Biggie Smalls Mother Died
– Biggie Smalls. “We can’t change the world unless we change ourselves.” – Biggie Smalls. “I wonder if I died, would tears come to her eyes? Forgive me for my disrespect, forgive me for my lies.” – Biggie Smalls. “Birthdays was the worst days, now we sip champagne when we thirsty.” – Biggie Smalls. Biggie Smalls's mother Violetta Wallace is alive and recently turned 61 on February 5, 2011. Sadly, Biggie Smalls's grandmother (Violetta's mother) Harriet passed away on March 30, 2011.
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Name: Christopher George Latore Wallace
Nicknames: The Notorious B.I.G., Biggie Smalls, Big Poppa, Frank White,
Born: May 21, 1972
Died: March 9, 1997
The Notorious B.I.G.'s Early Life
The Notorious B.I.G. was born Christopher George Latore Wallace in Brooklyn, New York City. An only child, Wallace spent most of his childhood on 226 St. Romeo and juliet 1968 full movie. James Place near the Bedford-Stuyvesant border. His mother, Violetta Wallace, was a Jamaican immigrant who taught pre-school and worked two jobs to support her family. Biggie's father, George Latore, was a Jamaican politician. Latore left when Wallace was 14 month-old. Young Wallace was nicknamed 'Big' because he was overweight as a kid.
From the Streets to the Radio
Biggie started selling drugs at 12. In a 1994 New York Times article, Violetta Wallace said she only found out about Biggie's drug dealing ways through his music.
By the time he was 17, Biggie dropped out of school and sold drugs full time. He was eventually busted in North Carolina in 1990 and spent nine months in jail for dealing crack. After being released from jail, Biggie started taking rap seriously.
Biggie's Demo Tape
After leaving jail, Christopher Wallace recorded a demo tape under the alias Biggie Smalls, a reference to a character from the movie Let's Do It Again. When he found out that Biggie Smalls was already taken, he changed his name to The Notorious B.I.G. He still fondly referred to himself as Biggie, Big Poppa or Frank White (after Christopher Walken's character in King of New York).
With a little help from former Big Daddy Kane DJ, Mister Cee, Biggie's demo tape made the rounds. He appeared in The Source's Unsigned Hype column. The demo tape, which Biggie supposedly made just for fun, reached the offices of Uptown Entertainment head honcho Andre Harrell via a young assistant and producer named Sean 'Puff' Combs. 'He had a voice that just sounded like it was heavy, funky and rhythmic,' Mr. Harrell later recalled. 'And it had a lot of personality -- like a light on his feet kind of big brother.' Harrell gave Notorious B.I.G. his first record deal.
The Bad Boy Era
Combs was later fired from Uptown. He started his own label, Bad Boy Records, and made The Notorious B.I.G. his flagship artist. It was Puffy's idea to blend Biggie's street side ('Warning,' 'Gimme the Loot') with his charming, pop-friendly side ('Big Poppa,' 'One More Chance'). It turned out to be a winning blueprint.
Biggie received his first major break on a remix of Mary J. Blige's 'Real Love.' The song reached No. 7 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. Biggie and Blige joined forces again on the 'What's the 411' remix.
In 1994, Biggie Smalls gained even more momentum with the solo smash, 'Party and Bullsh-t,' which appeared on the Who's the Man? soundtrack. His stock soared even higher after he dropped a classic verse on Craig Mack's 'Flava in Ya Ear,' alongside the likes of LL Cool J and Busta Rhymes. 'You're mad cause my style you're admiring/Don't be mad..UPS is hiring,' Biggie raps at one point. That line has been reprised by many admirers, including T.I. and Jay Z.
Ready to Die
Biggie's first full-length album, Ready to Die, arrived on September 13, 1994. It debuted at No. 13 on the Billboard 200 Albums chart at a time when west coast rappers like Snoop Dogg and Dr. Dre had their grip on hip-hop's throat. One of the greatest hip-hop albums of all time, Ready to Die would go on to shift over four million units.
Junior M.A.F.I.A.
A year after the release of his masterpiece, Biggie leveraged his growing status to put his crew on. Junior M.A.F.I.A. (Junior Masters at Finding Intelligent Attitudes) consisted of friends Lil Kim, Lil Cease, D-Roc and others. They enjoyed chart successes with the singles 'Get Money' (US #17) and 'Players Anthem' (US #13) alongside Biggie. The members would go on to pursue solo careers, with Lil Kim the most successful of the group. Biggie also envisioned the formation of a group called The Commission alongside his young Brooklyn knight Jay Z and protege Charli Baltimore.
