2Pac’s ‘Greatest Hits’ Becomes Fourth-Longest Charting Rap Album

    2Pac‘s 1998 Greatest Hits album is now the fourth-longest charting rap album of all time on the Billboard 200.

    The news was confirmed in a tweet from Billboard’s official Twitter account on Monday (November 28), revealing the project has spent 450 weeks on the chart since its release 24 years ago. Coming in at No. 94 this week, it’s now only behind Drake’s 2011 album Take Care at 508 weeks, Kendrick Lamar’s 2011 album good kid, m.A.A.d city at 526 weeks and Eminem‘s 2005 greatest hits compilation, Curtain Call, at 607 weeks.

    Greatest Hits arrived two years after Pac’s death, and features popular singles like “Keep Ya Head Up,” “Hail Mary,” “Hit ‘Em Up” and “I Get Around,” among others. It was certified Diamond by the Recording Association of America (RIAA) in 2011.

    On top of being one of the most successful artists of all time, 2pac was also finding success in the film word before his untimely passing. He played Bishop in the 1992 film Juice, which is revered as a classic film by many – but fans recently learned that Diddy wanted the casting to go a different way.

    During a recent Instagram Live conversation with Fat Joe, Video Music Box creator Ralph McDaniels revealed Puff actually wanted to replace Pac in the film.

    “When we shot Juice… Andre Harrell was shooting [a movie that] Puff was working on,” McDaniels recalled. “Puff got fired from that movie, and he said, ‘Ralph, you working on Juice, I want to be Bishop. I saw the script. Bishop, that’s me!’

    “And I was like, ‘But we got somebody to be Bishop already, the only one that’s cast is Tupac.’ [Diddy] was like, ‘Nah, I’m from Harlem, Ralph, just think about it. Think about it. The script, that’s me.’ And I was like ‘That’s [going to be] hard. That’s [going to be] difficult.”

    Despite Puff’s efforts, 2pac obviously remained in the role. The Ernest R. Dickerson-directed film went on to gross over $20 million at the box office and became a cult classic.

    6 thoughts on “2Pac’s ‘Greatest Hits’ Becomes Fourth-Longest Charting Rap Album

    1. Can we just start having records calculated differently for pre streaming/post streaming cos believe me it’s a whole different thing!! In this streaming era I might accidentally leave some wank album playing that I would NEVER have gone out and physically bought!!! It’s nowhere near the same these days so don’t cross the era’s!!

    2. Can we just start having records calculated differently for pre streaming/post streaming cos believe me it’s a whole different thing!! In this streaming era I might accidentally leave some wank album playing that I would NEVER have gone out and physically bought!!! It’s nowhere near the same these days so don’t cross the era’s!!

      1. Man, I love changes!

        Just joking! Hearing 40,000 times in 24 years had made me not like it. But God Bless the Dead- man….so good. This article got me thinking of Until the end of Time album for some reason, and how damn good that album was. I think it was his third double album- which is crazy, but I remember driving around with that in the cd player, and we weren’t skipping anything except that lame ass title track. U don’t have 2 Worry, This Ain’t Livin’, Ballad of a Dead Soulja, Last Ones Left…. damn.

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