Biggie Ready To Die

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As I sit back and look when I used to be a crook Doin whatever it took from snatchin chains to pocketbooks A big bad motherfucker on the wrong road I got some drugs tried to get the avenue sold I want it all from the rolexes To the lexus gettin paid, is all I expected My mother didn't give me what I want, what the fuck? Now I got a glock, makin motherfuckers duck Shit is real, and hungry's how I feel I rob and steal because that money got that whip appeal Kickin niggaz down the steps just for rep Any repercussion lead to niggaz gettin wet The infrared's at your head real steady You better grab your guns cause I'm ready, ready I'm ready to die! (nah we ain't gon' kill your ass yet) (we gonna make you suffer).

Ready

Ready to Die is the debut studio album by American rapper; it was released on September 13, 1994,. The label's first release, the album features production by Bad Boy founder, and, among others. Recording for the album took place during 1993 to 1994 at The Hit Factory and D&D Studios in New York City.

Biggie Ready To Die Remastered

The partly autobiographical album tells the story of B.I.G.' S experiences as a young criminal. Ready to Die is his only studio album released during his lifetime, as he was murdered just days prior to the release of his second album, Life After Death (1997).

Ready to die album cover

Ready To Die Album

On March 24, 2006, Bridgeport Music and Westbound Records won a federal lawsuit against Bad Boy Records for copyright infringement, with a jury deciding that Combs and Bad Boy had illegally used samples for the production of the songs 'Ready to Die', 'Machine Gun Funk', and 'Gimme the Loot'. The jury awarded $4.2 million in punitive and direct damages to the two plaintiffs, and federal judge Todd Campbell enacted an immediate sales ban on the album and tracks in question. On appeal, the Sixth Circuit found the damages unconstitutionally high and in violation of due process and remanded the case, at which point Campbell reduced them by $2.8 million; however, the verdict was upheld. All versions of the album released since the lawsuit are without the disputed samples.