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Lost Tupac Interview FOUND

Tuesday, June 16, 2009 4:48 PM | 76 comments
By Davey D
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O
ne of the most interesting and intense interviews, I’ve ever conducted was with Tupac Shakur.. He had just hit it big with the movie Juice and and everyone wondering was he just acting or putting forth his real life persona in the movie..
Although I had known him for a couple of years it was hard for me to tell.. cause he had a loaded gun on him as we spoke…If I recall it was a 38….Pac explains in this interview his then recent encounter with the Oakland Police Department which resulted in him getting beat. I had run excerpts from this interview in a newsletter I used to publish back in the early 90s. I had completely forgotten about this interview and had misplaced the tape.

A couple of months ago while working on liner notes for Digital Underground’s Greatest Hits which recently came out on Rhino records, I came across a tape that had an old interview I did with Shock G. I flipped to the b-side and to my surprise I discovered the missing 2Pac interview from 1991.So today in celebration of his birthday we are sending off the transcript of the entire interview. We are also going to be playing the entire interview on our Hard Knock radio show. If you happen to be located in the San Francisco Bay Area or anywhere throughout Northern and Central california tune into KPFA 94.1 FM… If you happen to be listening to us up in Seattle where we are also heard tune into Radio X. Everyone else peep us out on line at KPFA.org or radio-x.org.


2Pacjuice-225


We will be putting excerpts of the interview up on the site tomorrow. Enjoy the interview.Tupac Shakur considers himself the ‘Rebel of the Underground’ [Digital Underground] and for good reason. He stirs things up and does the unexpected. Such a person is bound to generate excitement because they have impact on both the people and situations around them.


2Pac in 1992 promises to have major impact in the world of hip hop. He’s kicking things off with a sensational acting debut in the movie ‘Juice‘ where he stars as the character Roland Bishop. His debut lp ‘2Pacalypse Now‘ is beginning to cause a bit of a stir on retail shelves around the country. And if that’s not enough Tupac is branching out and signing new acts to his production company including his older brother Moecedes who raps in the Toni Tony Tone song ‘Feels Good. I recently had the pleasure of interviewing this out spoken and very animated individual at his apartment where he told his tale.

 


 2pacbandana-225

Davey D:
Give a little bit of background on yourself. What got you into hip hop?
 

2Pac: I’m from the Bronx, NY. I moved to Baltimore where I spent some high school years and then I came to Oaktown. As for hip hop…all my travels through these cities seemed to be the common denominator.


Davey D: 2Pac… Is that your given name or is that your rap name?

 

 Davey D: You lived In Marin City for a little while. How was your connection with hip hop able to be maintained while living there? Was there a thriving hip hop scene in Marin City?


2Pac: Not really..You were just given truth to the music. Being in Marin City was like a small town so it taught me to be more straight forward with my style. Instead of of being so metaphorical with the rhyme where i might say something like…

I’m the hysterical, lyrical miracle
I’m the hypothetical, incredible…

I was encouraged to go straight at it and hit it dead on and not waste time trying to cover things…


Davey D:Why was that?


2Pac In Marin City it seemed like things were real country. Everything was straight forward. Poverty was straight forward. There was no way to say I’m poor, but to say ‘I’m po’…we had no money and that’s what influenced my style.


Davey D: How did you hook up with Digital Underground?


 2Pac: I caught the ‘D-Flow Shuttle’ while I was in Marin City. It was the way out of here. Shock G was the conductor.


Davey D: What’s the D-Flow Shuttle?


2Pac:The D-Flow Shuttle is from the album ‘Sons of the P‘ It was the way to escape out of the ghetto. It was the way to success. I haven’t gotten off since…

pacshock_0_0_0x0_350x369


Davey D: Now let’s put all that in laymen’s terms


2Pac: Basically I bumped into this kid named Greg Jacobs aka Shock G and he hooked me up with Digital Underground and from there I hooked up with Money B… and from there Money B hooked me up with his step mamma… and from there me and his step mamma started making beats…[laughter] Me and his step mamma got a little thing jumping off. We had a cool sound, but Shock asked me if I wanted a group. I said ‘Yeah but I don’t wanna group with Money B’s step momma ’cause she’s gonna try and take all the profits… She wants to go out there and be like the group ‘Hoes with Attitude’, but I was like ‘Naw I wanna be more serious and represent the young black male’.


So Shock says we gotta get rid of Money B’s step mamma. So we went to San Quentin [prison] and ditched her in the ‘Scared Straight’ program…[laughter. After that Shock put me in the studio and it was on..This is a true story so don't say anything.. It's a true story. And to Mon's step mamma I just wanna say 'I'm sorry, but a man's gotta do what a man's gotta do. I'm sorry but it was Shock's idea-Bertha.. but don't worry she can get her half of the profits from the first cut after she finishes doing her jail time. [laughter]


Davey D: What’s the concept behind your album 2Pacalypse Now’?


