What’s most interesting about the track isn’t the beats or the lyrics but how far Biggie Smalls experiments with precisely what a rap song can be. The article was enough fuel to throw on Biggie’s fire, and the rapper ran with the idea. The article was published in 1994 under the title ‘On the Rocks: From 1984 to 1994, Ten Years of Crack’ and included a note which provided ‘A Crack Dealer’s Ten Crack Commandments’, delivering a see of rules for all dealers to live by. After reading a survival guide to survive as a crack dealer in The Source magazine, Smalls decided to re-interpret that article and ‘Ten Crack Commandments’ was the splendid result. New York was in the midst of a crack epidemic, and it had swirled into a new decade to grab a new generation b the scruff of the neck and to drown them in addiction. ![]() ![]() In truth, this track is an example of Biggie’s prowess at telling stories from a human perspective, even if the protagonist is questionable. Not because it made light of the epidemic of crack that had swept through America in the 1980s to such devastating results, but because it showcased the life Big had been forced to lead. ![]() One of the final tracks Big recorded for Life After Death the song has gone down in history as one of his greats. One such track is the brutal yet brilliant ‘Ten Crack Commandments’.
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