On October 12, 1995, with bond posted via
Suge Knight, former CEO of
Death Row Records, and pending appeal, Tupac was released from
prison in upstate New York. Joining the label in Los Angeles, Tupac feverishly recorded his fourth album,
All Eyez on Me. Two tracks, in particular—"Ambitionz Az a Ridah" as well as "Holla At Me"—have lyrics that some people believe, though not proven, to be against Stretch, one envisioning his death. By the album's release on February 13, 1996, Stretch was already dead. Released a few months later, in July 1996, the sophomore album,
It Was Written, by rapper
Nas, from
Queensbridge in Queens, had Live Squad production on two tracks, "Take It In Blood" as well as "Silent Murder," from Stretch's final recording session exactly one year after the November 30, 1994, shooting of Tupac. On November 30, 1995, Stretch was on his way to a
Biggie Smalls event after leaving the Nas recording session at midnight. He dropped off his own brother Majesty at his
Queens Village home. Two or three men in a black car pulled up beside Stretch's green
minivan, and gave chase, firing from a rolled down window. Stretch crashed at 112th Avenue and 209th Street, just after 12:30 AM. He was found dead with four bullets to his back. In April 2007, via separate investigation into the murder of
Jam Master Jay of
Run-DMC, in his native
Jamaica, Queens, federal prosecutors named Ronald "Tenad" Washington as a suspect in both murders. Washington would eventually be indicted for Jam Master Jay's murder in August 2020; Washington's trial would then begin in January 2024, and he, along with another defendant, would be convicted for Jam Master Jay's murder in February 2024. After Tupac's death in a drive-by shooting in Las Vegas, in September 1996, a Live Squad production, the track "Nothing to Lose," appeared on the first posthumous 2Pac album, released in 1997,
R U Still Down? (Remember Me). Released in 1997,
Greatest Hits has the cryptic "God Bless the Dead," dedicated to "Biggy Smallz," but not the famed Live Squad and onetime 2Pac associate Biggie Smalls who is otherwise called The Notorious B.I.G., and instead a Latino rapper who worked with one of 2Pac's main producers,
Johnny J. In 1999, a promotional release for The Notorious B.I.G.'s posthumous album
Born Again, has a Bad Boy remix of "House of Pain," featuring Stretch and 2Pac. Stretch's brother Majesty founded Grand Imperial Records jointly with rapper E-MoneyBags. He was killed in July 2001, allegedly by order of
Kenneth "Supreme" McGriff, a suspect behind the murder of Jam Master Jay; McGriff would eventually be convicted for E-MoneyBags' murder and be sentenced to life imprisonment in February 2007. In 2001, Majesty released the Live Squad album that Tommy Boy Records had nixed,
Game Of Survival. ==Discography==