 2Pac: The concept is the young Black male. Everybody’s been talkin’ about it but now it’s not important. It’s like we just skipped over it.. It’s no longer a fad to be down for the young Black male. Everybody wants to go past. Like the gangster stuff, it just got exploited. This was just like back in the days with the movies. Everybody did their little gun shots and their hand grenades and blew up stuff and moved on. Now everybody’s doing rap songs with the singing in it.. I’m still down for the young Black male. I’m gonna stay until things get better. So it’s all about addressing the problems that we face in everyday society.


Davey D: What are those problems?


2Pac: Police brutality, poverty, unemployment, insufficient education, disunity and violence, black on black crime, teenage pregnancy, crack addiction. Do you want me to go on?


 Davey D: How do you address these problems? Are you pointing them out or are you offering solutions?


2Pac: I do both. In some situations I show us having the power and in some situations I show how it’s more apt to happen with the police or power structure having the ultimate power. I show both ways. I show how it really happens and I show how I wish it would happen .


Davey D: You refer to yourself as the ‘Rebel of the Underground’ Why so?


2Pac: Cause, as if Digital Underground wasn’t diverse enough with enough crazy things in it, I’m even that crazier. I’m the rebel totally going against the grain…I’m the lunatic that everyone refers to. I always want to do the extreme. I want to get as many people looking as possible. For example I would’ve never done the song ‘Kiss U Back’ that way.I would’ve never done a song like that-That’s why I’m the rebel.


2Pacsmile

Davey D: Can talk about your recent encounter with police brutality at the hands of the Oakland PD?


 2Pac:We’re letting the law do its job. It’s making its way through the court system.. We filed a claim…

Davey D:  Recount the incident for those who don’t know.


2Pac:For everyone who doesn’t know, I, an innocent young black male was walking down the streets of Oakland minding my own business and the police department saw fit for me to be trained or snapped back into my place. So they asked for my I-D and sweated me about my name because my name is ‘Tupac’. My final words to them was ‘f— y’all’ . Next thing I know I was in a choke hold passing out with cuffs on headed for jail for resisting arrest. Yes.. you heard right-I was arrested for resisting arrest.


Davey D:Where is all this now?


2Pac: We’re in the midst of having a ten million dollar law suit against the Oakland Police Department. If I win and get the money, then the Oakland Police department is going to buy a boys home, me a house, my family a house and a ‘Stop Police Brutality Center’ and other little odd things like that..


Davey D:In the video for the song ‘Trapped‘ do you think that would’ve had the police want to treat you aggressively? After all, the video is very telling especially in the un-edited version where you have a cop get shot.


2Pac: Well the ironic thing is the cops I came across in that incident didn’t know about that video. The second thing is that everything I said in that video happened to me. The video happened before the incident. In the video I show how the cops sweat me and ask for my ID and how I can’t go anywhere…


Davey D:Let’s talk about the movie ‘Juice’. How did you get involved? Where’s it at? and what’s it about? 


2Pac: MMM what led me? Well, we have the Freaky Deaky Money B and Sleuth [raod manager for DU]. Money B had an audition for the movie Sleuth [road manager] suggested I also come along so I went. Money B read the script and said to me’ this sounds like you- a rebel. he was talking about this character named Bishop. I went in cold turkey, read, God was with me…


Davey D:Have you ever had acting experience before?


2Pac: Actually I went to the school of Performing arts in Baltimore and that’s where I got my acting skills.


Davey D:Ok so you weren’t a novice when you went up there… So what’s the movie about?


2Pac:The movie is about 4 kids and their coming of age.


Davey D:Is it a Hip Hop movie?


2Pac:No, it’s not a hip hop movie. It’s a real good movie that happens to have hip hop in it. If it was made in the 60s it would’ve depicted whatever was ‘down’ in the 60s…My character is Roland Bishop, a psychotic, insecure very violent, very short tempered individual.


Davey D:What’s the message you hope is gotten out of the movie? 


2Pac: You never know what’s going on in somebody’s mind. There are a lot of things that add up. There’s a lot of pressure on someone growing up. You have to watch it if it goes unchecked. This movie was an example of what can happen…


Davey D:Can you explain what you mean by this?


 2Pac:In the movie my character’s, father was a prison whore and that was something that drove him through the whole movie…


Davey D: This was something that wasn’t shown in the movie?


2Pac: Yes, they deleted this from the film. Anyway this just wrecked his [Bishop's] mind. You can see through everybody else’s personality, Bishop just wanted to get respect. He wanted the respect that his father didn’t get. Everthing he did, he did just to get a rep. So from those problems never being dealt with led to him ending four people’s lives.


Davey D:Do you intend on continuing making movies?


2Pac: It depends on whether or not there are any good parts. I want to challenge myself.


Davey D:What is your philosophy on hip hop? I’ve heard you say you don’t to see it diluted?


2Pac: Well when I said that, it made me think. It brought me to myself. Now I have a different philosophy. Hip Hop when it started it was supposed to be this new thing that had no boundaries and was so different to everyday music. Now it seems like I was starting to get caught up in the mode of what made hip hop come about. I would walk around and hear something and start saying ‘That’s not Hip Hop’. If someone started singing, I would walk around and say ‘That’s not Hip Hop’. Well, now I’ve changed my mind. That could be Hip Hop.As long as the music has the true to the heart soul it can be hip hop. As long it has soul to it, hip hop can live on.


