50 Cent Releases “Best Of” Album

    Fourteen years after the release of his multi-platinum debut album Get Rich or Die Tryin’, 50 Cent has released a Best Of album.

    While this doesn’t mark the all-time collection of 50’s music (assuming we will get Street King Immortal one day), it is a look at the G-Unit general’s five studio albums and some of his best features.

    Best Of opens with “In Da Club” and then goes into 17 other favorites including “21 Questions” featuring the late, great Nate Dogg, “P.I.M.P.,” “Disco Inferno,” “Candy Shop” with Olivia, “Just A Lil Bit,” another Olivia song with “Best Friend,” “I Get Money” and “I’ll Still Kill” with Akon.

    50’s in the headlines this week with the news surfacing that he’s not, in fact, traveling with Chris Brown on The Party Tour. Instead, he’ll continue to work on Den of Thieves, his new film with Gerard Butler.

    50 Cent’s Best Of album stream, cover art and tracklist are below.

    1. In Da Club
    2. 21 Questions (f. Nate Dogg)
    3. P.I.M.P.
    4. Disco Inferno
    5. Candy Shop (f. Olivia)
    6. Just a Lil Bit
    7. Outta Control (f. Mobb Deep) [Remix]
    8. Hustler’s Ambition
    9. Best Friend (f. Olivia) [Remix]
    10. Window Shopper
    11. Ayo Technology (f. Justin Timberlake)
    12. I Get Money
    13. Straight To the Bank
    14. I’ll Still Kill (f. Akon)
    15. Get Up
    16. I Get It In
    17. Baby By Me
    18. How To Rob

    44 thoughts on “50 Cent Releases “Best Of” Album

    1. Honestly, as someone who once thought 50 was just a pop mainstream rapper, he has such a vast catalogue of great hiphop. Most of his best music is the stuff that people never heard of. It’s his hits that’s are pop. His unknown music is dope as hell.

    2. Here is the real track listing for the “Best of 50 Cent” album:

      1. Intro
      2. What Up Gangsta
      3. Patiently Waiting ft. Eminem
      4. Many Men (Wish Death)
      5. In Da Club
      6. High All The Time
      7. Heat
      8. If I Can’t
      9. Blood Hound ft. Young Buck
      10. Back Down
      11. P.I.M.P.
      12. Like My Style
      13. Poor Lil Rich
      14. 21 Questions
      15. Don’t Push Me ft. Lloyd Banks & Eminem
      16. Gotta Make It To Heaven
      17. Wanksta
      18. U Not Like Me
      19. Life’s On The Line

      1. go ahead and add “Gatman and Robbin” on your list too, you seem to have all the shit with Eminem there anyways.. surely you are no Stan, right..

    3. This is just hits 50s best songs aren’t even singles dude atleast ten songs coulda been replaced by better hits or hard bangers! Whatever tho who cares it’s a greatest hits album doesn’t really matter everybody already has these tracks.

    4. Fuck record sales and hits even if he didnt drop that many hits after hes a legend Before i self destructs underrated as fuck ull nvr hear 50 spit like that again he spazzed out. before i self destruct coulda been a classic if it was 3 tracks shorter deleting baby by me and get it hot adding they burn me. Either way the guy released consistent music his whole career.

      1. He still has more hits beside this tracklist whip head boy, my life, new day, outta control with just 50 & this is how we do belonged to 50. I think if would’ve kept that record for the massacre album would’ve sold a whole lot more maybe over 25 mil

    5. More like Radio best hits… most his real bangers not even on this track list .. he shoulda done a double disc or some shit

    6. No “Many Men”, “In My Hood”, “Wangksta”, “Baltimore Love Thing”, “What up Gangsta”, “Patiently Waiting”, “Ghetto Quran”, “Life’s On The LIne”…the fuck kind of greatest songs CD is this??

      1. Greatest Hits is different to a Best of…

        The difference is that the Best of… is a mixture of the *artist’s* favourite releases not necessarily the songs that charted the highest.

    7. This was put out by Interscope which he’s no longer signed to, so it’s not like they really give a fuck about putting his actual classics on there.

    8. The version of “How To Rob” on this album is actually the unreleased version of the song that Mariah Carey blocked before it’s initial release in 1999/2000 as a single. D. Dot’s lyrics are altered from the official release and 50 Cent includes the lyric about Mariah in the song. That’s the only “new” song on the album that’s never been released before.

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