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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The Greatest has fallen?
I have mixed emotions about this album. I love it because I got some more B.I.G to listen to for at least another year because the man died to soon. However, certain songs just dont seem like songs "the greatest MC of all time" would have released such as songs with Cash Money, Eminem and the worst song on the album "Come on" with Sadat x. He didnt...
Published on January 3, 2000 by Big L

versus
24 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Ain't Biggie's FAULT
It was a total shock to the entire hip-hop community when Notorious Big (aka Biggie Smalls) was shot to death at the age of 25. Two years later, Biggie's fellow producer, Sean "Puffy" Combs intends to utilize his remixing and collaborating skills to bring Biggie back to the "Greatest Rapper of All Time" by releasing Born Again [Dec. 7]. Unfortunately, Puffy failed to...
Published on December 27, 1999 by Jason J Lee


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24 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Ain't Biggie's FAULT, December 27, 1999
By 
Jason J Lee (Palo Alto, Kali) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Born Again (Audio CD)
It was a total shock to the entire hip-hop community when Notorious Big (aka Biggie Smalls) was shot to death at the age of 25. Two years later, Biggie's fellow producer, Sean "Puffy" Combs intends to utilize his remixing and collaborating skills to bring Biggie back to the "Greatest Rapper of All Time" by releasing Born Again [Dec. 7]. Unfortunately, Puffy failed to do that. This album only revealed Puffy's avarice and disrespect to his ceased homie. Puffy simply just sliced together the collection of Biggie's old lyric and remixed songs, which had seemingly ruined the originals.

It was sad what Puffy did to the album especially with the guest appearances. These guests seems to make Biggie not as the "greatest rapper" on the strength of the two multi-platinum selling albums he had previously completed (Life after Death and Ready to die) before he was murdered by a drive-by shooting.

This album contains some of the posthumous Notorious B.I.G.'s demos, freestyle verses and other fragmented clips, cut with new production and guest verses in the present tense that makes Biggie "born again". Since Puffy doesn't want to waste a second of Biggie tape, the production frames his lyrics like jewels of wisdom. Of this disc's 18 tracks, 14 are brought up to regular length by "featured" guests and not counting the intro and the outro. Thus Biggie's gifted performance only appeared in the remaining fragments. The most obvious example is the song "If I should Die Before I wake". It is built out of roughly 20 seconds worth of Biggie sound, covered by the guest rappers Black Rob, Beanie Sigel and Ice Cube.

The song "I Really Want to Show You" sounds like the replica version of "Everyday Struggle", featuring the excellent performance by K-Ci and Jo-Jo and Nas. New rapper Eminem tears into his verse of "Dead Wrong" like it's his one chance to prove himself, and knocks Biggie out of the picture. Before Biggie's death, he doesn't even know who Eminem is, and we don't know if Biggie is willing to mix his song with Eminem. The fast song "Notorious B.I.G.", featuring the cheerfully nasty Lil' Kim, the cheerfully bland Puff Daddy and a cheerfully inevitable is a much better idea than it sounds like. This album is a disgrace to a Hip Hop legacy. Not because Biggie lacks of talents. It is Puffy try to make more money o release this cacophony and he ruined this brilliant rapper. Even worse, Biggie wasn't there to stop Puffy and Puffy makes all the profit. Anyone who dared to characterize the immortal lyrics of Life after Death and Ready to Die with this latest release is sheer blasphemy, and Puffy should go to Biggie's grave to beg for pardon.

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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars A disgrace to the artist's memory., December 12, 1999
By 
mitch (Nationwide) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Born Again (Audio CD)
Biggie was a great rapper, but these tracks are not his work. They are just pieces of his lyrics put over totally new tracks, and its obvious. This is more like a bad compilation album. It is clearly a poor attempt to save a dying company. Puffy has exploited Biggie in his death and this album is exactly that. It's just a bunch of brand-name artists stuck in with pieces of Biggie that were never meant to be released. Thumbs up to Jay-Z for refusing to take part in this project. RIP B.I.G. and 2Pac.
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21 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars IF U THINK THAT THIS ALBUM IS TIGHT THEN U DEAD WRONG, December 21, 1999
By 
Blakout (Reston, Virginia) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Born Again (Audio CD)
With all due respect this biggie album (an exception) was ruined by puff daddy once again, now puffy if you ruin your album that's somthin' but if you ruin an album for biggie and he is not even alive to defend himself that's a crime. It is sad what puffy did to the album especially with the guest appearances.
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13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars A B.I.G. waste of money, March 5, 2002
By 
This review is from: Born Again (Audio CD)
I don't think people are even talking about this album anymore because it was such an injustice to Biggie's legacy. Instead of a third Biggie effort or even a tribute to Biggie, Born Again is a overhyped and inconsistent album thrown together by Puff and company just to make some quick bucks.

But first, the good news. The updated "Come On" featuring Sadat X has a better beat and Sadat's rhymes are better than on the original. And even though Biggie didn't really rhyme with Beanie Sigel, Black Rob and Ice Cube on "If I Should Die Before I Wake", the beat is so murderous and the dudes rhyme so well that you start to wonder what if they really did record together.