Davey D:I guess my question would be, how do you determine what’s soul and what isn’t?


2Pac: Well you can tell. The difference between a hit like ‘Make You Dance’ [C&C Music Factory] and ‘My Mind Is Playing Tricks On Me’ [Geto Boys]. You have to ask yourself, ‘Which song moves you’.


Davey D: Well actually both. Both songs move me


2Pac: Really? well… ok there you go


Davey D:So they both would be Hip Hop, right?


2Pac:I guess so, at least in your opinion. ‘The Make You Dance’ song didn’t move me. But the Geto Boys song did move me


Davey D:Well for the record Bambaataa says both of them are Hip Hop. I asked him what he thought about groups like C&C Music Factory. He said they were part of the Hip Hop family…But that’s his philosophy on things. So what’s your plans for the next year or so?


2Pac: To strengthen the Underground Railroad. I have a crew called the Underground Railroad and a program called the Underground Railroad…I wanna build all this up, so that by next year you will know the name Underground Railroad


Davey D:So what’s the concept behind The Underground Railroad?


2Pac:The concept behind this is the same concept behind Harriet Tubman, to get my brothers who might be into drug dealing or whatever it is thats illegal or who are disenfranchised by today’s society-I want to get them back into by turning them onto music. It could be R&B, hip hop or pop, as long as I can get them involved. While I’m doing that, I’m teaching them to find a love for themselves so they can love others and do the same thing we did for them to others. 


Davey D: How many people in the Underground Railroad? Is it a group that intends to keep constantly evolving? Also where are the people who are a part of Underground Railroad coming from?


2Pac: Right now we’re twenty strong. The group is going to be one that constantly evolves. The people that are in the UR are coming from all over, Baltimore, Marin City, Oakland, New York, Richmond-all over. 


Davey D: What do you think of the Bay Area rap scene compared to other parts of the country?

 

2Pac: Right now the Bay Area is how the Bronx was in 1981. Everybody is hot. They caught the bug. Everybody is trying to be creative and make their own claim. New York just got to a point where you could no longer out due the next guy. So now you have this place where there isn’t that many people to out due. Here you can do something and if it’s good enough people will remember you. So that’s what’s happening. here in the Bay Area, it’s like a renaissance.


Davey D: In New York the renaissance era got stopped for a number of reasons in my opinion. What do you think will prevent that from happening in the Bay Area?


2Pac: Well at the risk of sounding biased, I say Digital Underground. They are like any other group. I’ll give that to Shock G. He made it so that everything Digital Underground does it helps the Bay Area music scene. It grows and goes to New York and hits people from all over the country. That helps the Bay Area. Our scene is starting to rub off on people. We want everyone to know about Oakland. When other groups come down, like Organized Konfusion or Live Squad and they kick it with Digital Underground, they get to see another side of the Bay Area music scene.It’s a different side then if they kicked it with that guy… I don’t wanna say his name, but you know who he is he dropped the ‘MC’ from his name [MC Hammer].


Davey D: So you think Digital Underground will be more strength to the Bay Area rap scene because they help bring national attention. What do you think other groups will have to do?


2Pac: What we have to do is not concentrate so much on one group. We have to focus more on the area. It’s not about just building up Too Short, Digital Underground and Tony Toni Tone and say; ‘That’s it. They’re the only groups that can come from the Bay Area’. We have to let the new groups come out. Nobody wants to give the new acts a chance. Everybody wants to only talk about Too Short and Digital Underground…We have to start talking about these other groups that are trying to come in that are coming up from the bottom.


Davey D: When you say ‘come up’ what do you mean by that?

  
2Pac: It’s like this. Instead of letting them do interviews where nobody ever reads them, let a good newspaper interview them. Instead of putting them on the radio when nobody is ever going to hear them or where nobody is going to hear them, have them where people can hear them and get at them where they had a better chance, just like if they were Mariah Carey.

  
Davey D: Do you find the Bay Area sound is being respected? Do you find that people are starting to accept it around the country?

  
 2Pac: I feel that the Bay Area sound hasn’t even finished coming out. It’s starting to get respected more and more everyday.

 
 

 

Davey D: Your brother Moecedes is a rapper for the group Tony Toni Tone. What’s the story with him? Are you guys gonna team up?

 
2Pac: He’s in the Underground Railroad. He’s also about to come out with another guy named Dana.

 
 Davey D: Who produced your album and are you into producing

 
2Pac: I co-produced it with the members of the Underground Railroad which is Shock G, Money B, Raw Fusion, Pee Wee, Jay-Z from Richmond, Stretch from the Live Squad. It’s really like a life thing-this Underground Railroad. It effects everything we do.

 
Davey D:Is there anything else we should know about Tupac? 

