of the few young male songwriters in any pop style writing credible love songs 94 In the book How to Rap rapper Guerilla Black described how Wallace was able to both glorify the upper echelon 106 and make you feel his struggle 107 The New York Times journalist Toure wrote in 1994 that Wallace s lyrics mixed autobiographical details about crime and violence with emotional honesty 18 Marriott of The New York Times wrote in 1997 that Wallace s lyrics were not strictly autobiographical and that he had a knack for exaggeration that increased sales 21 Wallace wrote that his debut album was a big pie with each slice indicating a different point in his life involving bitches and niggaz from the beginning to the end 108 Rolling Stone described Ready to Die as a contrast of bleak street visions and being full of high spirited fun bringing the pleasure principle back to hip hop 94 AllMusic wrote of a sense of doom in some of his songs and the New York Times noted some songs being laced with paranoia 40 109 Wallace described himself as feeling broke and depressed when he made his debut 109 The final song on Wallace s debut album Suicidal Thoughts featured his character contemplating suicide and concluded with him doing it 94 On Life After Death Wallace s lyrics went deeper 94 Krims explained how upbeat dance oriented tracks which featured less heavily on his debut alternate with reality rap songs on the record and suggested that he was going pimp through some of the lyrical topics of the former 96 XXL magazine wrote that Wallace revamped his image through the portrayal of himself between the albums going from mid level hustler on his debut to drug lord on his second album 110 AllMusic wrote that the success of Ready to Die is mostly due to Wallace s skill as a storyteller 40 In 1994 Rolling Stone described his ability in this technique as painting a sonic picture so vibrant that you re transported right to the scene 38 On Life After Death he notably demonstrated this skill on the song I Got a Story to Tell creating a story as a rap for the first half of the song and then retelling the same story for his boys in conversation form 104 LegacyGraffiti of the Notorious B I G Mural of the Notorious B I G at 5 Pointz A mural in Brooklyn A stencil of the Notorious B I G in Asakusa Tokyo Considered one of the greatest rappers of all time Wallace was described by AllMusic as the savior of East Coast hip hop 19 The Source magazine named him the greatest rapper of all time in its 150th issue in 2002 111 112 In 2003 when XXL magazine asked several hip hop artists to list their five favorite MCs Wallace appeared on more rappers lists than anyone else In 2006 MTV ranked him at No 3 on their list of The Greatest MCs of All Time calling him possibly the most skillful ever on the mic 11 Editors of About com ranked him at No 3 on their list of the Top 50 MCs of Our Time 1987 2007 113 In 2012 The Source ranked him No 3 on their list of the Top 50 Lyrical Leaders of all time 114 Rolling Stone has referred to him as the greatest rapper that ever lived 115 In 2015 Billboard named Wallace as the greatest rapper of all time 10 Wallace s lyrics have been sampled and quoted by a variety of artists including Jay Z 50 Cent Alicia Keys Fat Joe Nelly Ja Rule Eminem Lil Wayne Game Clinton Sparks Michael Jackson and Usher This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources The Notorious B I G news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message At the 2005 MTV Video Music Awards Combs and Snoop Dogg paid tribute to Wallace by hiring an orchestra to play while the vocals from Juicy and Warning played on the arena speakers 116 At the 2005 VH1 Hip Hop Honors a tribute to Wallace headlined the show 117 Wallace had begun to promote a clothing line called Brooklyn Mint which was to produce plus sized clothing but it fell dormant after he died In 2004 his managers Mark Pitts and Wayne Barrow launched the clothing line with help from Jay Z selling T shirts with images of Wallace on them A portion of the proceeds go to the Christopher Wallace Foundation and to Jay Z s Shawn Carter Scholarship