Who Shot Ya?

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Who_Shot_Ya%3F an entity of type: Thing

Who Shot Ya?, spesso indicata anche senza il punto interrogativo, Who Shot Ya, è un brano musicale hip hop del rapper statunitense The Notorious B.I.G., comunemente noto come Biggie Smalls, prodotto da Puff Daddy. Il brano fu pubblicato il 21 febbraio 1995 come lato B di una versione alternativa del singolo Big Poppa/Warning dalla Bad Boy Records. Mentre il lato A Big Poppa divenne un grosso successo pop, Who Shot Ya? con il suo testo minaccioso, divenne rapidamente un enorme successo da strada negli Stati Uniti, e molto influente nell'ambiente hip hop. Pezzo diss più celebre di Biggie, fu anche molto controverso. Nonostante nel testo non si faccia mai il suo nome, il brano diede inizio alla famigerata "guerra rap" con il collega Tupac Shakur. rdf:langString
"Who Shot Ya?" é uma canção controversa lançada por Notorious B.I.G., no B-side do single "Big Poppa", em 1995. A música foi lançada no álbum póstumo , na edição remasterizada de Ready to Die e no Greatest Hits. A canção contém a participação de Puff Daddy e é interpretada por muitos fãs de rap como uma diss para Tupac Shakur, sendo o marco alto da rivalidade entre a East Coast hip hop e a West Coast. Em resposta, 2Pac lançou a famosa "Hit' em Up" onde questiona a atitude de Biggie. rdf:langString
Who Shot Ya? är en låt från 1994 av Notorious B.I.G. Låten är känd för att ha trissat upp kriget mellan öst- och västkusten i hiphopens USA på grund av att Tupac Shakur trodde att den var en diss mot honom. rdf:langString
"Who Shot Ya" or often "Who Shot Ya?" is a song by Brooklyn, New York, rapper the Notorious B.I.G., also called Biggie Smalls, backed by Sean Combs as the "hype man". Puffy's emerging record label, Bad Boy Entertainment, released it on February 21, 1995, on an alternate reissue of Biggie's single "Big Poppa/Warning," out since December 5, 1994. While this 1994 release climbed the Billboard Hot 100, its new B side "Who Shot Ya"—now Biggie's "most infamous classic," with an instrumental now iconic—revised some vocals of a "Who Shot Ya" track, rapped by Biggie and Keith Murray, already issued on a mixtape from a Harlem DJ earlier in 1995. Recalled as "menacing magic" that helps "define New York rap," "Who Shot Ya" was "controversial and hugely influential." Widely interpreted as a taunt at 2P rdf:langString
Who Shot Ya? – utwór amerykańskiego rapera Biggiego z albumów „Born Again”, remasterowanej wersji „Ready to Die” i „Greatest Hits”. Jest to również strona B singla „Big Poppa”. Utwór został nagrany kilka miesięcy przed postrzeleniem 2paca w 1994, lecz przez niektórych jest uważany przez diss na niego. Utwór zawiera sample z „I’m Afraid The Masquerade Is Over” Davida Portera. Początkowo utwór został nagrany na album Mary J. Blige „My Life”. Jednak w wersji z Biggiem został uznany za zbyt brutalny na album R&B. rdf:langString
«Who Shot Ya?» (с англ. — «Кто стрелял в тебя?») — песня The Notorious B.I.G., со стороны «Б» его сингла 1995 года, «Big Poppa». Трек был позже выпущен на посмертном альбоме Born Again, переиздании альбома Ready to Die и . rdf:langString
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rdf:langString "Who Shot Ya" or often "Who Shot Ya?" is a song by Brooklyn, New York, rapper the Notorious B.I.G., also called Biggie Smalls, backed by Sean Combs as the "hype man". Puffy's emerging record label, Bad Boy Entertainment, released it on February 21, 1995, on an alternate reissue of Biggie's single "Big Poppa/Warning," out since December 5, 1994. While this 1994 release climbed the Billboard Hot 100, its new B side "Who Shot Ya"—now Biggie's "most infamous classic," with an instrumental now iconic—revised some vocals of a "Who Shot Ya" track, rapped by Biggie and Keith Murray, already issued on a mixtape from a Harlem DJ earlier in 1995. Recalled as "menacing magic" that helps "define New York rap," "Who Shot Ya" was "controversial and hugely influential." Widely interpreted as a taunt at 2Pac, the single provoked a "rap battle" between the two rappers, formerly friends. Biggie, when interviewed, explained his "Who Shot Ya" lyrics as portraying a rivalry between drug dealers. Sharing the mixtape track's instrumental, the single replaces the Murray verse with a second Biggie verse, and expands Puffy's "hype man" vocals. Beyond a synthesized kick drum added, the instrumental is simply a sample that "chillingly" loops a portion of soul singer David Porter's 1971 song "I'm Afraid the Masquerade is Over," album Victim of the Joke? An Opera. A "snippet" of the mixtape track, but Murray's verse, plays in "K. Murry Interlude," a brief skit on Uptown Records singer Mary J Blige's R&B album My Life, coproduced by Puffy, released on November 29, 1994. That day, James "Jimmy Henchman" Rosemond, managing an Uptown Records rapper, booked Tupac to record a cameo. Reaching the studio's Times Square building lobby, Tupac was shot resisting robbery by waiting gunmen. Tupac instantly blamed Rosemond, and soon suspected privity by Puffy and Biggie. Once a January jailhouse interview of Tupac, hinting the suspicions, was read in Vibe magazine's April issue, "Who Shot Ya" intervening, "the industry rumor mill was churning." The central persons all disputed Tupac's portrayal, and Biggie called "crazy" the rumors blaming him via "Who Shot Ya" lyrics. Either way, the single's timing was suspect. Out of prison, Tupac answered in June 1996 by the B side "Hit 'Em Up"—accusing and menacing Biggie and Puffy by name—which legendary "diss track" inflamed the rap community's East/West rivalry to its peak. In Vibe, then, Puffy denied any aggression at Tupac, and Biggie called "Who Shot Ya" initially "the intro to that shit Keith Murray was doing on Mary J Blige's joint." Biggie's puzzling explanation indirectly spotlit Puffy's vocals, shouting East Coast, motherfucker!. Tupac's fatal shooting in September 1996 and Biggie's in March 1997, both officially unresolved, drew speculations partly blaming the "rap battle." Biggie and studio associates who witnessed his "Who Shot Ya" recording have unanimously disputed that it, or Biggie's "saying that phrase," targeted Tupac. Nashiem Myrick, the main producer, avowed "no reason, no motive, at all, to have set 'Pac up," a query tied to the song. It was reissued in 1999 on the posthumous Biggie album Born Again, in 2001 on a "Big Poppa/Warning" reissue with remixes, in 2004 on a remaster of his 1994 or debut album Ready to Die, and in 2007 on his compilation album Greatest Hits. In 2014, the mixtape version, key inspiration to rapper Jay-Z in 1995, drew renewed notice. Rock band Living Colour's music video to a 2016 cover version protests gun violence. Who Shot Ya? is now a trope beyond music.
