
We gonna go to London for this new album,’ ” Kent - who at the time was senior vice president of A&R at Motown Records - told The Post. “He was like, ‘Yo, you gotta go on the road with me. And while the bottles were popping at Vibe magazine’s post-Soul Train Awards party in Los Angeles, he was trying to convince DJ Clark Kent to be his spinning sidekick across the pond. Two weeks before the March 1997 release of “Life After Death” - his second and final studio album - the rapper was making plans to hypnotize London in support of the ambitious double LP. on his 1994 breakout hit “Juicy.” And three years later, he was living the dream before it all came to a tragic end. “It was all a dream/I used to read Word Up! magazine,” famously rapped the Notorious B.I.G. Notorious B.I.G.’s daughter T’yanna Wallace posts boyfriend’s $1M bond in hit-and-run case Legendary rapper Notorious B.I.G’s mural vandalized in Brooklyn Video shows alleged vandal who ruined Notorious B.I.G mural in NYC

Meta to ressurect Notorious B.I.G for VR concert
