Better Dayz

2Pac

Sale - Sale price $28.99 CAD Regular price
Regular price $28.99 CAD
Sold Out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Description

Better Dayz is 2Pac’s eighth studio album and fourth posthumous release, issued as a double‑disc compilation on November 26, 2002 through Amaru Entertainment and Interscope. It pulls together 26 tracks of largely previously unreleased or hard‑to‑find material recorded between 1994 and 1996, making it his last posthumous project structured as a full double album. Curated by Afeni Shakur, the set is framed as an effort to present more of Pac’s storytelling and emotional range without radically modernizing his sound, and it arrived to strong commercial performance and generally positive reception from fans, many of whom regard it as one of the best posthumous assemblies of his work.

Disc One leans heavily into harder, thug‑life material, but with significant variation in tone. Tracks like “Still Ballin’” (with Trick Daddy), “When We Ride On Our Enemies,” “Fuck Em All,” and “Street Fame” are aggressive, battle‑ready cuts, while “Never B Peace,” “Mama’s Just a Little Girl,” and “Ghetto Star” showcase Pac’s trademark hood storytelling and empathy for those trapped by poverty, violence, and systemic neglect. “Whatcha Gonna Do” and “Late Night” (with DJ Quik and Outlawz) add smoother, nocturnal West Coast vibes, and the acoustic “Thugz Mansion” with Nas and J. Phoenix closes the disc on a meditative note, imagining a peaceful afterlife beyond the struggle.

Details
detail icon barcode
Barcode :
0606949707026
detail icon publisher
Publisher :
Interscope
detail icon genre
Genre :
Rap/Hip Hop
Product Dimensions
detail icon width
Length x Width x Height :
6 x 5.2 x 0.5 in
detail icon weight
Weight :
90 g

Better Dayz

2Pac

Sale - Sale price $28.99 CAD Regular price
Regular price $28.99 CAD
Sold Out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Description

Better Dayz is 2Pac’s eighth studio album and fourth posthumous release, issued as a double‑disc compilation on November 26, 2002 through Amaru Entertainment and Interscope. It pulls together 26 tracks of largely previously unreleased or hard‑to‑find material recorded between 1994 and 1996, making it his last posthumous project structured as a full double album. Curated by Afeni Shakur, the set is framed as an effort to present more of Pac’s storytelling and emotional range without radically modernizing his sound, and it arrived to strong commercial performance and generally positive reception from fans, many of whom regard it as one of the best posthumous assemblies of his work.

Disc One leans heavily into harder, thug‑life material, but with significant variation in tone. Tracks like “Still Ballin’” (with Trick Daddy), “When We Ride On Our Enemies,” “Fuck Em All,” and “Street Fame” are aggressive, battle‑ready cuts, while “Never B Peace,” “Mama’s Just a Little Girl,” and “Ghetto Star” showcase Pac’s trademark hood storytelling and empathy for those trapped by poverty, violence, and systemic neglect. “Whatcha Gonna Do” and “Late Night” (with DJ Quik and Outlawz) add smoother, nocturnal West Coast vibes, and the acoustic “Thugz Mansion” with Nas and J. Phoenix closes the disc on a meditative note, imagining a peaceful afterlife beyond the struggle.

  • CD