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2pac - All Eyez On Me Explicit Version (4LP) $36.36 + Delivery or Free with Prime (over $49 Spend) @ Amazon AU via US

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Usually this vinyl is around the $50-$55, been lowering lately. Never seen it at this price.

Also you can get:
Best of tupac cd for $3 for part 1

https://www.amazon.com.au/Best-2Pac-Part-1-Thug-PAC/dp/B000X…

and $3.50 for part 2

https://www.amazon.com.au/Best-2Pac-Part-2-Life-PAC/dp/B000X…


All Eyez on Me is the fourth studio album by American rapper 2Pac (and the last to be released during his lifetime), released on February 13, 1996, by Death Row and Interscope Records.

All Eyez on Me features guest appearances from several artists including The Outlawz, Dr. Dre, Snoop Dogg, George Clinton, E-40, Redman, Method Man, Tha Dogg Pound, K-Ci & JoJo, Roger Troutman, among others. The album features production by 2Pac himself alongside a variety of producers, including DJ Quik, Johnny "J", Dr. Dre, Rick Rock, Daz Dillinger, DJ Pooh, DeVante Swing, among others.

The album features the Billboard Hot 100 number-one singles "How Do U Want It" and "California Love". It featured five singles in all, the most of any of Shakur's albums. Moreover, All Eyez on Me made history as the first ever double-full-length hip-hop solo studio album released for mass consumption globally.

ALL EYEZ ON ME
ARTIST : 2PAC
PATYPE : 33 RPM Vinyl
GENRE : Rap Hip-Hop
MFG NAME : DEATH ROW RECORDS
VENDOR : ENTERTAINMENT ONE U.S.
LPFormat: Vinyl LP

Price History at C CamelCamelCamel.

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closed Comments

  • +12

    Check Out Time.

    • +7

      Big Syke, Newt, Hank

  • Do orders from amazon us incur any customs fees?

    • No.

    • not sure about non-prime members, but I don't think so…

      • +14

        Customs don't care what level of amazon membership you have.

        • +1

          i'm glad you are thinking in the real world kinda way!

    • No, because Amazon automatically includes the necessary taxes and fees during checkout.

  • Damn got nothing else to buy haha

  • +3

    If anyone else wants something "out of stock" - try the lodge Items - make sure they are shipped from Amazon US. Also remember to cancel it after AEOM is shipped.

    https://www.amazon.com.au/Lodge-ASHH41-Silicone-Handle-Holde…

    • +1

      Sorry trying to follow, this is get free international shipping without going above $50? What is AEOM, and how can you cancel the out of stock item? This would come in handy for other vinyls I have been eyeing off

      • +6

        So the trick is (For Amazon Prime - US purchases)

        You order 1 item you want (All Eyez On Me - AEOM) + 1 item that is out of stock on Amazon US (the Lodge handle) - The combined total will take you above the $49 for free prime international shipping. Amazon will usually ship/dispatch the items that are in stock. At which point you can then cancel the item you don't want which is still out of stock.

        • +1

          Hell yes, thanks both. Will keep this in mind for future

      • +2

        Yes, it's to get it above $49. AEOM: All Eyez On Me (the album in the post). You can cancel the individual out of stock product once the item you want has been marked as shipped .

      • *vinyl

        • +1

          k. cheers for the downvote :)

    • +30

      You are entitled to your wrong opinion. :p

      • +7

        TightTerry is right in hip hop circles the golden age is considered the late 80s-early 90s (New York area) before the mainstream radio commercialisation of hip hop. De La Soul, A Tribe Called Quest, EPMD, Gang Starr, Public Enemy, Eric B and Rakim etc.
        https://historyofthehiphop.wordpress.com/music-genres/golden…

        • +1

          Tupac was part of gangsta rap, you are talking about the pioneers of rap but Tupac took it to another level, was part of a different age, he was the most successful and spawned many copy cats and the gangsta rap period of Dre, Tupac, Snoop, Biggie, Diddy, start with NWA, reach it's zenith with Tupac and Biggie until they got gunned down and it has been gradually watered down since but this is the most profitable and peak of popularity for rap music.

          • +5

            @rudiger1234: I was replying to Terry talking about what is considered the golden era of hip hop because people were downvoting the comment. I'm well aware of 2pacs impact, i remember buying Me Against the World on CD (way better than All Eyez on Me imo) in 1995 when i was in high school. Listen to his track Old School off that album where he shouts out all the old school New York rappers and DJ's Doug E Fresh, DJ Red Alert, De La, KRS One, Whodini etc . All i know is he didnt get super popular in Australia at least until California Love came out.