The 2Pac Beef
One of the greatest rap battles of all time was between Tupac Shakur and The Notorious B.I.G. The feud was slowly brewing under the radar, but it escalated after 2Pac was shot at Quad Studio, a New York recording studio were Biggie and Puff Daddy had been working. Shakur accused Biggie and his Bad Boy cohorts of having prior knowledge of the botched robbery. Biggie denied the allegations, dubbing the event a coincidence.
Regardless, the rap titans spent the next several months trading disses on wax. (Later, in 2012, an incarcerated lifer named Dexter Isaac confessed to shooting Tupac Shakur. Isaac claimed that Jimmy 'Henchman' Rosemond masterminded the attack.)
With the help of a story-hungry media, the Biggie vs 2Pac beef escalated to an east coast vs west coast rap war. Members from both coasts took turns attacking their presumed rivals. The beef is the subject of numerous films and songs and remains the most significant coastal feud in hip-hop history.
Life After Death
Notorious B.I.G. recorded most of his second album in the midst of his beef with 'Pac. The double-album featured a diverse mix of songs, from scathing disses to radio-ready hits. It also featured a wide cast of rappers and singers: Bone Thugs, R. Kelly. P.Diddy, Lil Kim, and more. But Biggie's witty storytelling was the linchpin that held the sometimes messy affair together. Life After Death set a record for the largest jump in Billboard history, from No. 176 to No. 1 in one week. It has been certified diamond for sales totaling over 10 million units.
March 9, 1997
Unfortunately, Biggie would not live to witness the groundbreaking success of Life After Death. The album was scheduled for release on March 25, 1997. On the wee hours of March 9, Biggie was leaving a Soul Train after-party hosted by VIBE magazine at the Petersen Automotive Museum in Los Angele. Around 12:45 a.m., his SUV hit at a red light. According to numerous eyewitness reports, a Chevrolet Impala SS pulled up to the right of Biggie's vehicle. A man in a blue suit and bow-tie rolled down his window and dumped four shots on the rapper.
The Murder Of Biggie Smalls
An autopsy released in December 2012 showed that the first 3 shots were non-fatal. The fourth bullet, however, entered Biggie's right hip and struck several vital organs. It struck his colon, liver, heart and left lung. Biggie was pronounced dead at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center around 1:15 a.m. His murder remains unsolved.
Posthumous Albums and Notorious Biopic
In the years following Biggie's death, two more posthumous albums followed. The first, Born Again, arrived in 1999. Duets: The Final Chapter, which paired him with various rappers, was released in 2005. Two years later, Bad Boy issued Biggie's first album.
In 2009, Fox Searchlight Pictures released , a biographical film about the life of the Notorious B.I.G. Rapper Jamal 'Gravy' Woolard played Biggie, while ex-3LW singer Naturi Naughton played Lil Kim.
The Notorious B.I.G.'s Legacy
The Notorious B.I.G. is widely acknowledged as one of the greatest rappers of all time. Even with a stunted catalog, Biggie influenced a handful of rappers, including Jay Z, Lil Kim and Guerilla Black.
The Notorious B.I.G. in His Own Words
'I found something I was good at and I'm just trying to flip it, keep it going. I ain't trying to slack at all. Just represent for my peoples, my borough and my family, and I'm a'ight.'
Trivia
The composite sketch of Biggie's alleged shooter bore a stunning resemblance to The Wire's bow-tied killer Brother Mouzone.
Author | Cathy Scott |
---|---|
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Genre | True crime, Biography |
Publisher | St. Martin's Press |
October 11, 2000 | |
Media type | Hardcover |
Pages | 210 |
ISBN | 978-0-312-26620-2 |
The Murder of Biggie Smalls is a non-fiction true crime book by author and journalist Cathy Scott. Published in October 2000 by St. Martin's Press, it covers the March 9, 1997 murder of the Notorious B.I.G. in a drive-by shooting.
Background[edit]
The book includes a chapter about accusations from fellow rapper Tupac Shakur, that Biggie, 24, and his producer, Sean 'Diddy' Combs, were responsible for Tupac being injured during a 1994 shooting at New York City's Quad Studios, where Biggie was recording that same night. Smalls denied the accusation, as did Combs, and no arrests were ever made in the case. In September 1996, Shakur, 25, was shot a second time, this time in Las Vegas. Shakur died six days later. That murder, too, remains unsolved, which Scott covered in The Killing of Tupac Shakur.