 
2Pac: Yeah, the group Nothing Gold is coming. My kids are coming out with a serious message…NG is a group coming out that I produce.. All the stuff I say in my rhymes I say because of how I grew up. So to handle that, instead of going to a pyschiatrist, I got a kids group that deals with the problems a younger generation is going through. They put them into rhymes so it’s like a pyschology session set to music. It’ll make you come to grips with what you actually do..

 
Davey D: What do you mean by that? Are they preaching?

  
 2Pac: No they’re just telling you straight up like Ice Cube or Scarface. They’re being blunt and it comes out of a kid’s mouth. If you’re a black man, you’re going to really trip out cause they really call you out and have you deal with them…NG will make us have responsibility again. Kids are telling you to have responsibility…

 

 Davey D: What do you think of the current trends in Hip Hop like the gangsta rap, Afrocentric Rap, raggamuffin and the fusion of the singing and rap? Some people call it ‘pop rap’.


 

2Pac: I think all the real shit is gonna stay. It’s gonna go through some changes. It’s going through a metaphorphis so it will blow up sometimes and get real nasty and gritty, then the leeches will fall off and Hip Hop will be fit and healthy. Hip Hop has to go through all of that, but no one can make judgments until it’s over.

 

 

Davey D: What do you think the biggest enemies to Hip Hop are right now?

  
2Pac: Egotistical rappers. They don’t wanna open up their brain. Its foul when people are walking around saying things like; ‘Oakland is the only place where the real rappers come out. New York is the only place where the real rappers come out. They booty out there or they booty over there…’ All of that just needs to die or Hip Hop is gonna have problems. Its gonna be so immature. Thats just conflict in words. We can’t be immature we gotta grow.

 
 Davey D: Cool I think we got enough out of you 2Pac.

2Pac:
yes I think you got enough

 
Davey D: Peace.

Comments

 

LILAILO said:

RIP PAC
http://www.myspace.com/independenthussle
come comment ur opinion matters
June 16, 2009 4:53 PM
 

Ms_JoiBella said:

i miss this man.....he played the shit outta Bishop. he was natural it was scary. every one else in Juice seemed to be acting, he just WAS. with that being said i'll read this now and commet later....i just wanted to say that b4 there were 100 comments.
June 16, 2009 4:59 PM
 

Kinte said:

Happy b-day pac
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June 16, 2009 5:04 PM
 

Killuminati 187 said:

G.O.A.T.
June 16, 2009 5:23 PM
 

Airjunior23 said:

PAC is the realest DOA!!!

East Oakland Bitch
June 16, 2009 5:25 PM
 

D.O.C said:

R.I.P/HAPPY B-DAY PAC

G.O.A.T

COOL INTERVIEW
June 16, 2009 5:26 PM
 

Water Ur Seeds said:

my battery is bouta run outta juice, so i havent got time to read it properly, ima have to read it 2moro when i get 2 work

man i cant wait 2 read this!!!!!!! big up davey d, a true hip hop head and legend...  thanks for posting it

rip tupac
June 16, 2009 5:28 PM
 

International said:

damn, good interview, he was a teen too, smh you cant even compare rappers in their late 20s, 30s to this Pac in this interview, what a damn shame, shyt like this is why he will never die in hip hop...

THE G.O.A.T
June 16, 2009 5:31 PM
 

KOSGOD said:

Very nice interview. Probably was around 1992.
June 16, 2009 5:33 PM
 

KOSGOD said:

Oops my bad, just saw that it said it was in 1991. Damn, I was a freshman in highschool then
June 16, 2009 5:36 PM
 

CRANSTONJULIANI said:

r.i.p. to one of the greatest...we lost a legend...check out this and pay respect...http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tb7d8pHtKpA
June 16, 2009 5:45 PM
 

Ms_JoiBella said:

wow, replace c&c music factory or mc hammer with flo rida or soljaboytellem and its like this interview just happened. what he said still really aplies today, what one person may think is hip-hop another may not. but i think he lost his way a little in the end though. i don't think he was able for one reason or another to maintain his goal of the groups and foundations he talked about. i wonder where the kids of nothing gold and the people from underground railroad are today. its funny cause now people call it hip-pop, not pop-rap.....cool interview nice job davey.

and i made my commet up top b4 i read this and i had no idea juice was gonna be mentioned.
June 16, 2009 5:46 PM
 

nyga07 said:

haha
youll aint peep how he broke down the problem thats killing hip hop 18 yrs b4 hand
when you have a bunch of rappers saying the best is only from the eas,t south, or west and rappers saying if your not from the east, south, or west your pussy thats whats going to kill hip hop being immature.....
and this is why i say pac while not the best rapper ever is most def the best person to ever be labeled as a rapper ,there is a difference

this man mind and thought process was so unmatched .
He is truly what you get when you look in a person mind and find out everything they think say and do and that is what set pac apart from all the others ,he just let you all the way and all his actions seemed genuine,this man sat and told you he was doing gangster rap bczu it paid his bills and to get a messgae across not bcuz he wanted to be or wanted to glorify being a gangster ,,,gets no realer than that
June 16, 2009 5:53 PM
 

Lost Tupac Interview FOUND | Spotifyfreeinvites.com said:

June 16, 2009 5:58 PM
 

God_Zilla said:

Good interview
It's like he's talking to us behind the grave and letting us know Hip Hop will be alright.