Foundation 118 In 2005 Voletta Wallace hired branding and licensing agency Wicked Cow Entertainment to guide the estate s licensing efforts 119 Wallace branded products on the market include action figures blankets and cell phone content 120 The Christopher Wallace Memorial Foundation holds an annual black tie dinner B I G Night Out to raise funds for children s school equipment and to honor Wallace s memory For this particular event because it is a children s schools charity B I G is also said to stand for Books Instead of Guns 121 There is a large portrait mural of Wallace as Mao Zedong on Fulton Street in Brooklyn a half mile west from Wallace s old block 122 A fan petitioned to have the corner of Fulton Street and St James Place near Wallace s childhood home renamed in his honor garnering support from local businesses and attracting more than 560 signatures 122 A large portrait of Wallace features prominently in the Netflix series Luke Cage due to the fact that he served as muse for the creation of the Marvel Cinematic Universe s version of Marvel Comics character Cornell Cottonmouth Stokes In 2018 a movie chronicling LAPD detective Russell Poole s investigation of Wallace s murder was released City of Lies is based on journalist Randall Sullivan s book LAbrynith and explores the corruption and cover ups within LAPD that surround Wallace s case Voletta Wallace believed that Poole was honest and wasn t given the chance to do his job She supported the movie by appearing as herself 123 In August 2020 Wallace s son C J released a house remix of his father s hit Big Poppa 124 A March 2021 Netflix documentary Biggie I Got a Story to Tell executive produced by Voletta Wallace and Combs focuses on B I G s life before he rose to fame as The King of New York and features unprecedented access granted by the Wallace estate 125 Biopic Notorious is a 2009 biographical film about Wallace and his life that stars rapper Jamal Woolard as Wallace The film was directed by George Tillman Jr and distributed by Fox Searchlight Pictures Producers included Sean Combs Wallace s former managers Wayne Barrow and Mark Pitts as well as Voletta Wallace 126 On January 16 2009 the movie s debut at the Grand 18 theater in Greensboro North Carolina was postponed after a man was shot in the parking lot before the show 127 The film received mixed reviews and grossed over 44 million worldwide 128 129 In early October 2007 open casting calls for the role of Wallace began 130 Actors rappers and unknowns all tried out Beanie Sigel auditioned 131 for the role but was not picked Sean Kingston claimed that he would play the role of Wallace but producers denied it 132 Eventually it was announced that rapper Jamal Woolard was chosen to play Wallace 133 while Wallace s son Christopher Wallace Jr was cast to play Wallace as a child 134 Other cast members include Angela Bassett as Voletta Wallace Derek Luke as Sean Combs Antonique Smith as Faith Evans Naturi Naughton as Lil Kim and Anthony Mackie as Tupac Shakur 135 Bad Boy also released a soundtrack album to the film on January 13 2009 it contains many of Wallace s hit singles including Hypnotize and Juicy as well as rarities 136 DiscographyMain article The Notorious B I G discography Studio albumsReady to Die 1994 Life After Death 1997 Collaboration albumConspiracy with Junior M A F I A 1995 Posthumous collaboration albumThe King amp I with Faith Evans 2017 Posthumous compilation albumsBorn Again 1999 Duets The Final Chapter 2005 MediaFilmography The Show 1995 as himself Rhyme amp Reason 1997 documentary as himself Biggie amp Tupac 2002 documentary archive footage Tupac Resurrection 2004 documentary archive footage Notorious B I G Bigger Than Life 2007 documentary archive footage Notorious 2009 archive footage All Eyez on Me 2017 archive footage Quincy 2018 documentary archive footage Biggie The Life of Notorious B I G 2017 documentary archive footage Biggie I Got a Story to Tell 2021 documentary archive footageTelevision appearances New York Undercover 1995 as himself Martin 1995 as himself Who Shot Biggie amp Tupac 2017 archive footage Unsolved 2018 archive