I get why people are still all about Tupac. If someone asked me to define charisma, I'd probably direct them to one of his better interviews. The enthusiasm in those early years! But...greatness? I don't know. Sometimes, for sure. Moments of brilliance, e.g. MATW and 7 Day Theory. (The tragedy is that he was getting better.) On the whole, though, his music was uneven and undeniably repetitive. I think if he'd been a bit less prolific, he'd have had higher standards for his releases. At the same time I can't argue with his attitude: rapid-fire studio sessions, work out the song, do another one. That's very cool. But the results were sometimes of the "whatever" variety.
Anyway, as a human being, you guys are right. It's impossible to judge someone you never met. We're basing our opinions on a very specific public persona that he crafted intentionally. I mean, cmon, is Hit Em Up a sincerely hateful track, or is he playing things up to make it interesting? He was a salesman, moving door to door. We don't know the first thing about the dude.
Anyway, as a human being, you guys are right. It's impossible to judge someone you never met. We're basing our opinions on a very specific public persona that he crafted intentionally. I mean, cmon, is Hit Em Up a sincerely hateful track, or is he playing things up to make it interesting? He was a salesman, moving door to door. We don't know the first thing about the dude.
