The collaboration between
Jay-Z and
The Notorious B.I.G. was not originally planned. According to
DJ Clark Kent, who produced the track, the song began as a solo Jay-Z track titled "No More Mr. Nice Guy" or "Once We Get Started." During a separate recording session,
Biggie accidentally heard the beat and immediately wanted to use it for himself. Despite Biggie's insistence, Clark Kent initially refused to give him the beat, explaining it was already committed to Jay-Z. However, Biggie was persistent, saying "Nah, man. Fuck that. I need to be on that record." According to Clark Kent, he persuaded Dash and Jay-Z to proceed with the recording session and address the business arrangements afterward. According to Clark Kent, the two rappers immediately connected upon meeting: "They met each other and it wasn't even like they had a conversation; they just started to laugh, clap hands—because there was an insane amount of respect for each other's craft."
Recording process The recording session that followed became notable in hip-hop lore. Jay-Z, known for his ability to compose lyrics entirely in his head without writing them down, asked Clark Kent to play the beat for nearly 20 minutes while he stood and listened. When Jay-Z emerged from the booth and asked "Are you ready?" Biggie was completely mystified. According to Clark Kent, "Big was like 'What the fuck are you talking about?' And then he looks at me and goes 'What the fuck did he just do?'" Burke described Biggie's presence as overwhelming: "When Biggie walked through, it was just a huge presence walking into the room. You felt his presence when he came in." The moment when both rappers realized they didn't write lyrics down became legendary. Burke witnessed the exchange: "The engineer came and dropped a pad and a pen right in between them. Jay looks at it and then he pushes it over to Big. Big looks at it and pushes it back. That's the time they realized that neither one of them wrote lyrics [down on paper]." Burke noted that "Jay actually went in and did everything in five minutes. He broke down the song and left all these parts [for Big]." When Biggie left that night, he joked to Jay-Z: "When I give you a song to rhyme on for my album, I'ma make sure it's a regular beat so you could do a straight sixteen, not all this breakdown." == Production and musical elements ==