footageAwards and nominationsAward Year of ceremony Nominee work Category ResultThe Source Hip Hop Music Awards 137 1995 The Notorious B I G New Artist of the Year Solo WonThe Notorious B I G Lyricist of the Year WonThe Notorious B I G Live Performer of the Year WonReady To Die Album of the Year WonBillboard Music Awards 138 139 1995 The Notorious B I G Rap Artist of the Year Won One More Chance Stay with Me Remix with Faith Evans Rap Single of the Year Won1997 Life After Death R amp B Album WonGrammy Awards 140 141 1996 Big Poppa Best Rap Solo Performance Nominated1998 Hypnotize Best Rap Solo Performance Nominated Mo Money Mo Problems with Mase and Puff Daddy Best Rap Performance by a Duo or Group NominatedLife After Death Best Rap Album NominatedMTV Video Music Awards 142 143 1997 Hypnotize Best Rap Video Won1998 Mo Money Mo Problems with Mase and Puff Daddy Best Rap Video NominatedSoul Train Music Awards 144 145 1996 One More Chance Stay With Me Remix with Faith Evans R amp B Soul or Rap Song of the Year Won1998 Life After Death Best R amp B Soul Album Male WonLife After Death R amp B Soul or Rap Album of the Year Nominated Mo Money Mo Problems with Mase and Puff Daddy Best R amp B Soul or Rap Music Video NominatedBlack Reel Awards 146 2004 Runnin Dying to Live with Tupac Shakur Best Original or Adapted Song NominatedASCAP Rhythm amp Soul Music Awards 147 148 149 2005 Runnin Dying to Live with Tupac Shakur Top Soundtrack Song of the Year Won2017 The Notorious B I G ASCAP Founders Award Won2020 Sicko Mode Winning Rap and R amp B Hip Hop Songs WonRock and Roll Hall of Fame 150 2020 The Notorious B I G Performers WonSee alsoList of murdered hip hop musiciansReferences Rap s first lady TheGuardian com July 10 2005 Notorious B I G In His Own Words and Those of His Friends MTV com March 7 2007 Archived from the original on March 11 2007 Retrieved March 11 2007 Huey Steve Ready to Die gt Overview AllMusic Retrieved October 7 2006 Huey Steve Notorious B I G gt Biography AllMusic Retrieved October 7 2006 Wallace Christopher 1973 1997 in Gerald D Jaynes ed Encyclopedia of African American Society Volume 1 Thousand Oaks CA SAGE Publications 2005 p 867 Top 100 Albums RIAA com May 4 2006 Archived from the original on December 21 2006 Retrieved December 7 2006 Top Selling Artists RIAA com Retrieved May 3 2013 The Notorious B I G Scores Fifth Million Selling Album Billboard February 16 2018 Notorious B I G Juicy The 50 Greatest Hip Hop Songs of All Time Rolling Stone December 5 2012 Retrieved September 9 2013 a b The 10 Greatest Rappers of All Time Billboard November 12 2015 a b The Greatest MCs of All Time Archived July 27 2009 at the Wayback Machine MTV Retrieved December 26 2006 a b Lang Holly 2007 The Notorious B I G A Biography Greenwood Publishing Group pp 1 2 ISBN 978 0 313 34156 4 a b Coker Cheo H March 8 2005 Excerpt Unbelievable The Life Death and Afterlife of The Notorious B I G Vibe Archived from the original on February 16 2009 Franklin Marcus January 17 2009 Much change in Biggie Smalls neighborhood The Insider Associated Press Archived from the original on February 12 2010 Retrieved October 10 2010 Biggie s One Room Shack in Bed Stuy Now up for Sale Bed stuy patch com April 3 2013 Retrieved December 31 2013 Rasso Anne M January 11 2009 The Biggie walk Time Out New York Retrieved June 25 2021 a b c d Sullivan Randall December 5 2005 The Unsolved Mystery of the Notorious B I G Rolling Stone Archived from the original on April 29 2009 Retrieved October 7 2006 a b c Toure December 18 1994 Pop Music Biggie Smalls Rap s Man of the Moment The New York Times retrieved March 26 2008 a b c d e f g h Huey Steve Notorious B I G gt Biography AllMusic Retrieved October 7 2006 Lavin Will March 1 2021 Biggie I Got A Story To Tell review a look at the life of rap s most notorious figure NME Retrieved August 27 2021 a b c d e f g Marriott Michel March 17 1997 The Short Life of a Rap Star Shadowed by Many Troubles The New York Times Retrieved March 26 2008 MTV News Staff March 11 1997 Police May Release Sketch of Biggie Gunman MTV com MTV News Retrieved December 23 2006 a b Notorious