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Tupac The Don Killuminati

Tupac The Don Killuminati Average ratng: 3,5/5 9959 reviews

Sidenote: Today, September 13th, 2011, marks the 15-year anniversary of Tupac Shakur’s death. Of course our resident Tupac fan,, pays respect. – B-Easy Hey people from all over the world. I do apologize for the wait for Volume 10 of the. Volume 10 is coming soon I just been busy as hell with life.

Anyway I decided to post up the original version of with the original songs and original version from my collection. You’ll notice a difference between “Krazy” from this album compared to the 7 Day Theory version. “White Man’z World” on this one is different too. The guitar is played different and it is more singing from the guy on the hook. Also it is a unreleased interlude on here that start before “When Thugz Cry”. This version of “When Thugz Cry” is basically but it is shorter and it doesn’t play the Nas diss at the end On the beginning of “When Thugz Cry” the original sample play before the beat kick in.

Johnny J was a beast on them beats! RIP to Johnny J! Let me back track a little bit. The “Bomb First” song don’t have the intro where the guy is slandering people like Nas & Jay-Z. “Watch Ya Mouth” is a little different from beat break down a little differently on this one and it plays the interlude of the news reporter talking to a fan (The same interlude they had before “To Live & Die In LA” on the retail version of Makaveli).

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The diss at the end when he go off on Dr. Dre isn’t played on this one either it cut off while he saying “Where my Down South niggaz At, Where my east side niggaz at”.

Two useful technologies for working from anywhere on your favorite windows based music applications on your mobile devices through solutions and Also add Office 365 to the same desktop by “Niggaz Nature” is also slightly different from the mixtape version I put since this one is shorter and this one also break down differently compared to the demo version I put up. You’ll notice a difference from this one compared to the Too Gangsta For Radio (2000) version also.

[Intro: 2Pac] Makaveli the Don, break on 'em! Ah put ya, ah put ya hands on ya, hands on ya heater. This unreleased track was cut from the final version of The Don Killuminati: The 7 Day Theory. The Don Killuminati The 7 Day Theory - 01 - Tupac - Bomb First.

I like this “Niggaz Nature” way more than I do, that was horrible. Since I already heard the original before that album came out in ’01. Well like I said stay tune in for Volume 10 of the series! Long Live 2Pac!!

Bomb First (Jay-Z, Biggie, Mobb Deep, & Xzibit diss) 2. Watch Ya Mouth 5. To Live & Die In LA 6. Friends (Jay-Z & Dr. Hold Ya Head 9. Lost Souls (feat.

Young Noble & EDI) 10. White Man’z World 11. Niggaz Nature (feat. Val Young) 12.

Against All Odds (Nas, Jimmy Henchmen, Stretch *RIP*, King Tut, Puffy & Biggie Diss) 13. Hidden Interlude Track 14. When Thugz Cry Download. The B Hey P, I want to also share this story with you that I have been a loyal 2pac fan for more than half my life and til this day pac bumps in my house and in the car like he release this stuff like yesterday. I love pac for teaching me you have to stand up for what you believe no matter the consequences. The quality of your pac’s stuff is the best I have heard so far so keep it going it means alot to me.

My wife found this website and all these downloads of songs you were putting out and she took the time out to burn them and surprise me as a birthday gift which was the best ever cause she already knows that pac means the world to me, So also thanks for the B-Day gift It made my year. P-Body Trust me I’m not discourage or anything like that. I just get tired of ungrateful people sometimes, ya know.

If it wasn’t for B-Easy recommending me to do this I probably wouldn’t have done these mixtapes but then again I got tired of people getting them fake Pac albums like “Until The End Of Time, Better Dayz & So Forth” and not getting the chance to hear the original versions of the songs along with unreleased tracks. Especially kids these days they know who Pac is but at the same time they don’t know they only think he made “Hit’em Up” and that’s all the media glorify at times is when he diss Notorious BIG & Others. Dude I’m happy to hear that your wife found the site man and give her a dap for me.

That’s real shit for what she did man. I’m glad to know that these mixtapes made your year and also help you have a great birthday, that’s awesome dude. I can’t lie I done heard just about everything Pac made but sometimes it is a few songs I do run into I never heard before and that shit get me excited. I be looking at the clock when I’m at work and school so I can rush to my car to listen to the songs again. A lot of music these days don’t give me that feeling like I use to have once upon a time ago. Thanks once again for the support and stay on the lookout for Volume 10.

