Notorious B.I.G. Soundtrack

-_NOTORIOUS_BIG_PIC

Genre: Rap
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'Notorious' is the soundtrack to the 2009 biopic film 'Notorious' based on rapper The Notorious B.I.G. / Biggie Smalls. It features mostly his previously heard songs, inclusively the ones harder to find such as "Party and Bullshit" and "One More Chance (Remix)". It includes two original songs, "Brooklyn Go Hard" which is also from Jay-Z's album 'The Blueprint 3' and a tribute to Biggie by Jadakiss and widow Faith Evans called "Letter To B.I.G.", as well as three unreleased demos by Biggie and a song with his son CJ. - Track listing - "Notorious" soundtrack track listing, according to Bad Boy Records:

 
 

Comment Wall

  • Image000

    Nbmers 3 hours ago

    Makaveli d Don+ cowardly hearted Biggie small shot pac 5 times pac took it and smile cuz pac is D real G! Feel dis {Dere u tell me wat i see dem they run but dats ow we gonna do dis f*ck biggie fu*k bad boy and as a muthafucking crew neva fuck wit pac. M

    Delete
  • fc_avatar_27

    EmcDent 23 hours ago

    rest in peace ur souls gone but ur music will live 4evr don

    Delete
  • fc_avatar_01

    Didddy 25 days ago

    Personally i miss you considerin how much you did when you were there i always ask myself just what if you, aaliyah, tupac&left eye did a collabo? Really miss you guys

    Delete
  • fc_avatar_01

    Didddy 25 days ago

    Personally i miss you considerin how much you did when you were there i always ask myself just what if you, aaliyah, tupac&left eye did a collabo? Really miss you guys

    Delete
  • Myself

    Bestbod 30+ days ago

    Holla everynigga outthere is notorius big still alive or not iwant to know heyooo to the house a gift of luv to anyone that answer my request.

    Delete
  • T

    _CAIN_ 30+ days ago

    Are you dead yet?

    Delete
  • oOo..dEeLsShh

    DeeLiishh 30+ days ago

    We'LL aLwazE loOove Biihgg'p0ppuhh!!!

    Delete
  • Image0008

    mieyelee 30+ days ago

    Miss u so much greatest of al time,i stil feel al ur albums esp ready 2 die.r.i.p

    Delete
  • Lord koko(fine boy)

    kennedy07 30+ days ago

    Are u dead

    Delete
  • pap

    Pappoo 30+ days ago

    U will b mis b.i.g.

    Delete
  • Brendiz

    blu3kiss3s 30+ days ago

    Forever I Will Love Ur music

    Delete
  • happy

    Jomolysis 30+ days ago

    Uptown wallace,broklyn biggie is the realest nigga e verly experience.feel this 'BACK UP CHUMPS YOU BIGGIE SMALL GRIPS IT QUICK AND KICKS IT QUICK' b.i.g will forever super hoova dodo stain remover. His legacy lives on and god bless and protect his fami

    Delete
  • T

    Tolani2 30+ days ago

    B i g is my man when on is formal life RIP.

    Delete
  • chillin :)

    sk8rjeepgurl87 30+ days ago

    seriously, NO ONE will ever top Biggie

    Delete
  • JUST THINKIN ABOUT.......YOU.MMMM

    bigsexypapito 30+ days ago

    BIGGIE,BIG PUN,BIG L. R.I.P. TO MASTERS OF THE GAME. THAT LEFT US. JAY -Z,IS WHAT KEEPING THIS RAP GAME ALIVE. B.I.G. WILL ALWAYS BE THE KING. "THE GATS BY YOUR LIVER,YOUR UPPER LIP QUIVER,GET READY TA DIE TELL GOD I SAID HI". REPPIN BK. ALL DAY EVERY DAY

    Delete
  • My cock

    kadafi30 30+ days ago

    Biggie was my idol wen it came 2 rap wen i grew up.Rest in peace nd may ur legend live on in the years 2 come

    Delete
  • fc_avatar_19

    cseHiphoppa 30+ days ago

    Tha one illest special rapper of NY.still keepin it real frm the underground HIPHOP.With him rap can be term fun n sweet.

    Delete
  • Image000

    Tfinest 30+ days ago

    I luv u bigie!

    Delete
  • moto_0006

    Cfree143 30+ days ago

    isperation, raw tallent, lyicley gifted the late aka frank white will always be the greatest.unmastakeable. keep the memory alive the days of rap are over

    Delete
  • i waz high lol

    gang5ta101 30+ days ago

    ill miss u cuzzen

    Delete
  • 020908_2328

    razberry33 30+ days ago

    We miss u dearly Biggie

    Delete
  • Mike jones march7 08

    Michaeljones3582 30+ days ago

    I will never forget u b.i.g. God bless you and your mother r.i.p.

    Delete
  • Mike jones march7 08

    Michaeljones3582 30+ days ago

    I will never forget u b.i.g. God bless you and your mother r.i.p.

    Delete
  • Mike jones march7 08

    Michaeljones3582 30+ days ago

    I will never forget u b.i.g. God bless you and your mother r.i.p.

