The Notorious B.I.G. Essentials
At the height of his success, The Notorious B.I.G. dubbed himself the King of New York after the Christopher Walken-portrayed antihero from the film of the same name. The title was fitting and limiting: His swagger was unmistakably Brooklyn, but his talent and charisma made him a world-renowned superstar. Born Christopher Wallace in 1972, B.I.G. was raised by a Jamaican immigrant mother, writing raps and freestyling on street corners as a preteen. B.I.G.’s explosive 1994 debut album, <i>Ready to Die</i>, chronicled his survivalism (“Who Shot Ya?”) and sexploits (“Big Poppa”) with charm, menace, and urgency. His vivid tales featured unflinching details (“Gimme the Loot,” “I Got a Story to Tell”) made digestible by his distinctive flow and recognizable ’80s R&B samples courtesy of The Hitmen.
The “ashy-to-classy” aspirations of Biggie’s hit “Juicy” became a reality: He elevated his Junior M.A.F.I.A. crew, godfathered an empire of hitmakers, and became one of the biggest rap stars in the world. Sadly, his meteoric rise came with a media-exacerbated beef with 2Pac that culminated in both stars’ murders six months apart, crippling the culture as it reeled from the luminaries’ absence.