The fourth album released in the wake of 2Pac's 1996 death, Until the End of Time certainly offers plenty of music, two discs' worth to be precise, although the songs here seem overdone, which can obscure 2Pac's performances. Nevertheless, those performances somehow remain remarkable no matter how deep into the vault Afeni Shakur and Suge Knight have dug, and songs like "Letter 2 My Unborn," "When Thugz Cry," and the title track are just as heartfelt as "Keep Ya Head Up," "Dear Mama," and "I Ain't Mad at Cha" had been. The title track is one of 2Pac's most desperate, spirited performances ever -- the voice of a man face to face with his own fate -- and it's accompanied by an anxious yet lulling interpolation of Mr. Mister's 1985 pop hit "Broken Wings" that is far more affective than you'd imagine. Note that there are two versions here of the title track (the best one being the original one, which features RL on the hook), as there are also two versions of a few other songs, and these remixes are nearly interchangeable. ~ Jason Birchmeier, All Music Guide
Pac is the truth all these other "bubble gum" artist better be lucky the cops killed this man cause there would be alot of ATL rappers working @ skating rinks and fast food spots, R.I.P PAC "THUG LIFE"!
ya donnelldonell you dumb as f*ck! 2pac is tha sh*t but you belong in tha gutter b*tch! And I bet you don't even know where miami is even at! so go home and grow up.
this is to anybody thats out there bumpin fifty and g-unit that nigga fifty is a fuckass nigga and a straight up all around p**sy and i beta not catch his a** in miami or he will be a done deal