            • +4

              @astrotrain: Sorry Terry has has me wild for his insistence on a horrendously ignorant and bad take that Tupac's success and popularity was based on that he was fake, contrived, manufactured for commercial success. This is so far off the mark it rustled my jimmies. He was popular because he was real, honest and spoke from the heart and wasn't afraid of ruffling feathers and his music was in no way designed for mass popularity by being watered down and made radio friendly. It's just a shockingly bad take that the ignorance offended me and insistence that he is right when he couldn't be more wrong as Tupac set out to shock and offend and say uncomfortable things with brute honesty more so than anyone so the last person you could claim cynicism about the image they tried to portray by being too clean is Tupac. It's almost laughable how bad the take is.

              • +1

                @rudiger1234: Haha agree, when I hear the censored version of Hit Em Up, there are barely any words in the song and a heap of silent breaks where expletives once were, but yes surely this song was made for commercial radio haha

                • +2

                  @eggaz: LOLing at people arguing about 2pac on Ozbargain #thuglife

                  • @prhino: Tupac wasn't a brainless gangsta rapper. He was politically minded and philosophical.

                    • +2

                      @[Deactivated]: This was not a reflection on 2pac.

                      I like 2pac, and as a young white male used to blast this CD from my six CD stacker whilst driving my Subaru Leone sedan down Chapel Street

    • -8

      true, although there's probably been the best run of Hip Hop in the last 10 years, so maybe I shoudn't define any time as a golden age

      • +3

        Youre defining "Golden" as the best period or your favorite period. Golden age/era of hip-hop is a pretty defined era and period of time, look it up. Most consider the golden age to be 88-93.

        Personally my favorite period is around 1994-2002 in Hip-Hop, its a big period but it has all my favorites.

        • +1

          After '94 would exclude Wu Tang's 36 Chambers and even Snoop's Doggystyle, and therefore objectively cannot be anyone's favourite. That's science.

          • +2

            @anawth: You make a great point. So ill rephrase it to November 1993-2002 :P

            36 chambers is my GOAT, so why i left out 1993 i do not know…

      • No.

      • definitely the best run ever,

        i mean, how can u not call it the golden age with rappers Young Thug, Travis Scott, A$ap , Drake etc

      • +1

        stuff in the last 10 years from Death Grips, Kendrick, Kanye, TribeCQ, Freddie Gibbs & Madlib, Danny Brown, Tyler, Earl SS, Pusha T, Run The Jewels, all have albums you could easily consider as top 30 hip hop albums

      • last 10 years??? Mumble rap being the in the golden age?? WTF YOU SMOKIN

    • -2

      Tupac had about 3 songs out of a catalogue of 200 that were suitable for radio…

      • +1

        3 songs suitable for raido? He had 2 billboard number 1's on this album alone and a number of other top 20 records before that. You do understand that the charts were built off radio spins in the 90's right? 2Pac was all over the radio in the 90's its literally how your singles charted back then..

        • -5

          Man you literally have no idea. How is a best selling album built on radio spins when there is only one song on the album California Love that was in the top 30 while was alive. If you had actually listened to his songs you would know most of them would never go near commercial radio and his success was word of mouth and album sales and he had 1 big mainstream hit that's it. And that was his shallowest offering designed to be palatable for the mainstream.

          • +3

            @rudiger1234: The album sales isnt based on radio spins. The billboard 100 is based on radio spin which is what the singles are based on - you are the one that clearly has no idea.

            One song in the top 30 when he was alive? click the link below and tell me how many songs 2pac had on the billboard 100 charts in the 90's and when he was alive.

            https://www.billboard.com/music/2Pac/chart-history/HSI

            Word of mouth and not near commercial radio? Dear mama and me against the world were both nominated for Grammys in 1995, lol the definition of commercial. He had another 3 Grammy nominations in 1996.

            • -1

              @TightTerry: So he had 4 songs,1 number 1 and 2 top 10's during his lifetime that made it high on the billboard charts and it is not just based on radio spins, it's also based on singles sales and album sales. Quit while you are behind.