Then, there are the halfway decent songs like "Notorious B.I.G." (what a clever title, huh?). It is here where Jadakiss got the hook from for The Lox's "All For the Love". And though "Dead Wrong" has some dope lyrics (they had to cut out the part where he said, "I'm wrong/Jehovah said I'm barred from the pearly gates/F__ it, I didn't wanna go to heaven anyway") and Eminem rips it as well, they used the same played-out beat used in Rakim's "Mahogany".

But the album has so many shortcomings that it's sickening. There are some rappers that you know Biggie wouldn't have rapped with like Missy ("Let Me Get Down"), and the Hot Boys on the album's lowest point, "Hope You N's Sleep". Mannie Fresh's beat mixed with Biggie's unpolished rhymes is worse than having Biggie's vocals over Juvenile's "Ha" beat from his bootleg album, Reborn. And Mark Curry's verse saves "Dangerous MC's". Moreover, the song titles are repetitive and uncreative ("Notorious B.I.G.", "Biggie").

It gets worse. The masterminds must have run out of Biggie's lyrics to use, so they run and dig into some of his lyrics from songs that EVERYONE has heard before. The chorus to "Biggie" is from the Heavy D/2Pac/Untouchables collabo "Let's Get It On"; "Big Booty Hoes" jacks Luke and Biggie's "Bust a Nut"; and "Tonight" and "I Really Wanna Show You" uses verses from "Long Kiss Goodnight" and "Everyday Struggle", respectively. Who are these people trying to fool? Even DJ Premier makes a misstep here. Though his beat to "Rap Phenomenon" is dope, and Redman's line, "I'm concurrent in your hood like a teenage mom," is hilarious, BIG's verses are taken from Tracey Lee's "Keep Your Hands High". And BIG's outtakes on "Can I Get Witcha" are called outtakes for a reason. They were lazy freestyles that should have been left in the archives. But the worst moments are putting on the shortened version of the ancient song "Who Shot Ya", and in "I Really Wanna Show You", K-Ci's singing/yelling is HORRIBLE. To further [degrade] the album's quality, Biggie's moms complains in the outro how hip-hop killed Biggie. That is mad debatable.

Why dig through those songs when it would be just easier to Puff and them to admit that they don't have enough Biggie lyrics to make an album? Then they could have shelved this whole project. Forgive them, B.I.G., for messing up your third album.

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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars So-so, May 15, 2001
By 
This review is from: Born Again (Audio CD)
This is definetly not Big's best, but how can you be mad at him if hes not even with us anymore? (R.I.P.) This CD is made up of bits of unreleased Biggie verses and even some freestyles thrown into new beats and featuring some good and bad rappers. I bet biggie's rolling in his grave being featured on a track with the Cash Money Millionaires...but anyways there are some nice cuts on this album. The remix of Dead Wrong is dope with Eminem really tearing it up, and several other tracks meet the Biggie standard. Now I know everyone says Tupac's post-death albums are better, well thats because he left tons of work, biggie didn't have that much time, he was taken way too early. Overall this album is okay but if you want really B.I.G. try his classic "Ready to die" or his final CD "Life After Death"
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The Greatest has fallen?, January 3, 2000
By 
This review is from: Born Again (Audio CD)
I have mixed emotions about this album. I love it because I got some more B.I.G to listen to for at least another year because the man died to soon. However, certain songs just dont seem like songs "the greatest MC of all time" would have released such as songs with Cash Money, Eminem and the worst song on the album "Come on" with Sadat x. He didnt even know eminem or cash money click. Puffy put them on there because they hot right now. All the songs with his own crew, Lil Kim, Lil Cease, Junior Mafia are all tight songs. I appreciate all the lyrics because he was too tight lyrically to sleep on but the production on some songs are obivous patchwork of fragmented freestyles or previous recordings. The most obvious 3 are "Big Booty Hoes" which is really "bust a nut" which he origianally did with Luke, "tonight" which is really "long kiss goodnight" from life after death and "i really want to show you" which is nothing but "everyday struggle" with a different beat. Anyway, forget what people say and JUDGE YOURSELF! B.I.G. Forever
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Bouncing from start to finish., December 17, 1999
By 
anthony choyce (dallas, tx United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Born Again (Audio CD)
This is my first cd that I have bought of Biggie's and I must say that it is an amazing piece of work. Every track is bouncing, but I was especially moved by his mom's outro. I must also agree that Puff used way too many guest artist, and this alone took away from Biggie's last time to shine.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars doesn't do Biggie justice, December 7, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Born Again (Audio CD)
I agree with the editorial review. This album was ruined by the plethora of guests. It sounds more like a compilation than a Biggie album. If Big was solo on this cd it would probably be a classic.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Puff, you should have let him RIP,, December 7, 1999
This review is from: Born Again (Audio CD)
Biggie would never put out garbage like this, and I don't even like him that much, but come on...Half these songs don't match, the guest appearances are terrible, this album is a disgrace to Biggie and his mom and anyone who buys this will be let down
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Thanks Puffy, April 8, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Born Again (Audio CD)
Thanks Puffy for screwing up another album. You know this could have been a great album but thanks to puffy release of Notorious with him and Kim rapping mostly to something Biggi dropped in 95 you obviously see Puffy wants to be the one to shine not Biggi. Come on fans buy this album so Puffy could show off more "Ice" and push his $200,000 car with jennifer Lopez. Support this idiot.
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Born Again
Born Again by Notorious B.I.G. (Audio Cassette - 1999)
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