BIG Photos Biography Atlantic Records Archived from the original on July 5 2008 Retrieved November 30 2006 Swihart Stanton Blue Funk gt Overview AllMusic Retrieved October 6 2006 Duncan Andrea et al The Making of Ready to Die Family Business XXL March 9 2006 Retrieved March 18 2007 a b c Heller Corinne March 9 2012 Notorious B I G s daughter makes radio debut on 15th anniversary of his death KABC TV Archived from the original on February 23 2014 Retrieved June 3 2018 Lang Holly 2007 The Notorious B I G A Biography Greenwood p 16 ISBN 978 0 313 34156 4 The Notorious B I G releases his autobiographical debut Ready to Die Rolling Stone June 1 1995 Scott Cathy 2000 The Murder of Biggie Smalls New York City St Martin s Press p 31 ISBN 978 0 312 26620 2 Ziegbe Mawuse June 16 2010 Tupac And Biggie Probably Celebrated Birthdays Together Lil Cease Says MTV Kyles Yohance January 19 2015 Yukmouth Talks Tupac s Impact On Hip Hop Says Pac Influenced Biggie s Style allhiphop com Who s the Man Original Soundtrack at AllMusic Craig Mack Chart history Billboard Retrieved May 3 2013 Chappell Kevin April 1999 After Biggie Faith Evans has a new love a new baby a new career singer Ebony The Notorious B I G Awards AllMusic Retrieved May 3 2013 Artist Chart History Billboard com Archived from the original on September 29 2007 Retrieved October 7 2006 RIAA searchable database RIAA Archived from the original on October 15 2006 Retrieved October 7 2006 a b c Ready to Die Explicit Tower Records Muze data Retrieved December 10 2006 a b Tyrangiel Josh November 13 2006 The All TIME Albums Time Retrieved December 10 2006 a b c d Huey Steve Ready to Die gt Overview AllMusic Retrieved October 7 2006 American certifications Notorious B I G One More Change Recording Industry Association of America Best Selling Records of 1995 Billboard Vol 108 no 3 BPI Communications January 20 1996 p 56 ISSN 0006 2510 Retrieved May 5 2015 Busta Rhymes Couldn t Believe It When He Saw Biggie Giving Away Copies of Ready to Die egotripland com September 14 2012 Archived from the original on April 10 2015 Muhammad Latifah March 8 2011 Shaq Remembers Friendship with Notorious B I G The Boombox Shaquille O Neal Interview on The Notorious B I G Harris Christopher April 25 2015 Daz Dillinger Details Recording With The Notorious B I G HipHopDX com Archived from the original on April 25 2015 Retrieved April 25 2015 The Notorious B I G Bio Billboard Retrieved October 29 2010 Ortiz Edwin October 1 2013 Lil Cease Says The Notorious B I G Wouldn t Let Him into Michael Jackson Recording Session Complex Francois Allard Richard Lecocq October 4 2018 Michael Jackson All the Songs The Story Behind Every Track Octopus Books pp 684 ISBN 978 1 78840 123 4 Biggie Smalls dating history From Lil Kim to Faith Evans Capital XTRA Charli Baltimore Biography musicianguide com Retrieved April 23 2022 E 40 Says He Gave Notorious B I G A Pass During One Visit To The Bay March 2 2010 Lane Hai Lydia Junior M A F I A Biography AllMusic Retrieved February 18 2007 Up In The Source Looking Back at The Notorious B I G s Covers of The Source Magazine The Source May 21 2019 Retrieved June 5 2020 Coleman C Vernon II March 29 2019 A History of Rappers Calling Themselves the King of New York XXL Retrieved June 5 2020 The Source Hip Hop Music Awards 1995 The 411 online Archived from the original on November 19 2006 Retrieved December 7 2006 a b c Bruno Anthony The Murders of gangsta rappers Tupac Shakur and Notorious B I G Archived April 7 2007 at the Wayback Machine Court TV Crime Library Retrieved January 24 2007 a b Notorious B I G MTV com KYLD Archived from the original transcript of his last interview on September 23 2003 Convicted Killer Confesses to Shooting West Coast Rapper Tupac Shakur The Baltimore Sun July 13 2012 Archived from the original on August 29 2012 Retrieved August 21 2012 Carney Thomas Live from Death Row PBS org Frontline WGBH TV Retrieved December 9 2006 Mahadevan Tara C March 29 2004 This Day In Rap History Bad Boy Records and Death Row Records Faced Off After the 1996 Soul Train Awards Complex Complex Networks Inc Philips Chuck