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Who Shot Ya

"Who Shot Ya?"
Song by The Notorious B.I.G.
Released December 30, 1994
Recorded 1994
Genre Gangsta rap
Length 5:16
Label
Songwriter(s) Christopher Wallace
Producer(s) Nashiem Myrick, Sean Combs (co.)
Extended version of Ready to Die track listing
"Suicidal Thoughts"
(17)
"Who Shot Ya?"
(18)
"Just Playing (Dreams)"
(19)
Born Again track listing
"If I Should Die Before I Wake"
(14)
"Who Shot Ya?"
(15)
"Can I Get Witcha"
(16)
Greatest Hits track listing
"Dead Wrong"
(7)
"Who Shot Ya?"
(8)
"Ten Crack Commandments"
(9)

"Who Shot Ya?" is a controversial gangsta rap song by The Notorious B.I.G., a B-side to his 1995 hit single, "Big Poppa". The track was later released on the posthumous album Born Again, the remastered edition of Ready to Die, and The Greatest Hits.

Originally the song was recorded for the Mary J. Blige album My Life and meant for what eventually became the K. Murray Interlude (as evidenced on the track by use of the same instrumental); however, Biggie's version was considered too violent to be put into an R&B album and Keith Murray was asked to record his version instead. The song samples David Porter's "I'm Afraid The Masquerade Is Over".

In March 2008, Chuck Philips wrote an LA Times article naming James "Jimmy Henchman" Rosemond, a hip-hop CEO, as an organizer of the attack on Tupac in 1994 at Quad Studios in New York. The article alleged that Smalls and Sean Combs knew about the attack a week in advance. The article relied heavily on anonymous sources and internal FBI documents Philips obtained. After the article was published, The Smoking Gun revealed that Philips' FBI documents were fake. In April 2008, the LA Times printed a full retraction of the Quad Studios article and released Philips from the newspaper shortly thereafter. Philips blamed the Times editors for forcing him to rely on the fake FBI documents.

In June 2011, New York inmate Dexter Isaac came forward as one of Philips' anonymous sources, claiming that he participated in the Quad Studios attack. Philips told LA Weekly that he demanded a "front-page retraction" in the LA Times.


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Wikipedia

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