RIP
GOAT
June 16, 2009 6:00 PM
 

youngsane510 said:

rest in peace 2pac! just imagine how different the game would be right now if he never died..

myspace.com/saneofdisobay

imeem.com/saneofdisobay
June 16, 2009 6:03 PM
 

Ashy2Clazzy said:

Good interview. RIP Pac

I wonder what affect them having Bishop's dad being a prison whore would have had on the lasting effect of that movie.

Sometimes Pac was walking controversy because he contradicted himself all the time. Like saying that about singing in rap and then doing songs like "How Do U Want It" and with a group like Bone who only sung their raps.

He also talked about egotistical rappers killing hip hop and I think he portrayed a huge ego at times. He also ended up being a labelmate with Hammer (whose name he didnt want to say in the interview) when he joined Death Row. They ended up being homeboys.

But maybe that's why he's so famous, even after his life on Earth ceased.
June 16, 2009 6:09 PM
 

Everything is Everything said:

Prophet..... everything the Brother spoke on is still 100% relevant today. THANKS FOR YOUR LIFE PAC.
June 16, 2009 6:13 PM
 

CUTMAN said:

I thought he was born on Brooklyn.................
June 16, 2009 6:24 PM
 

Outlaw76 said:

Thanks for everything PAC.  You were like a big brother even though I never met you.  No matter what I was goping through, I could turn on one of your songs and feel like you knew exactly how I felt.  Definitely the realest to do it.  Miss you bruh!
June 16, 2009 6:31 PM
 

Rut122 said:

Happy B-day Pac.

You set standards for rappers on the big screen acting. In my opinion, you'll always be #1.

R.I.P.
GOAT

June 16, 2009 6:34 PM
 

mainwun said:

good interview. It's funny how later in his career he gravitated toward that same direction he said was hurting hip hop, with the whole westside thing.
June 16, 2009 6:35 PM
 

TheLogik said:

Prophecy!
June 16, 2009 6:41 PM
 

poe said:

R.I.P./Happy Birthday Pac!


wish u was still here!
June 16, 2009 6:51 PM
 

stacy1 said:

this fue spoke about rap in the last phrase and thats jus were it is now i feel for the new artist and listeners rao is not what it use to be but then u still have the real mc out here stll. scarface,game willie d,jay z some times and numerous others
June 16, 2009 7:09 PM
 

ImGood said:

R.I.P. TUPAC
June 16, 2009 7:32 PM
 

InteL-A-GentZ said:

pac was a true revolutionary... R.I.P to one of the greatest... it's sad that he fell victim to the same things he was speaking against early in his life. I saw the interview of him when he was 17 talking about the problems in the world and why things are the way they are. his ol girl was a black panther and schooled pac on all the evils of the world... "THEY" weren't worried bout him at first, b/c even though he had the platform to make real change, he wasn't really trying to expose what was going on, just "reporting" it... but then towards the end, he started getting political and realized that he had to do sumtin about wuts going on, and "THEY" couldn't allow that to happen, which is why he was murdered...

dam shame... but when u get too close to the truth, u get removed...


RIP Tupac Amaru Shakur...

"I mite not change the world, but I will spark the brain that changes the world"


http://www.intelagentz.com
June 16, 2009 7:39 PM
 

Divine12th said:

Nice work Davey...big-ups ALLHIPHOP

Everytime I listen to an influential artist (any genre), I wonder how would that genre, or music in general would be if that artist was still living.  

Shit, Pac would've done CRAZY damage as an executive, on the big screen, as well as dropping classics!  So much unreleased material was released after his departure...just think how much more material he woulda had tucked away if he was still here!

R.I.P. Pac-"The Poet"



Divine, PEACE!
June 16, 2009 7:39 PM
 

HELLUPINPHILLY said:

Just think back, PAC was only 25 when he died & went threw alot @ that young age. Fame prob got the best of him, but yet he still put that music out, that if you put it on you would think that was a new song made in  2009.

Not only did I love his music, but I loved 2 hear him speak about this fucked up society.
June 16, 2009 7:44 PM
 

Tye-Banks said:

2Pac: Egotistical rappers. They don’t wanna open up their brain. Its foul when people are walking around saying things like; ‘Oakland is the only place where the real rappers come out. New York is the only place where the real rappers come out. They booty out there or they booty over there…’ All of that just needs to die or Hip Hop is gonna have problems. Its gonna be so immature. Thats just conflict in words. We can’t be immature we gotta grow.

Read those words you guys who say HIP HOP IS DEAD.. Read those words...

Yeah I said it
I'm Indie

Tye Banks

http://www.TyeBanks.com

Check out my new video
"I'm Still Cool"

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5fv_2PzNifE
June 16, 2009 8:19 PM
 

ufeelme209 said:

pac died @ 25 im 26 now and feel like i have grown alot just in the last three years, was he perfect no, but thats why everyone could relate because none of us are.