I have different Alt versions of stuff and unreleased cuts also. P-Body No doubt my dude. Vol 10 should be up this Monday and I’ll start on Vol 11 when I get a chance. I just got tired of folks hearing them bullshit remixed albums and I felt like they was making a mockery off his name and his music. I hate how they took away the original beats and the original guest features.

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On some remixes they took off certain verses or certain talking parts. I really hope Afeni release the next album in original form, all the fans would love that. You can clearly see where Pac was going musically before he died. I listen to the new Outlawz album and dammit they don’t sound that good man. It seem like when Pac was alive they sounded more hungry and way more lyrically.

Now they sound like everybody else, they only have a few songs I listen to but nothing memorable. Anyway man stay tune in, I’ll probably include something else with this mixtape •. A_Daramy I agree about the posthumous productions.

Some were real tight like Until the End of Time w/ RL, Thugz Mansion w/ Nas, and When We Ride On Our Enemies, but for the most part the other ones took away from his flow and essence. Something I always wondered though is: why Dr. Dre never took up a Pac project. I didn’t think that their beef was big enough to last through Pac’s death.

Plus he never expressed any words against Pac. Maybe he will do a beat or two for some still unreleased material. BUT STILL, I feel 100% that if they would have left the Loyal to the Game album in its original form (even though the songs were from like 92, 93, 94, and 95) millions of people would have loved the album. Same goes for Pac’s Life album. A_Daramy You know what, I feel the same way. One thing for certain though is that if Snoop didn’t say these to Pac personally, then he has no right saying them after his death. If he did say these things to Pac then he should state that these are things he said to Pac personally.

To me it seems like the more years that go by after Pac’s death, the more people forget how they would’ve acted if he was still alive. (Look at the quality of the music on Makaveli album versus Pac’s life). It;s not right that his songs have gone from classics like “white manz world” and “hail mary” to unnoteworthy albums like Loyal to the game and Pac’s life.

Which is why you [p body] get big props from folks for gettin’ Pac’s original and unreleased songs to the public. On the same from above, It seem like Daz and Kurupt are more homeboys with Pac than even Snoop because they put Pac verses on their new album releases n stuff like that. Also Snoop was not the only one who approached rappers on the east in ways that they respected.

Although Pac had an aggressive approach, we have to give him props for havin the balls n heart to directly approach people he had a problem wit. And this approach led him to make peace wit Nas when they saw each other at the 96 vma’s. Also snoop was contradictory saying that Big acted like he didnt want it, but still threw subliminal shots. I like Big too n feel that he was a good and real dude, but that he came across another real dude in Pac, who felt that Big wronged him and couldnt just let it slide.

P-Body I honestly don’t believe Snoop said this stuff to Pac face to face. It was so much stuff going on at that time and I believe Snoop was kinda afraid back then since Suge Knight was still the most feared person in the music business. I don’t think Biggie set up Pac but I do believe Puff knew about it though. That’s just my belief and that won’t change at all. Once again thanks and I really owe it to everybody who keep coming here posting comments and showing love.

Pac is my favorite rapper of all time and I wanted to do him some justice. It felt like they was raping this man music and making a mockery out of him which didn’t set well with me at all. Kurupt and Daz always seem to be more of a friend to Pac. As you see they had more unreleased songs with Pac than Snoop did and Daz did some of the beats Also Kurupt did some beats too. Johnny J was the heart of it all though. Once Pac linked up with Johnny J during “Pour Out Of Little Liquor” it was on after especially once Pac got out of prison and signed to Death Row.

Johnny J was monster on them beats. A long time ago I didn’t think it was true about Nas squashing beef with Pac but the more older I get I start thinking it is true and the Outlawz cosigned it also. Pac never squashed his thing with Jay-Z, Fugees, De La Soul, LL Cool J, and Da Brat though. Snoop been contradicting himself for years to be honest, that shouldn’t even be new to you haha. I like Snoop overall but sometimes I think he totally forget sometimes I guess since he hang with Katy Perry and others it kinda brain washed him. I don’t blame him though I’ll hang with them as long as they are cool no drama, I’ll try to smash Katy though. Anyway I don’t care what folks say I feel like Pac was one of the realest in the game.