September 6 2002 Who Killed Tupac Shakur Los Angeles Times Retrieved July 15 2012 Philips Chuck September 7 2002 How Vegas police probe floundered in Tupac Shakur case Los Angeles Times Retrieved July 23 2012 Duvoisin Mark January 12 2006 L A Times Responds to Biggie Story Rolling Stone Retrieved September 19 2013 Silveran Stephen M September 9 2002 B I G Family Denies Tupac Murder Claim People Archived from the original on September 21 2013 Retrieved July 23 2012 Leland John October 7 2002 New Theories Stir Speculation On Rap Deaths New York Times Retrieved September 30 2013 Reid Shaheem September 10 2002 Faith Evans Says Biggie Cried When He Heard Tupac Was Shot MTV Berrios Martin June 12 2020 Snoop Dogg Recalls Visiting The Notorious B I G After 2Pac Was Killed Video HipHopWired Interactive One LLC Rapper Notorious B I G Arrested on Drug Charge Nelson Keith Jr October 2 2013 EXCLUSIVE Lil Cease Tells The Story Of How He Crippled The Notorious B I G VIDEO allhiphop com Biggie rode with his then girlfriend rapper Charli Baltimore August 2 2021 Harling Danielle February 9 2015 Lil Cease Says The Notorious B I G Wrote A Portion Of Life After Death While Hospitalized HipHopDx Archived from the original on February 12 2015 Retrieved February 11 2015 Markman Rob March 9 2012 Notorious B I G Would Have Worked With Kanye West Lil Kim Says MTV Markman Rob March 15 2012 Notorious B I G Locked Lil Kim In A Room To Prevent Jodeci Collabo MTV com Notorious B I G Loses Lawsuit MTV com MTV News January 27 1997 Retrieved December 23 2006 Brown Jake May 24 2004 Ready to Die The Story of Biggie Smalls Notorious B I G Colossus Books p 122 ISBN 978 0 9749779 3 5 The Notorious B I G s Ex Girlfriend Charli Baltimore Threw His Jewelry Out of a Window Just Days Before His Death Purdum Todd S March 10 1997 Rapper Is Shot to Death in Echo of Killing 6 Months Ago The New York Times Retrieved February 23 2009 Sullivan Randall 2013 2002 LAbyrinth A Detective Investigates the Murders of Tupac Shakur and Notorious B I G Digital ed Canongate Chapter Six ISBN 9781782114109 Horowitz Steven J December 7 2012 Notorious B I G Autopsy Report 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and Ethnography in Underground Hip Hop Trafford Publishing p 163 ISBN 978 1 4120 5394 5 a b Edwards Paul 2009 How to Rap The Art amp Science of the Hip Hop MC Chicago Review Press p 100 Edwards Paul 2009 How to Rap The Art amp Science of the Hip Hop MC Chicago Review Press p 112 Edwards Paul 2009 How to Rap The Art amp Science of the Hip Hop MC Chicago Review Press p x Edwards Paul 2009 How to Rap The Art amp Science of the Hip Hop MC Chicago Review Press p 53 Edwards Paul 2009 How to Rap The Art amp Science of the Hip Hop MC Chicago Review Press p 144 Andrea Duncan March 9 2006 The Making of Ready to Die Family Business XXL Retrieved March 18 2008 a b Christgau Robert Life After Death review Consumer Guide Reviews Retrieved January 7 2007 a b Notorious B I G Still the Illest Archived December 13 2006 at the Wayback Machine MTV Retrieved December 26 2006 Edwards Paul 2009 How to Rap The Art amp Science of the Hip Hop MC Chicago Review Press p 14 Edwards Paul 2009 How to Rap The Art amp Science of the Hip Hop MC Chicago Review Press p 44 Brown Jake May 24 2004 Ready to Die The Story of Biggie Smalls Notorious B I G Colossus Books p 66 ISBN 978 0 9749779 3 5 a b Pareles Jon March 10 1997 Rapping Living and Dying a Gangsta Life The New York Times Retrieved March 26 2008 Ex Kris November 6 2006 The History of Cocaine Rap All White Archived March 13 2009 at the Wayback Machine XXL magazine Retrieved February 10 2007 Osorio Kim March 2002 Biggie Smalls Is The Illest The Source Music Profiles The Notorious B I G BBC News Online Archived from the original on June 11 2007 Retrieved January 27 2007 50 Greatest Rappers of All Time The 50 Greatest MCs of All Time Rap about com Retrieved January 4 2017 Blue Johny July 2012 Top 50 Lyrical Leaders 3 The Notorious B I G The Source New York City L Londell McMillan Notorious B I G Juicy The 50 Greatest Hip Hop Songs of All Time Rolling Stone December 5 2012 Retrieved September 9 