Pac the best to do it.
June 16, 2009 8:20 PM
 

Ksolo said:



Davey D: What do you think the biggest enemies to Hip Hop are right now?

 
2Pac: Egotistical rappers. They don’t wanna open up their brain. Its foul when people are walking around saying things like; ‘Oakland is the only place where the real rappers come out. New York is the only place where the real rappers come out. They booty out there or they booty over there…’ All of that just needs to die or Hip Hop is gonna have problems. Its gonna be so immature. Thats just conflict in words. We can’t be immature we gotta grow.


Happy Birthday, Pac. Rest In Peace Homie




June 16, 2009 8:23 PM
 

HECTIK84 said:

TUPAC IS ONE OF THE BEST THINGS THE EVER HAPPEN IN HIPHOP
TUPAC MAY BE GONE BUT WILL NEVER BE FORGOTTEN
June 16, 2009 8:37 PM
 

NOLAIS504 said:

@ mainwun said:
good interview. It's funny how later in his career he gravitated toward that same direction he said was hurting hip hop, with the whole westside thing.
---------------------------

cosign homie. in some way's it seems like he brought his death on himself.
June 16, 2009 8:43 PM
 

Mic-Mad said:

R.I.P/Happy B-Day  gone but never forgotten I hope some rappers read this.

Mic-Mad
June 16, 2009 8:46 PM
 

Sovietnam said:

Ending four peoples lives?

Old man Quillez.

Raheem.

Rhadaman.

and.......................... who?
June 16, 2009 8:47 PM
 

HECTIK84 said:

RIP MAKAVELI
June 16, 2009 8:50 PM
 

SuperChrisbo said:

Very intelligent brotha. reading this interview makes me wanna slap the piss outta negroe's like Gucci, jeezy etc...

The man will never allow Hip Hop to go back to screaming peace and the importance of Wisdom.
June 16, 2009 8:59 PM
 

HECTIK84 said:

RIP TUPAC
June 16, 2009 9:07 PM
 

canes305 said:

Happy Birthday Pac...
June 16, 2009 9:10 PM
 

SouthernFried said:

Pour out a lil liqour RIP Pac!!!!

I do believe it will be a day when we take back our craft when these record execs think they drain us dry we will finally get on the same page and reach the mountain top.

the og's gotta start teachin and the youngins need to start listening.

yall be easy and get money
June 16, 2009 9:35 PM
 

CRAWDAWG said:

HAPPY BIRTHDAY PAC
June 16, 2009 9:37 PM
 

CRANSTONJULIANI said:

June 16, 2009 9:40 PM
 

CRANSTONJULIANI said:

PAC WENT TO VEGAS AND GOT SHOT/ RUSHED TO THE HOSPITAL IN CRITICAL BUT NOT A DROP/ OF TEARS WERE SHED INSTEAD HE WAS RIDICULED/ FOR HIS ANTICS BUT WE AINT PANIC CUZ A MIRACLE/ WAS SURE TO HAPPEN LIKE UP IN MANHATTAN/ AT THE STUDIO WHEN SOMEBODY START CLAPPIN/ SO WE WERE LAUGHING ASKING WILL HE LEARN/ A LESSON THIS TIME BUT HE NEVER GOT A TURN.......http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tb7d8pHtKpA
June 16, 2009 9:55 PM
 

Pharoah1983 said:

@   nyga07 ,
See and how can people not give pac his respect. 2pac was that dude yo. I know alot of people like B.I.G, but I feel like Pac's music had way more substance and it touched on way more topics that B.I.G.
R.I.P Pac

http://pharaoh-kingofthepack.blogspot.com/
June 16, 2009 10:31 PM
 

CUTMAN said:

IF YO GIVE A FUCK ABOUT BEATS , YOU SHOULD BE AT ''I STANDARD'' PRODUCER SHOWCASE ON JUNE 17 2009 AT ''DON'S HILL'' 511 Greenwich st. @ Spring st in NYC. COME SUPPORT THE REAL HIP HOP !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! People like Sean Price and Dru ha are invited. Must be 21 to get in, tickets $20 at the door $10 if get from us text '' cheap tix'' when get there or call 347 576 0801 or 787 23617 59. Forgot to say it's gonna be Sky Zoo's signing celebration with his performance as well BK Stand up!!.
June 16, 2009 11:28 PM
 

jay_everyday said:

Happy Birthday Pac.

Jay-Z on a Pac album?
June 16, 2009 11:36 PM
 

jay_everyday said:

Jay-Z on a Pac album in 91?

http://soulofachampion.blogspot.com
June 16, 2009 11:37 PM
 

jay_everyday said:

Jay-Z on a Pac album in 91?

http://soulofachampion.blogspot.com
June 16, 2009 11:38 PM
 

Way2Kool said:

Tupac was a passionate individual.  He embodied the contradictory behavior that's in all of us.  I stay clear of worshipping fellow humans though.  
June 17, 2009 12:18 AM
 

Way2Kool said:

Davey D: What do you think of the current trends in Hip Hop like the gangsta rap, Afrocentric Rap, raggamuffin and the fusion of the singing and rap? Some people call it ‘pop rap’.