I don’t mean by gangsta because he wasn’t that and he admit that but just the way he put his emotions, his real thoughts, and how he interact with people outside of the hip hop world. Dude had a big heart. He wasn’t perfect though but overall he was a good person who got taken away too early. People forget dude was only 25 so he still had more growing up to do and still trying to find himself also. He did more at 25 than most did at 55.

A_Daramy Yea he was definitely destined to make the realest music up to this date. Makes me wonder if he’ll ever b forgotten.

Will it take 100, 200, 300 years? I’m glad he was alive in our generation.

Tupac the don killuminati

Without Pac, I probably wouldn’t have as much faith in hip hop. (the quality in Pac’s songs, lyrics, and emotion, amazes me to this day.

Other artists are amazing too, but im glad to have experienced the level of Pac’s amazement. I’m 25 and plan to listen to 2pac for life (if the old timers can still get down with the Temptations, Marvin Gaye, etc., then I’m sure I’ll always get down with Pac).

_ I agree with the Biggie thing. He might not have known anything before the incident, but if Pac was hearing things in prison, then Big, likely heard some things afterwards too. I keep thinkin that one visit from Big to Pac in prison wouldve prevented their beef and they wouldve been homeboys continuing to collab on records. (They wouldve ran Hip Hop) But also, just because they had beef doesn’t mean they didn’t still have love for one another. Their beef probably sharpened their skills too.

(2pac after prison, was on fire and made countless classic songs within one year that stand the test of time).

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Created the word Killuminati by combining the words 'Kill' and 'Illuminati'. Many people speculate that this is Tupac trying to fight against, although IT IS NOT. If any people were true Tupac fans, they would know that he did NOT believe in the Illuminati, and that this word actually meant to kill the hype surrounding the Illuminati. While was in prison, he did not read about this organization, he was told about it from inmates, and he thought that it was stupid, and that the thought of it was weighing down society. Today, conspiracy theorists have completely destroyed original definition, so they can try to promote their bullshit views on a dead organization, because they are blind to these real problems we are facing.

Every definition, except one, is promoting this fake meaning, and I am outraged to think that there are possibly thousands of Tupac fans who now have the wrong impression about him. Pac spoke to the people and he spoke real, about the real world issues that we face, which is exactly why he decided to create the saying Killuminati. If you still are not convinced, SAID IT HIMSELF. 2pac talks about (he did not believe interview proof): /watch?v=xAKfS5lMm68 5.30 - 6.15 We need to realize that the world is full of problems, without us creating fictional ones. Pac is gone, but his message lives on. Its time for us to deliver it.

Tupac - 'Thats why i put to it, because the niggas is telling me about this shit while i was in jail. Like the diamonds and all that.

Thats another way to keep your self esteem low, THAT ANOTHER WAY TO KEEP YOU UNCONFIDENT. And I'm putting because I'm killing that shit!' (Killuminati) dirtyspic (youtube) - 'Killing the fictional group of people (in his mind) whos creation was made to keep what he deemed his people unconfident and with a low self esteem. Worried about their future, feeling hopeless about the future instead of living in the present.

Trying to change the world.' Tupac was a religious fellow, and believed stongly in the experience of enlightenment.

After reading The Prince by while in prison he found out about the enlightenment era society, Illuminati, a group centered around knowledge and enlightenment, that deviated from the theocratic and biased views of the church and government, known for many controversies and conspiracy theories. Tupac had combined kill with illuminati to refer to gangs, fraternities born in the thug life, which engaged in criminal activities. Kill to the violent nature of gang life, and Illuminati refferred to the enlightenment gained from experience, thus. It had no relation to any conspiracies, contrary to popular believe. Made the phrase from 'kill' and 'illuminati.'

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He believed that the Illuminati were plotting a new world order and wanted to stop them. He claimed that he had discovered this after reading 'The Prince.'

Unfortunately, Tupac was clearly lying, because the Illuminati was a group created in the late 1700's, while The Prince was written in 1513. See a problem there? Furthermore, The Prince was written while was imprisoned as a political prisoner. Most of the book, when looked at in context, was meant to be sarcastic about the upper classes (not some serious guide on how to rule effectively) In summary, anyone who believes in the Illuminati is highly disillusioned to think of Tupac as some sort of prophet regarding their existence.