              • +2

                @rudiger1234: Imagine thinking a Grammy nominated artist with multiple billboard top 10 records that was all over radio and television, starred alongside Janet Jackson in a box office number 1 movie wasnt commercial - LOL

                • -2

                  @TightTerry: You weren't alive at this time were you?

                  • +1

                    @rudiger1234: So ive made up the grammys and hollywood produced box office movies? I've made up his multiple award performances? If you think 2pac wasnt played on the radio you need you a hip-hop schooling.

                    • -2

                      @TightTerry: Everybody else was played on the radio too you fool, yes he wanted to make money but to suggest he was some kind of sell out is incredibly far off the mark, you need the education. Dude shot 2 cops, was out on bail and had parliamentary inquiries trying to shut him down.

                      • +2

                        @rudiger1234: im not saying he was a sell out at all, he was very far from it. So now youre saying he WAS played on the radio - so was he or wasnt he?

                • -1

                  @TightTerry: By multiple top 10 records when he was alive you mean 2. Basically anyone who has any success gets nominated for a grammy, and he starred in hood movies. Just stop showing how much you know nothing and go and learn about it.

                  • +1

                    @rudiger1234: Hood movies dont go box office number 1 champ

                    • @TightTerry: Is this ignorance feigned or are you truly this stupid, it opened it's weekend number 1 but it was the 20th most popular movie of the year, it had a $14 million budget and made $27 million. Hood movies don't go number 1, what about boyz in the hood that spawned the creation of this movie. Mate get a clue.

                      • +1

                        @rudiger1234: Do you understand what box office number 1 was for a weekend? means it opens at number 1 - ie the biggest movie in the country

                        What is a hood movie lol? A movie made in the hood? Janet jackson, the wayan brothers were still in the hood in 1993? your terms are generic and scream ignorance

                        • -2

                          @TightTerry: Pretty much most fresh movies on opening day with popular talent in it will be number 1 on opening weekend. God you are stupid, I am done with you. Take a hike. It was directed by John Singleton who was hot off boyz in the hood. You are too dumb for me bro. Seeya.

                          • @rudiger1234: by popular talent you mean 2pac?

                            • @TightTerry: Popular and commercial is two different things. You are suggesting Tupac's music is bubblegum cookie cutter pop music? You have obviously never listened to it. Have a nice day.

                              • +1

                                @rudiger1234: I remember all the movies produced in the hood. The hood being Colombia pictures…

                                I love when people use the term "the hood" to describe anything urban or African American LOL

                                • -2

                                  @TightTerry: He was a gangsta rapper, he shot people. He advocated for the destruction of the system. He didn't focus on making radio friendly tunes with a nice melody for commercial success, you are stupid. Goodbye.

          • +1

            @rudiger1234: i'm so sick of cali love

        • Tupac was as anti establishment as you could get and to suggest he had watered down commercially friendly mindset is as far off the mark as you could get as nobody ever has probably been more willing to test the boundaries. It just so happened that the fact he was willing to do this made him the most popular.

          • +1

            @rudiger1234: Lol Rudiger1234… tell us who you think was more commercial back in 1995?

            • -1

              @hypie: Are you kidding me? Everyone. Hootie and the blowfish, Alanis Morrisette, Bryan Adams, Mariah Carey, Whitney Houston, Shaggy, Bon Jovi, Shania Twain. Those are commercial artists.

              • +1

                @rudiger1234: Mate… Hip hop…

                Hootie and the blowfish…. more commercial than 'pac? haha.
                Shania Twain in 1995? She was sitting on the Country music charts.
                Shaggy had "Boombastic" to his name in 1995…. Who?

                I can't neg you… because I've run out. But what a terrible argument.

                • @hypie: What is your definition of commercial? The most commercially successful? The most popular? What does that mean, what are you saying about Tupac by that fact? Are you saying he was a contrived, manufactured image that lead to his popularity? Is that what you are suggesting? Because that is generally what it means when someone slaps the commercial label on someone. This isn't the reason for Tupac's commercial success and popularity. It is the opposite reason.

                  • +2

                    @rudiger1234: When did commercial mean contrived and manufactured? This is what hipsters want you to believe. Sometimes popular artists are popular because they are good and people want to listen to them.

                    i.e. Tupac released Me Against the World in 1995 and sold 2 million albums. Double platinum.

                    Remember that in 1995, his target audience was far smaller than any of those listed. Hip Hop was not considered mainstream in the 90's. i.e. The white folk didn't listen to it. Considering that African Americans account for 12% of the population. I think you get my argument.