rdf:langString Who Shot Ya?, spesso indicata anche senza il punto interrogativo, Who Shot Ya, è un brano musicale hip hop del rapper statunitense The Notorious B.I.G., comunemente noto come Biggie Smalls, prodotto da Puff Daddy. Il brano fu pubblicato il 21 febbraio 1995 come lato B di una versione alternativa del singolo Big Poppa/Warning dalla Bad Boy Records. Mentre il lato A Big Poppa divenne un grosso successo pop, Who Shot Ya? con il suo testo minaccioso, divenne rapidamente un enorme successo da strada negli Stati Uniti, e molto influente nell'ambiente hip hop. Pezzo diss più celebre di Biggie, fu anche molto controverso. Nonostante nel testo non si faccia mai il suo nome, il brano diede inizio alla famigerata "guerra rap" con il collega Tupac Shakur.
rdf:langString "Who Shot Ya?" é uma canção controversa lançada por Notorious B.I.G., no B-side do single "Big Poppa", em 1995. A música foi lançada no álbum póstumo , na edição remasterizada de Ready to Die e no Greatest Hits. A canção contém a participação de Puff Daddy e é interpretada por muitos fãs de rap como uma diss para Tupac Shakur, sendo o marco alto da rivalidade entre a East Coast hip hop e a West Coast. Em resposta, 2Pac lançou a famosa "Hit' em Up" onde questiona a atitude de Biggie.
rdf:langString Who Shot Ya? är en låt från 1994 av Notorious B.I.G. Låten är känd för att ha trissat upp kriget mellan öst- och västkusten i hiphopens USA på grund av att Tupac Shakur trodde att den var en diss mot honom.
rdf:langString Who Shot Ya? – utwór amerykańskiego rapera Biggiego z albumów „Born Again”, remasterowanej wersji „Ready to Die” i „Greatest Hits”. Jest to również strona B singla „Big Poppa”. Utwór został nagrany kilka miesięcy przed postrzeleniem 2paca w 1994, lecz przez niektórych jest uważany przez diss na niego. Utwór zawiera sample z „I’m Afraid The Masquerade Is Over” Davida Portera. Początkowo utwór został nagrany na album Mary J. Blige „My Life”. Jednak w wersji z Biggiem został uznany za zbyt brutalny na album R&B. W 2006 wokalista System of a Down, Serj Tankian, nagrał remiks utworu do gry wideo „Mark Eckō's Getting Up: Contents Under Pressure”. Utwór coverowało i remiksowało wielu raperów. Przed oficjalnym rozpoczęciem swej kariery DMX nagrał freestyle oparty na beacie „Who Shot Ya”, z tekstem, którego później użył w „Bring Your Whole Crew” i „Murdergram” (zamieszczony na albumie „Unleashed & Unreleased”). Powstała również wersja z Doc Holiday, w której DMX wykorzystał tylko tekst z „Bring Your Whole Crew” (zamieszczona na albumie „”). W 2003 Ja Rule miał beef z G-Unit. Nagrał cover utworu Biggiego, który zatytułował „Guess Who Shot Ya”. Wykorzystał do niego beat oraz przekształcony tekst (między innymi zastępując „Puff Daddy”-„Irv Gotti”). W 2008 Papoose użył podkładu i części tekstu do swojej wersji, w której dissował Uncle Murda. Swoje „Who Shot Ya” nagrali również między innymi: Big L, Foxy Brown, G-Unit, The Game, Styles P i LL Cool J.
rdf:langString «Who Shot Ya?» (с англ. — «Кто стрелял в тебя?») — песня The Notorious B.I.G., со стороны «Б» его сингла 1995 года, «Big Poppa». Трек был позже выпущен на посмертном альбоме Born Again, переиздании альбома Ready to Die и . Изначально песня была записана для альбома Mary J. Blige My Life и предназначалась для того, что в конечном итоге стало «K. Murray Interlude» (о чём свидетельствует использование на треке того же инструментала); однако, версия Бигги считалась слишком жестокой, чтобы быть помещённой на R&B-альбом, и вместо этого Keith Murray попросили записать его версию. В песне используется семпл из песни David Porter «I’m Afraid The Masquerade Is Over».
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