Create account Log in

R U Still Down? (Remember Me)

[Edit]

Download links and information about R U Still Down? (Remember Me) by 2Pac. This album was released in 1997 and it belongs to Hip Hop/R&B, Rap genres. It contains 26 tracks with total duration of 01:42:10 minutes.

Artist: 2Pac
Release date: 1997
Genre: Hip Hop/R&B, Rap
Tracks: 26
Duration: 01:42:10
Buy on iTunes $14.99
Buy on iTunes $10.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. Redemption 1:48
2. Open Fire 2:52
3. R U Still Down? (Remember Me) 4:07
4. Hellrazor 4:15
5. Thug Style 4:16
6. Where Do We Go from Here (Interlude) 4:28
7. I Wonder If Heaven Got a Ghetto 4:19
8. Nothing to Lose 3:39
9. I'm Gettin Money 3:31
10. Lie to Kick It 3:37
11. F**k All Y'All 4:32
12. Let Them Thangs Go 3:32
13. Definition of a Thug N***a 4:09
14. Ready 4 Whatever 4:05
15. When I Get Free 4:46
16. Hold On Be Strong 4:10
17. I'm Losin It 3:55
18. Fake Ass Bitches 3:10
19. Do for Love 4:41
20. Enemies With Me 4:15
21. Nothin But Love 4:26
22. 16 On Death Row 5:39
23. I Wonder If Heaven Got a Ghetto (Hip-Hop Version) 4:39
24. When I Get Free II 3:22
25. Black Starry Night (Interlude) 0:48
26. Only Fear of Death 5:09

Details

[Edit]

Shortly after 2Pac died, there were rumors that hundreds of unreleased songs remained in the vaults; a mere two months after his death, the first posthumous record, The Don Killuminati: The 7 Day Theory, appeared. Death Row released the record, and shortly afterward, 2Pac's mother, Afeni Shakur, gained the rights to all of his unreleased recordings from both the Interscope and Death Row labels. She founded the Amaru label and released the double-disc R U Still Down? (Remember Me) in late 1997. Culled from 2Pac's unreleased Interscope recordings between 1992 and 1994, including several tracks that have had backing musical tracks "reconstructed," R U Still Down? doesn't have the aura of exploitation that haunts the Makaveli album. For the most part, Shakur sounds good, spinning out rhymes that are alternately clever or startling, although he eventually begins repeating himself. As for the music itself, it's pretty much standard-issue gangsta rap that never deviates from the course. There are enough hidden gems to make R U Still Down? worthwhile for hardcore 2Pac fans.