In Memory of

The Notorious B.I.G.

May 21, 1972 - March 9, 1997 - Age 24

Born Christopher Wallace 24 years ago, B.I.G. grew up in the Bedford Stuyvesant area, one of the toughest neighbourhoods in Brooklyn, New York. His childhood was bleak, surrounded by crackheads and drug dealers. Indeed, by his teens, Notorious B.I.G. had fallen for the life style that was all around him. "Hustlers were my heroes," he later admitted. "Everything happened on the strip I grew up in. It didn't matter where you went, it was all in your face." The rapper did it all: hanging around street corners, acting as a look-out, making deals. Soon, the fun and games took a darker turn. The police and rival gangs were after him and several of his friends got shot and ended up in coffins.

By 1993, the rapper had become Notorious B.I.G. and was guesting on Mary J. Blige's "Real Love" and Supercat's "Dolly My Baby". The strategy was already paying off but, to gain further exposure, B.I.G. recorded "Party and Bullshit", which was included in the soundtrack to the movie Who's the Man.

The following year the rapper completed his debut album, the prophetically titled Ready To Die, which chronicled his transition from a life of crime to the rap rhymes. Singles like "Juicy", "One More Chance" and "Big Poppa" reached the Billboard top five, the last track earning the rap single of the year award from the publication. The album went platinum, selling over a million copies in the US. B.I.G. was also voted Best New Artist, Best Live Performer and Lyricist of the Year by the Source, the magazine which had given him his first break. On a rare UK visit, he proved himself the equal of the swingbeat star R. Kelly, whom he was supporting at Wembley arena. He was in even more stellar company, gusting on Michael Jackson's History - Past, Present and Future Book 1.

But, if you could take the rapper out of the neighborhood you couldn't take the hood out of the rapper. B.I.G. formed a group called M.A.F.I.A. with some of his former hustler friends and appeared on their Conspiracy album.

However, with the forthcoming release of Life After Death (featuring guests like Lil' Kim), Wallace seemed ready to face up to his ghosts and make amends. Tracks like "Notorious Thugs" (with Bone-Thugs-N-Harmony) and "You're Nobody ('Til Somebody Kills You)" indicate as much. The sleeve depicting the rapper standing next to a hearse with a B.I.G. numberplate will no doubt become the subject of much analysis and controversy by a hip-hop scene in which some people still maintain that Tupac Shakur faked his own death.

As Notorious B.I.G. told Billboard magazine last week: "I bring the problems and the situations that I've been through in my life into my music. "You're Nobody ('Til Somebody Kills You)" is my favourite track. I like what the hook is saying.

"It brings to mind the expression `You'll miss me when I'm gone'."

Physical Location: Cemetery

Frank E. Campbell
Funeral Chapel in
Manhattan