author Jake Brown reveals Biggie's sensitive side as well as his hard-core media stance it explores his motivations, his loyalties and his roots. In Ready to Die: The Story of Biggie Smalls - The Notorious B.I.G. He seemed to welcome the challenge, as if he was already resigned to his fate, hence, ready for death, or whatever the world could throw at him. What took hip-hop by storm with the debuts of the Notorious B.I.G. quickly became a household name among hip hop fans and all responsibility would rest on him as he made his way up hip hop aisles to center stage. When his time was up, he had done what he set out to do, and it was historic ! Biggie Smalls' life was lived in the fast lane. Biggie controlled his time, by the very nature of what he achieved in it. He didn't live in or up to the moment, he actually created it. The Notori While many considered Biggie ahead of his time, author Jake Brown clearly cites why it was his time. Never before have the titles of two albums had such a sense of dramatic irony.While many considered Biggie ahead of his time, author Jake Brown clearly cites why it was his time. Wallace would be murdered 3 years later, 16 days before the release of the follow up, ‘Life After Death’ (#179). His ability to tell stories was second to none in Hip Hop. Biggie Smalls would elevate East Coast Hip Hop and raise the bar. The album is smooth and his voice is one of the most recognisable in Hip Hop. The song interpolates Jackson 5’s ‘I Want You Back’ in the chorus. Third single, ‘One More Chance’ held the record for highest debuting rap single on the charts at #5, until that record was smashed by Puff Daddy and the song, ‘I’ll Be Missing You,’ which was a tribute to Biggie himself. Heavily sampling ‘Between The Sheets’ by The Isley Brothers, the title references on of his nicknames.
Second single, ‘Big Poppa’ is one of the most recognisable Hip Hop songs of the ‘90s. Lead single starts off the lyrics, “Yeah, this album is dedicated/To all the teachers that told me I'd never amount to nothin'/To all the people that lived above the buildings that I was hustlin' in front of/Called the police on me when I was just tryin' to make some money to feed my daughter (it's all good)/And all the niggas in the struggle.” The song documents his struggles and rise, discussing how he had realised his dreams. It ends with Biggie being released from jail, mirroring his real life as he was arrested in 1990 for dealing crack. The track then cycles through ‘80s and early ‘90s Hip hop songs, ‘Rapper’s Delight,’ ‘Top Billin’ and ‘Tha Shiznit,’ a clever device to illustrate the passage of time. That song is about a drug dealer, foreshadowing Wallace’s brief stint later on. This gives an indication that the record is somewhat autobiographical. Brilliant subtlety as that single was released in 1972, the same year that Smalls aka Christopher Wallace was born. As the baby comes we hear the song ‘Pusherman’ by Curtis Mayfield playing. The record opens with the narrative of a woman giving birth. By the time the recording was finish, Biggie was 22-years-old. Combs would ultimately start Bad Boy Records, to which Biggie would be signed, but in the interim he made ends meet by selling drugs. Biggie would subsequently start recording the album in 1993 but when Combs was fired from the label, Biggie’s future was left in the balance.
Biggie Smalls was signed by Sean “Puffy” Combs to Uptown Records after the latter heard his demo tape. ‘Ready To Die’ is the debut record of The Notorious B.I.G., and the only one to be released within his lifetime.