    Delete
  • Mwahzzzz...chocolate' shake n_e_bodi?..*SHOTTA OWNZ*

    Fukkit_IZZLE_ 30+ days ago

    BIGGIE FRIEZ R DA ILLIST!

    Delete
 

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  • Epic soundtracks? The 18 or so ones I own and still listen to regularly

    I really can't see myself driving a half hour and then paying $15 to see this, but for boxing fans, it's really nothing but good news. One of the best/worst jobs I ever had was dealing blackjack (yes, really) in the back of a "gentleman's club." Along with the obvious regular "entertainment," the owner of the club's son was a huge fight fan, and he'd order every pay per view boxing offering he could find - which at the time meant a whole lot of Mike Tyson - and turn them into major events (which, if I'm not mistaken, was highly illegal.) I tell you all that to tell you this: Boxing is returning to movie theaters for the first time in almost three decades with the Sept. 19 welterweight championship bout between Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Juan Manuel Marquez and its undercard. Like I said, the only theater in my area that shows "events" like this (concerts, etc.) is about a half hour away in Centerville, so I can't see myself going, but this is still an awfully cool happening in my book (and it's apparently the first boxing event in movie theaters since the "No Mas Fight" between Sugar Ray and Roberto Duran - I remember that one.) And if you happen to live in or will be visiting New York (which I will for the last week of the year), the Museum of Modern Art has something coming from Oct. 8-18 that will be a delight for fans of Spike Jonze (of which you can certainly count me one.) The perhaps too cleverly titled "Spike Jonze: The First 80 Years" exhibit covers Jonze’s entire filmmaking and television career. Included are Jonze’s first two feature films, "Being John Malkovich" and "Adaptation," as well as two films that he co-produced: "Jackass: The Movie" and the documentary "Heavy Metal in Baghdad." I never would have guessed that about the "Jackass" flick, but I will admit I find it to be just about pure comic bliss. Also featured will be music videos for Björk, Fatboy Slim,his award-winning Weezer, Beastie Boys, Wax, The Notorious B.I.G., and many others, as well as his commercials. Easily best of all, though, on opening night, will be "In Cahoots: Maurice Sendak and Spike Jonze," an evening of short films that Jonze made about, and with, Maurice Sendak during the production of his forthcoming feature, "Where the Wild Things Are" (which you just may have heard me talk about, oh, 290 times by now.) Nothing but cool there, and you New Yorkers, I'm nothing but jealous. But before all that here today, it was supposed to (and still will) be about the 18 or so soundtracks (and movie-related oddities) that I discovered I own (or used to own) as I was cleaning up my CD collection. I wouldn't go so far to call too many of them among the best soundtracks ever, but I still listen to them all, so they're winners in my book. Here goes: "Slumdog Millionaire": I hear tell that AR Rahman has done much better film score work than this, but as a representative sample of his sound, it's nothing but fun. "Joe Strummer: The Future is Unwritten": Imagine listening to the late Joe Strummer play DJ, as he used to do for the BBC, and you'll come close to just how great the soundtrack for this documentary about him is. Elvis, Nina Simone, Eddie Cochran and, of course, lots of Clash all find a home here. "Into the Wild": What has grown to become my favorite movie of 2007 has also slowly evolved into the year's best soundtrack in my book too. Eddie Vedder delivers these mostly great tunes with a guttural growl and howl that indeed almost transport you "Into the Wild." "The Muppet Movie": It hurts me a little to even type this, because I grew up on it but now can not find the cassette tape my family and I burned a hole through when I was a kid. If anyone out there somehow has a copy of this they'd be willing to burn on CD, please let me know, and I'll gladly send you music, money or anything else you might desire in return. Man, do I love the Muppets! "O Brother Where Art Thou": If the purpose of a movie soundtrack is to allow you to watch the movie unfold in your mind while you're listening to it, none succeeds as well as this one from the Coen Brothers (one of two that will make this list.) "Avenue Q": OK, I concede that the soundtrack for this Broadway musical starring a bunch of puppets and even Gary Coleman is extremely silly, but it's also just perfect listening for whatever you may be doing around the house on a Sunday afternoon. This show is coming to Macon's Grand Opera House next May, and I highly recommend it. "Hairspray": This could be either the soundtrack for the utterly addictive Jon Waters original or the Broadway musical, both of which I own, but not for that other movie, which I haven't and won't see. If I had to pick just one, it would probably be the Broadway set, which is just pure fun, but for one single song, I'll take the movie's "Nothing Takes the Place of You" by Toussaint McCall," which just slays me every time I hear it. "Seu Jorge: The Life Aquatic Studio Sessions": OK, this is the first, but not the last, one on this list that really isn't a movie soundtrack at all. Instead, it's a collection of those David Bowie songs delivered in Brazilian Portuguese by Seu Jorge in director Wes Anderson's "The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou," easily the best thing about that mostly disappointing film. "Ladykillers": This second entry from the Coens also comes from a flick that most people find not only disappointing but downright useless. But I kinda like it, and I like the soundtrack, featuring a mix of genuine gospel greats from the likes of the Soul Stirrers and Donnie McClurkin with hip-hop from the Nappy Roots, a whole lot more. Carole King's "Really Rosie": In the spirit of "Where the Wild Things Are" comes this soundtrack for the '70s (I think) TV special based on the children's collection by the great Maurice Sendak. And yes, I really do still listen to the likes of "Alligators all Around" and "The Ballad of Chicken Soup" and smile every time I do. "Hedwig and the Angry Inch": Though the straightforward movie soundtrack for this divine oddity from the mind of John Cameron Mitchell is perfectly good in its own right, much better is the "Wig in a Box" collection, which features the Breeders, the Polyphonic Spree, They Might Be Giants and many more offering their takes on the very catchy songs. Pop perfection. Prince: "Parade": I was so addicted to Prince when I was a teenager that to this day, most of my computer passwords contain some variation on the word (which indeed draws raised eyebrows from my co-workers if I ever have to reveal that.) I've even seen all the Prince movies, and though "Under the Cherry Moon" is pretty darn wretched, the soundtrack stands up very well over time. "Buffy the Vampire Slayer: Once More With Feeling": Who can't like this one? Buffy's musical episode was not only a ton of fun when it first hit the air, but if you go back and listen to it now - which I still do from time to time - you'll find that little pop gems like that "I'll Never Tell" with Xander and Anya are just pretty much timeless. "Once": I've probably listened to this soundtrack for the great little Irish movie starring Glen Hansard and Marketa Irglova more often than anything else you might find on my desk at work, and each time it still manages to take me away, no matter how downright rotten my work day just might be. "Spongebob Squarepants": Yes, that's right, "Spongebob Squarepants." I've seen the movie and I own the soundtrack, and I'm well aware that might mean there's something rather seriously wrong with me, but when it contains Ween, the Flaming Lips and even the delirious delight of "Prince Paul's Bubble Party", how can you resist? If you have kids and want to teach them to listen to good music, I can't recommend this highly enough. "Office Space": I just tried to check the Web sites for my local multiplexes to see if Mike Judge's "Extract" would indeed play as widely as promised this week, but they haven't put up their Friday listings yet. I can't imagine "Extract" will be as funny or just therapeutic as "Office Space," which features a soundtrack full of gangster rap that just fits the movie perfectly. "Big Bad Love": I managed to see this biopic of sorts based on the short stories of Southern writer Larry Brown in New York with an introduction by producer and star Debra Winger, and though I liked the movie quite a bit, I'm pretty sure I was one of about 10 people in the entire world who bothered to watch it. The soundtrack, full of a lot of genuine Southern blues and two great tracks by Tom Waits, is well getting your hands on if you can still find it. "A Tribute to Robert Altman's Nashville": Whew, last one! Instead of what should have been an insufferable bit of hipster irony from Carolyn Mark and her buddies, this is instead a heartfelt tribute to one of American's great movie soundtracks. Robyn Carrigan's "It Don't Worry Me" is particularly just spot on. OK, there you have it. And anyone who really made it this far deserves a reward, so here goes: If anything on this list strikes your fancy, simply e-mail me your name, address and request to keidem4@gmail.com, and I'll gladly burn you a copy of anything you want. Piracy? Perhaps, but I still spend more than enough money on music that I can make this offer with a clear conscience. Hope you enjoyed this list, and have a perfectly passable Tuesday. Peace out.