2Pac: I think all the real shit is gonna stay. It’s gonna go through some changes. It’s going through a metaphorphis so it will blow up sometimes and get real nasty and gritty, then the leeches will fall off and Hip Hop will be fit and healthy. Hip Hop has to go through all of that, but no one can make judgments until it’s over.
June 17, 2009 12:25 AM
 

NEBRASKABOY said:

r.i.p. tupac!!!
happy birthday!!!
June 17, 2009 12:48 AM
 

Mr.Exquisite said:

damn he had a complex plan from the beginning. he was surely the right leader for hip hop. such an unfortunate loss. RIP GOAT
June 17, 2009 1:54 AM
 

Outlawamsterdam said:

Not really..You were just given truth to the music. Being in Marin City was like a small town so it taught me to be more straight forward with my style. Instead of of being so metaphorical with the rhyme where i might say something like…

I’m the hysterical, lyrical miracle
I’m the hypothetical, incredible…

I was encouraged to go straight at it and hit it dead on and not waste time trying to cover things…


Thank you for showing us you.  r.i.p
June 17, 2009 3:04 AM
 

D.I.C.E. said:

"As long as the music has the true to the heart soul it can be hip hop. As long it has soul to it, hip hop can live on."

                                                                             -Tupac

Pay attn to that line all u, lil wayne, rick ross, gucci mane, wack rapper, fans out there........

This is part of the reason why this dude is the great rapper of all time. Her understood the music and the power behind it. Tupac had more substance in one song than most of these niggas got in the whole catalog.

I dont see how u can be a rap/hip hop fan and not see pac as then greatest or at least one of the greatest who ever done it. Thas why i trip out when i see ppls top 5 and they dont have pac on it. i dont understand that.

Pac was not only the greatest rapper, but but one of the greatest ppl we will probaly see in our lifetime. real talk

Rip pac
June 17, 2009 3:13 AM
 

googiemike707 said:

daaaamn its been HELLA long since he passed.. i still slap his shit like it came out 2 wks ago.... RIP Maine
June 17, 2009 3:41 AM
 

charizma said:

@ jay_everyday

i dont think he's talking about Jigga, he's talking about the dude from Richmond, not Marcy.
-----------------
this interviewer sounds real stupid too, why do he have to ask "what do you mean by that" to every answer.
it seems pac always had an ability to see into the future, he did a song about police brutality and bam a few weeks later he gets harassed by po-po. goosebumps.
June 17, 2009 3:47 AM
 

Roamn said:

"Davey D: What do you think the biggest enemies to Hip Hop are right now?

 
2Pac: Egotistical rappers. They don’t wanna open up their brain. Its foul when people are walking around saying things like; ‘Oakland is the only place where the real rappers come out. New York is the only place where the real rappers come out. They booty out there or they booty over there…’ All of that just needs to die or Hip Hop is gonna have problems. Its gonna be so immature. Thats just conflict in words. We can’t be immature we gotta grow."


Dude knew... he just knew.
Pac was too ahead of his time. Hope whoever got him suffers in the worst ways possible, muhafucka took away a smart kid.
Love!
June 17, 2009 4:11 AM
 

PRESTO said:

GET KNOWLEDGE ...

THATS THE PAC THAT WAS COMMING OUT JUST BEFORE HE GOT NEXT LIFE .. ASK SUGE ...

THAT WAS THE SAME PAC IN THE VIBE INTERVIEW

THAT WAS THE PAC I WAS LOOKING FORWARD TO COMMING OUT OF JAIL

THANKS SUGE ... U HELPED 2 KILL MY 2PAC ...
June 17, 2009 5:06 AM
 

Nagan said:

Such intelligence is arare commodity in todays newer rap artists happy birthday 'pac your fans truly miss you. a treasure to the world taken way to early. RIP from an aussie fan.
June 17, 2009 5:27 AM
 

Water Ur Seeds said:

Daummm that interview was fire... Mad intelligence at A young age, shame most young rappers 2day havent got their heads screwed on properly and arernt socially conscious... rap is now officially in the immature stage... He was right

Wasnt Treach from NBN also involved in Pac gettin the part in Juice, Im sure He tried out for Bishop

Pac had so many projects & different crews He wanted to bring up before He past, woulda changed the game... literally

Hammer became good friends with Pac, he was at his bedside when He past... I herd A few of the tracks Hammer done on Death Row

Egotistical rappers did suck the life outta rap in end to...


@ ms  joi bella

yeh this interview does still seems relevant up into 2day haha so does his music


rip
June 17, 2009 5:59 AM
 

Ms_JoiBella said:

@Water Ur Seeds
in the trech's song murn you til i join you, he says pac told him to come down to the set....

we was two lil niggas both skinny and broke
happy if we scrap pennies for smokes
tours over we were out yeah and you called with the news
you was over in ney york to film this movie called juice
called you back you told me back up me and you
and stretch could shack up...