In what was promoted as a Sunday series with 'exclusive information' in the Los Angeles Times, the article quoted a single source saying Biggie Smalls had been in Las Vegas the night Shakur was murdered and that Smalls had paid for and ordered the hit against Shakur. When Voletta Wallace, Smalls' mother, gave proof to the Times that her son had, in fact, been in a New York studio recording music the night Shakur was shot, the newspaper retracted the story and ultimately removed it from its website. Scott commented on the article in a Las Vegas CityLife column. 'Wallace was a rapper, not a killer,' she wrote. 'He was an only child who attended private Catholic school and was raised by an over-protective single mom. While Wallace spewed violence in his songs, he wasn't a street thug like Shakur.'[1]
People magazine interviewed Scott about the claim, quoting her as saying, 'It's easy to point a finger at a dead guy. The dead can't sue.'[2]TruTV's 'Crime Library' quoted one possible scenario from the book that Combs could have been responsible for Smalls' death because 'dead stars sell records without the bothersome upkeep.'[3]
An earlier article in the L.A. Times, which accused Tupac's music producer, Suge Knight, and a rogue Los Angeles Police Department officer as also being involved in Smalls' murder, the informant for the article recanted his claims and described himself to the Times as 'a paranoid schizophrenic.'[4]
Based upon the newspaper's earlier accusations against her son, Voletta Wallace filed suit against the City of Los Angeles and the LAPD in a wrongful death suit accusing police of taking part in a conspiracy to kill her son. She lost the suit when, in April 2010, a judge dismissed the claim.[5] The civil suit, along with LAPD's internal investigation, are included in The Murder of Biggie Smalls.
In January 2011, Anderson CooperAC360 reported that a new task force, composed of law enforcement officers based in the Los Angeles area, was taking a fresh look at the Smalls murder case, interviewing author Scott for AC360's blog about the probe that is said to also be looking into Shakur's murder.[6]
The book was optioned in 2000 for a feature film, Record Wars, by Jonathan Sheinberg's development and production company The Machine.[7]
Reception[edit]
According to Booklist magazine's Mike Tribby in his October 2000 review, 'Whereas others who have dealt with this stuff have often neglected to humanize the principals involved, Scott points up biographical details that bring them into focus as human beings. For setting the record straight as well as for limning a major pop music star, this is a valuable book.'[8]
The editors at Barnes & Noble wrote that 'the fatal shooting of rapper Notorious B.I.G. remains shrouded in a blanket of mystery, speculation, and grief, while his popularity is as strong as ever. Cathy Scott's The Murder of Biggie Smalls is an engrossing examination of the death of the beloved Big Poppa and the resulting investigation, which finally seems to be nearing a conclusion.'[9]
Nelson George with Africana-Magazine also reviewed the book, noting, 'The picture painted of the investigation of Biggie's murder is more detailed than anything found in the music press.[10] In 2000, The Murder of Biggie Smalls made Library Booklist's 'Realistic and Urban Fiction' for teens.[11]
The New York Post ran an excerpt upon the book's 2000 release.
Book editions[edit]
The Murder of Biggie Smalls has been reprinted in the UK by Plexus Publishing, a music genre publisher.[12] It has also been made into a talking book, read by narrator Bob Moore.[13]
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^Las Vegas CityLife, 'Death in Vegas: The Times claim that B.I.G. arranged the killing of Tupac Shakur simply doesn't make sense,' by Cathy Scott, September, 17 2002
- ^People magazine, 'B.I.G. Family Denies Tupac Murder Claim,' September 9, 2002
- ^Bruno, Anthony. 'Hip-Hop Homicide — 'Worth More Dead Than Alive' — Crime Library on'. Trutv.com. Retrieved 2013-04-11.
- ^Los Angeles Times, 'Informant in Rap Star's Slaying Admits Hearsay,' June 3, 2005
- ^The Guardian, 'Notorious BIG death lawsuit dismissed,' April 19, 2010
- ^' An AC360° Cold Case: Mystery still surrounds rappers' deaths,' January 6, 2011
- ^'The Station of the Nation - Internet Radio and E-Zine (scroll down)'. www.Rnation.com. Retrieved 2013-01-31.
- ^Booklist review, 'The Murder of Biggie Smalls,' October 15, 2000
- ^Barnes & Noble, 'Editorial Reviews,' October 2000
- ^Editorial Reviews, Africana-Magazine, October 2000
- ^Library Booklist, 'Realistic and Urban Fiction' (scroll down)
- ^Book listing, Plexus Publishing
- ^Talking Book Topics, Vol. 68, No. 3, May-June 2002 (scroll down)