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How Long Will They Mourn Me?

Thug Life: Volume 1
Thug Life.gif
Studio album by Thug Life
Released October 11, 1994
Recorded March 1993 – July 1994
Genre Hardcore hip hop, gangsta rap
Length 42:28
Label
Producer
2Pac chronology
Strictly 4 My N.I.G.G.A.Z...
(1993)
Thug Life: Volume 1
(1994)
Me Against the World
(1995)
Singles from Thug Life: Volume 1
  1. "Cradle to the Grave"
    Released: November 4, 1994
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 3/5 stars link
Entertainment Weekly A− link
Q 3/5 stars
Select 4/5 medals
Sputnikmusic 3.5/5 stars link

Thug Life: Volume 1 is the only studio album by American hip hop group Thug Life, started by rapper Tupac Shakur, and was released on October 11, 1994. The group featured Big Syke, Macadoshis, Mopreme, The Rated R and Tupac Shakur. Among the notable tracks on the album are "Bury Me a G," "Cradle to the Grave," "Pour Out a Little Liquor" (which also appears on the soundtrack to the 1994 film Above the Rim), "How Long Will They Mourn Me?" and "Str8 Ballin'." The album was originally released by Shakur's label Out Da Gutta Records. Due to heavy criticism on gangsta rap at the time, the original version of the album was scrapped and re-recorded with many of the original songs being cut. The album only contains ten tracks because Interscope Records felt many of the other recorded songs were too controversial to release. It has been said that 2Pac created two other versions of this album, with many of the songs still remaining unreleased.

Although the original version of the album never came to fruition as the album went through a number of changes, Tupac performed the planned first single from the album, "Out on Bail" at the 1994 Source Awards. Although the album was originally released on Shakur's label Out Da Gutta, Amaru Entertainment, the label owned by Tupac's mother, Afeni Shakur, has since gained the rights to it. Thug Life: Volume 1 was certified Gold. The track "How Long Will They Mourn Me?" appeared later in 1998 from 2Pac's Greatest Hits album.

It sold 500,000 copies in the United States in 1994.

"Full of machismo and do or die stances," wrote Jake Barnes in Q, "the lyrics' hardcore posturing is perversely undercut by sweet and delicate backings from artists like Curtis Mayfield, George Clinton and The Isley Brothers."


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