@Sovietnam
he shot steel, so that may be what he was talking about. with editing movies he may have shot it where steel dies, but then they may have changed it so steel lives. we'll never know.  
June 17, 2009 9:42 AM
 

RealAfrican said:

Pac is the greatest...

Tupac's songs sounds like they were just released last month/year
To me he's still relevant, still listenin to Dear Mama, coz these all
other rappers like Wayne, Ross, etc dont have songs that can compare...R.I.P
June 17, 2009 10:11 AM
 

Water Ur Seeds said:

@ ms joi

yeh that tune was deep, i got that on naughtys nicest hits

lol chats bout stretch punching some dudes out 'back then every bit of bud we was rollin was stolen' haha

napoleons tribute tune was deep to, with vale young
June 17, 2009 10:36 AM
 

ECLYPSE said:

IN HEAVEN. to my nigga 2pac. with B.I.G. chilling.  
June 17, 2009 11:07 AM
 

tumelo007 said:

Its not the same without Pac... i really miss u my nigga. R.I.P.
2pac has always been on point.
I was arrested for resisting arrest.----LOL
June 17, 2009 11:07 AM
 

Rut122 said:

Is he referring to himself as the 4th person he killed?
We all know that Q shot him. But if Bishop wouldn't have started the shooting . . . . Bishop wouldn't have gotten shot.
Just something to think about.

R.I.P.
2Pac
June 17, 2009 12:00 PM
 

Intelekt said:

WOWWW... Some of the stuff he was talking about STILL applies to our situation today... I mean, with Hip Hip and all.. Crazy. This man had incredible talent and a real unique mentality. I can't believe it's been what? 12 years since he got killed. I thought he was 24, but okay, 25. That's crazy. I'm 23, and I couldn't imagine having only one or two more years to live. R.I.P. Pac.

BTW, I think when he talks about 4 lives ending, he was referring to Bishop as one of those people.
June 17, 2009 12:27 PM
 

L-GUTTAH said:

it's crazy how ev.thing Pac says, in his music and his interviews are always relevant on the day that u listen 2 him. I was listening 2Apcolypse now last yr & ev.thing he was saying was relevant. of course it helped that we had a commander & chief named Bush that made it even more erie....... excellent interview


THUG 4 LIFE
June 17, 2009 2:00 PM
 

GreasySurpreme said:

Dude was too deep - Damn. I can only imagine. Thanks Davey D.
June 17, 2009 2:22 PM
 

TRUTHFROMDABOOT said:

2Pac: Egotistical rappers. They don’t wanna open up their brain. Its foul when people are walking around saying things like; ‘Oakland is the only place where the real rappers come out. New York is the only place where the real rappers come out. They booty out there or they booty over there…’ All of that just needs to die or Hip Hop is gonna have problems. Its gonna be so immature. Thats just conflict in words. We can’t be immature we gotta grow.



This guy was prophetic in his words and vision!! WOW!
June 17, 2009 4:05 PM
 

stevenyayo said:

Thats crazy its like you can just take his interviews and poetry and lyrics and use them as adlib formats for today and just put in names and words here and there and its the exact same lol. Maybe he died onpurpose like he knew if he died it would set an example for everyone and life in general not just hip-hop. I need a bong and dro lol. Damn work. SO thats final if everyone says Tupac is the greatest or in top 5 then you have to put Face and Cube cuz he talks a lot and bases a lot of stuff off them.
June 17, 2009 4:08 PM
 

KingWillie said:

Bigg Ups 2 Davey D For This One. Glad you put it out for us to enjoy

Even in his teenage years, he spoke the truth. This interview is so far ahead of it's time, it's crazy. It not only applies to our generation now, but this will apply for the forth coming generations of hip hop ( Ex. The Real Shit & Egotistical Rappers). 2pac Started A Revolution, Was/Is An Inspiration, & Lived As An Example For All Of Us. Could you imagine what the Underground RailRoad Movement would be like 2Day, if he'd got it off the ground? I can Sum It Up In One Word ... Phenomenal!!!

R.I.P. Uncle Pac
Heros Never Die ... Legends Live Forever!!!
June 17, 2009 4:31 PM
 

VMW said:

wow goosebump reading this!! wayyyy ahead of his time RIP Pac thank you for everything!
June 17, 2009 7:18 PM
 

Happy Birthday Tupac Amaru Shakur - Page 2 - Zilvia.net Forums said:

June 17, 2009 11:21 PM
 

TonyMalibu said:

Even if you don't fuck with Pac, you still gotta admit that he's the uncrowned king.  So either way it goes...Pac is the greatest emcee of all time.

Real talk...If you listen to Pac's Lost Tapes (recorded when he was 17 -18) and compare it to the music of these 17 and 18 year olds today, it really makes modern Hip Hop look shameful.   It's gotta be the result of the mainstream!  And when you got grown ass men like R. Kelly making songs like "Superman High," a elementary song that's already been done by the way,  it's like what do you expect!
June 19, 2009 3:47 AM
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