  • Notorious (soundtrack)

    'Notorious' is the soundtrack to the 2009 biopic film 'Notorious' based on rapper The Notorious B.I.G. / Biggie Smalls. It features mostly his previously heard songs, inclusively the ones harder to find such as "Party and Bullshit" and "One More Chance (Remix)". It includes two original songs, "Brooklyn Go Hard" which is also from Jay-Z's album 'The Blueprint 3' and a tribute to Biggie by Jadakiss and widow Faith Evans called "Letter To B.I.G.", as well as three unreleased demos by Biggie and a song with his son CJ. - Track listing - "Notorious" soundtrack track listing, according to Bad Boy Records:

  • Notorious

    Maybe in 70 years, when all those involved in the story are dead and the truth can finally be told, a more incisive, less glorifying biopic can be made of the Notorious B.I.G. With Notorious , despite energetic performances from Woolard, Naughton and Mackie and a vibrant soundtrack, all we get is a factory-issue biopic, making little allowance for the quirks of the actual life story it's telling.

  • Christopher Wallace, Jr.

    'Christopher Jordan "C.J." Wallace, Jr.' (born October 29, 1996) is an American film actor and rapper. Wallace, Jr. is the son of the late rapper The Notorious B.I.G. and R&B singer Faith Evans. In 2009, Wallace, Jr. made his film debut in The Notorious B.I.G. biopic, 'Notorious', portraying a younger version of his late father, set in the Bedford-Stuyvesant section in Brooklyn in New York City during the early-mid 1980s, at the height of the crack epidimic. He is also featured on the 'Notorious' soundtrack, rapping on the remix of "Juicy" with his father, The Notorious B.I.G. and mother Faith Evans who sings the chorus.


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