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Has Anybody Ever Had A Run Like This?

5 Grand

Old School Godfather
Stillmatic - December 18, 2001 (US: 2,179,000)

Lost Tapes - September 24, 2002 (US: 361,000)

God's Son - December 13, 2002 (US: 1,362,000)


Three classics in one calendar year



The Death of Escobar (found unreleased Nas album; 2001)

The Death of Escobar (abbreviated as D.O.E.) is a 2001 unreleased concept album by New York-based rapper Nas. The title is a reference to Nas's alternative persona of Nas Escobar, which was seen as a much more mainstream appealing alter ego by fans.

For over a decade, much information about the album was unknown. Pictures of the purported album had surfaced through the internet for a decade and had a barcode provided as well, which meant that there was planned distribution for the album. Nonetheless, for years, the album was debated by hip-hop heads for years, whether it was the working title for Nas's eventual December 2001 release Stillmatic, a cancelled concept album, or was a fan-made fake.

In 2014, The Lost Tapes Blog, run by claaa7, revealed that in fact, the album was real, and was intended to be the first part of the Stillmatic album, but was cancelled before it was released, and instead re-released, and re-titled, as The Lost Tapes in 2002.

During the early 2000s, Nas's career was in a state of flux. Nas's I Am... and Nastradamus were seen as critical failures, In 2001, Jay-Z (who at the time was Nas's rival, though now friend) partly released his diss on Nas called Takeover at the 2001 Summer Jam.

Nas needed to respond to the pressure. In 2000, Nas started working on his new album. In early 2001, an email message was sent to those who had subscribed to Sony Music Street Team UK's email newsletter:

"THE FORTHCOMING NAS ALBUM IS ON HOLD AT THE MOMENT, HERE'S THE LATEST PLAN" - "Nas wants to release Death of Escobar first with Stillmatic to follow. Death of Escobar is the bootleg/sessions project. The project will feature the tracklisting below plus three new tracks. This tracklisting could and probably will change. The three new tracks will explain Escobar's death." "No music has been discussed or recorded for Stillmatic. In a best-case scenario, the album will be released June 2001."

From this, we can conclude that Death of Escobar was likely some kind of introduction album, explaining the death of Nas's alter-ego, while Stillmatic was intended to be a re-birth album, with contrasting styles respectively.

During this time the VIBE Magazine actually reviewed the album before its release. Despite the positive reception, Death of Escobar was cancelled, and it was likely to focus entirely on the Stillmatic album instead. The album would be released under the title of The Lost Tapes in 2002.

A bootleg has existed on Discogs since 2011-12, with only a speculated tracklist. This is not an authentic copy, and it seems studio copies for the project have not turned up. It's unknown how many variants exist, or if any bootlegs might be the real copy.

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God's Son was a good album, but not a classic imo. Nevertheless...still good #s and quality music w/in that year span.
 
Im sure GxFR must have as they drop projects left and right and centre, so much so that the albums dates and release almost merge into one lol

Though guess the closes was DMX back in 1998 and 1999, it wasnt quite a calendar year but close...

'It's Dark and Hell Is Hot' - May 19, 1998 (250,000 first week, over 5,000,000 sold)

'Flesh of My Flesh, Blood of My Blood' - December 22, 1998 (700,000 first week, over 3,000,00 sold)

'...And Then There Was X' - December 21, 1999 (700,000 first week, over 5,000,00 sold)
 
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