                    • @hypie: The fact he didn't try to cater to mainstream tastes made him mainstream because of his integrity and ideals which noone else showed or had. Yeah he had a large white audience, I am one of them, I am his biggest fan. Terry has argued until he was blue in the face that Tupac's appeal was only due to that he marketed himself and made himself commercially attractive and it was the product that sold a lot of records. Totally untrue, couldn't be further off the mark, Tupac didn't care in the least how palatable or marketable he was, it was the message that made him more successful than anyone. He spat on the media and told them f*** you. Watch the documentary thug angel, it is the best documentary on his life. Then you will see he never set out to make himself a marketable commodity at all. He was a revolutionary.

                      • @rudiger1234: No one except you is arguing this…

                        I think you are suggesting you can't be a commercial success if you aren't pandering to the masses.

                        I agree.. Tupac did none of that and was still a commercial success.

                        I'm not sure what point you are arguing anymore.

                  • +2

                    @rudiger1234: Booooooooo to you - you are awarded no points and lose the argument.

                    • +1

                      @Ralphtheguy: ok millennial. you's don't know anything, what a stupid term, an album is commercial because they want it to sell, what album ever is not commercial? astounding stupidity abounds sometimes.

                      • @rudiger1234: I think you lost the plot at some point, I'm not sure where.

                        But please don't say "you's" ever.

                        • @hypie: Ok can I say piss off moron? Please do.

                          • +1

                            @rudiger1234: Bacdafucup

                          • @rudiger1234: okay boomer.

                            • -1

                              @hypie: (profanity) you guys are acting like freaks on a bargain website go the (profanity) to bed both of you.

                              • @Sammy Boi: Mate, its called having a logical and structured debate. You are the only one to resort to using a profanity twice "Sammy Boi".

                                Clearly someone got offended over the outlawing of "you's".

                                • @hypie: There was nothing structured about you 2 morons going back-and-forth with each other.

                                  People like you that sit here going back-and-forth and commenting and over and over clearly have nothing better to do

                                  • -1

                                    @Sammy Boi: And people like yourself stick their noses in places thet are really not wanted or needed.

                                    I think you should strongly consider whether you want to continue being someone who adds no value to this world.

                                    Whether we agree or not. I respect Rudiger for putting forward his opinion.

  • +5

    I fondly remember stealing this CD off my brother circa 1999 when I was around year 8.

    • +3

      This man lives the Thug life. 'pac would be proud.

    • +8

      When I was in year 8 I performed Until the end of time shirtless with thug life written on my chest (with a marker) in front of my English class. Our assignment was to recite poetry from a famous dead poet. The teacher tried to fail me. I called her racist. Win/win

      • +1

        Sounds like a racist teacher to me.

      • haha nice

  • +1

    This is my favourite album of all time but I am just as happy listening to it on youtube music for peanuts haha.

    • +11

      I ain't mad at cha.

      • +1

        god i love that song

  • +4

    One of my favourite rap albums of all time.

  • +1

    Me against the world and 7 day theory are his best works. This is excellent considering its a double disc.

  • +1

    Can also get Eazy Duz it for $16.99 for anyone that wants to up their West Coast gangsta rap collection
    https://www.amazon.com.au/Eazy-Duz-EAZYE/dp/B00E1RTAY0/

    • +1

      Gotta love the intro to the title track.

  • +3

    The golden age of hip hop is right now!

    • -1

      haha! that hurt my ears and my eyes when the rapper came on.

      • You better stick around and look for a deal on new ears.

        • No I'm quite sure my ears are working fine. And that song is still trash.

    • +2

      Is that a parody? it's hard to tell these days…

    • +2

      yep, some great hip hop coming out still, hip hop heads always gotta complain about how music was better back in their day.

      • +1

        hip hop is probably one of the most creative genres at the moment

        • Not sure why you got downvoted. Definitely a lot of hip hop artists pushing the boundaries or forging their own lanes to create great music at the moment.

          • +2

            @eswes: some of th best hip hop albums of all time have come in the last 10 years

            • +3

              @bailbondsh: Would agree with that! I reckon artists like the Griselda crew, Crimeapple, and Rome Streetz have put out some of the best hip hop music in the last few years.

      • I love stuff like RTJ and Aesop Rock. Hip hop but it's actually ABOUT stuff, not just cliched crap about money, guns and girls.

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