2013 Moss Corey August 25 2005 Green Day Clean Up Kelly Clarkson Gets Wet 50 Rips Into Fat Joe At VMAs MTV News Retrieved February 27 2007 VH1 to give Notorious B I G Hip Hop Honors June 25 2005 Associated Press Retrieved February 17 2006 Strong Nolan February 8 2005 B I G s Brooklyn Mint Clothing Line Debuts Jay Z Gets Down AllHipHop Retrieved September 7 2007 Properties Available for Licensing The Licensing Letter EPM July 17 2006 Wolfe Roman June 22 2006 Limited Action Figures of B I G Public Enemy Coming This Fall AllHipHop Archived from the original on December 5 2007 Retrieved September 7 2007 Reid Shaheem Calloway Sway March 21 2003 Biggie Jam Master Jay Left Eye and Their Mothers Honored at B I G Night Out MTV News Retrieved August 1 2006 a b Stewart Henry Should We Name a Street After Biggie Wallace Voletta April 13 2021 Voletta Wallace Interview City of Lies ScreenRant Interview Interviewed by Joe Deckelmeier Retrieved July 3 2022 Notorious B I G s Son Shares Electrifying Big Poppa House Remix Spin August 12 2020 Kreps Daniel February 15 2021 Notorious B I G See First Trailer for Estate Approved Netflix Documentary Rolling Stone Retrieved February 24 2021 Director Selected for Biggie Biopic Diddy to Executive Produce Archived January 18 2008 at the Wayback Machine XXL August 13 2007 Retrieved November 28 2007 Shooting erupts at Notorious movie Greensboro News amp Record January 16 2009 Retrieved September 12 2016 Notorious 2009 Box Office Mojo Retrieved April 18 2013 Notorious Movie Reviews Pictures Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved May 18 2015 Melena Ryzik October 8 2007 Dreaming Big About Acting Big The New York Times Retrieved November 28 2007 Beanie Sigel Auditions for Role of Biggie Smalls in New Biopic Archived January 18 2008 at the Wayback Machine October 3 2007 XXL Retrieved November 28 2007 Sean Kingston Big But Not B I G Vibe August 30 2007 Archived from the original on November 5 2007 Retrieved November 28 2007 Brooklyn Rapper Gravy to Play Biggie in Upcoming Biopic Archived March 10 2008 at the Wayback Machine March 6 2008 XXL Retrieved November 28 2007 Wallace Voletta Christopher Wallace Jr Interview Magazine Retrieved November 24 2010 Gravy for Biggie Archived March 10 2008 at the Wayback Machine March 6 2008 Joblo com Retrieved March 6 2008 Reid Shaheem December 3 2008 Notorious Soundtrack Details Revealed Features Jay Z Jadakiss Faith Evans Biggie s Son MTV News Retrieved December 27 2008 2nd Annual Source Awards Winners Database Billboard Music Awards Retrieved January 24 2023 Winners Database Billboard Music Awards Retrieved January 24 2023 Rock On The Net 38th Annual Grammy Awards 1996 www rockonthenet com Retrieved January 24 2023 Rock On The Net 40th Annual Grammy Awards 1998 www rockonthenet com Retrieved January 24 2023 Rock On The Net 1997 MTV Video Music Awards www rockonthenet com Retrieved January 24 2023 Rock On The Net 1998 MTV Video Music Awards www rockonthenet com Retrieved January 24 2023 Soul Train Awards 1996 IMDb Retrieved January 24 2023 Soul Train Awards 1998 IMDb Retrieved January 24 2023 Black Reel Awards 2004 IMDb Retrieved January 24 2023 2005 ASCAP Awards 2017 ASCAP Awards 2020 ASCAP Awards The Notorious B I G rockhall com Notes Until Wallace s death Further readingCoker Cheo Hodari 2004 Unbelievable The Life Death and Afterlife of the Notorious B I G New York Three Rivers Press ISBN 978 0 609 80835 1 Wallace Voletta McKenzie Tremell Evans Faith foreword 2005 Biggie Voletta Wallace Remembers Her Son Christopher Wallace aka Notorious B I G Atria ISBN 978 0 7434 7020 9 External links Wikimedia Commons has media related to The Notorious B I G Wikiquote has quotations related to The Notorious B I G The Notorious B I G collected news and commentary at The New York Times The Notorious B I G at IMDb FBI Records The Vault Christopher Biggie Smalls Wallace at vault fbi gov Portals Biography Music United States Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Notorious B I G amp oldid 1143611705, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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