Biggie Smalls, also known as Notorious . was a hip-hop star who became a rap icon after his untimely death due to a feud between rival gangs. Learn more at Biography. Biggie began working on his second studio album in September 1995 and continued into the following year. But there would be more trouble. In March 1996, he was arrested after chasing two autograph hunters with a baseball bat in Manhattan, threatening to kill them; he was sentenced to 100 hours of community service. Months later police raided his house in New Jersey and found 50 grams of marijuana and four automatic weapons. That same summer, he was charged with beating and robbing a friend of a concert promoter at a New Jersey nightclub
Christopher George Latore Wallace (May 21, 1972 – March 9, 1997), known professionally as The Notorious . Biggie Smalls, or Biggie, was an American rapper. He is widely considered to be one of the greatest rappers of all time. Wallace was born and raised in the Brooklyn borough of New York City. His debut album Ready to Die (1994) made him a central figure in East Coast hip hop and increased New York City's visibility in the genre at a time when West Coast hip hop dominated the mainstream
Biggie Smalls was born Christopher George Latore Wallace to Voletta Wallace and Selwyn George Latore on May 21, 1972, in Brooklyn, New York. He grew up in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn, where he was raised by just his mother after his father, who worked as a welder, abandoned the family when Biggie was just two years old. Biggie was a bright student as a child. He attended Queen of All Saints Middle School, where he won several awards specifically in English class. Following a lawsuit, Biggie Smalls had to change his recording name to The Notorious . G under which he released his first song as a solo artist titled, Party and Bullshit in 1993. In September 1994, The Notorious . released his debut album, Ready to Die to critical and commercial acclaim. The album was certified gold within two months of release before eventually selling over four million copies.
A big reason why Bad Boy’s blend of R&B and rap was so seamless is how both sides drew inspiration from the same source material. When you’ve spend your formative years engaging in one form of expression, it at least subconsciously becomes part of your worldview. A result is Total’s classic Can’t You See, which minimizes the funk of James Brown’s The Payback to create aural silk.
AKA: Christopher George Latore Wallace, Christopher Wallace, Big, Biggie Smalls, and Biggie. About The Notorious . Considered by many to be one of the greatest rappers of all time, The Notorious . was a major figure in both hardcore hip-hop and ’90s pop music until his murder in 1997 at age 24. He’s best known for his hits Hypnotize and Mo’ Money, Mo’ Problems, his top 10 hits One More Chance (Stay with Me Remix) and Big Poppa, and his iconic early single Juicy.
Biography by Steve Huey. A contender for best rapper of all time, and a gifted East Coast storyteller whose gritty, objective realism won him enormous respect and credibility. Changing his primary stage name from Biggie Smalls to the Notorious . the newly committed rapper made his recording debut on a 1993 remix of Mary J. Blige's single "Real Love. He soon guested on another Blige remix, "What's the 411?," and contributed his first solo cut, "Party and Bullshit," to the soundtrack of the film Who's the Man? Now with a considerable underground buzz behind him, the Notorious . delivered his debut album, Ready to Die, in September 1994.
All about NOTORIOUS . Lyrics, Biography, Popular Albums, Latest News, Videos and More. Christopher George Latore Wallace (May 21, 1972 – March 9, 1997), also known as Biggie Smalls (after a stylish gangster in 1975’s Let’s Do it Again) and Frank White (from the film King of New York), but best known as The Notorious . Business Instead of Game and, since his death, Books Instead of Guns). was a popular Brooklyn-born rapper of the mid-1990s. His career was overshadowed by the Bad Boy/Death Row Records feud during his life, but following his untimely death in 1997, The Notorious . has been celebrated as a hip-hop legend
Directed by Mark Ford, Biggie: The Life of Notorious . is the first biography to be authorized by his estate and will be the most personal and revealing documentary about the late Christopher Wallace that anyone has ever seen. It will provide interviews with those closest to him including his widow Faith Evans, his mother Voletta Wallace, his close friend Lil Cease and members of Junior Mafia as well as cultural icons Sean.