The Notorious B.I.G Childhood Apartment Selling For $725,000 [PHOTOS]

The Notorious B.I.G.‘s childhood apartment in Brooklyn‘s Clinton Hills neighborhood has been put up for sale for a hefty $725,000.

The Daily Intelligencer reports:

Before he was rap martyr Notorious B.I.G., a young Christopher Wallace lived at 226 St. James Place, apartment 3L, in Brooklyn, and worked as a bag boy at the Met Food around the corner. Now immortalized as a hip-hop landmark, the apartment was listed for sale yesterday for the very 2013 price of $725,000. While Biggie referred to his “one-room shack” in Bed-Stuy, times have changed: “This three-bedroom plus den/office condominium was renovated a few years ago preserving traditional styling while answering the needs of modern usage,” and now the area is referred to as Clinton Hill.

The listing agent, Judith Lief, is well aware of the apartment’s cultural significance but doesn’t feel it will have much of an affect on the apartment’s sale. “The tour buses that come by regularly are enough,” she told the Daily Intelligencer. “I don’t really know yet what impact, if any, [Biggie's looming presence] will have on the sale. I think it’ll be notable, but I don’t know if novelty translates to a purchase.” On the apartment’s listing on StreetEasy, the unit is partly described as  having “wonderful light” and is “beautifully proportioned” with “spacious east-facing living room to the formal dining room to its very well-appointed kitchen with lots of storage and prep space.”

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via:hiphopwired.com
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Lord Finesse Recalls Being “Shocked” When Notorious B.I.G. Used His Beat On “Suicidal Thoughts” [Video]

Lord Finesse Recalls Being "Shocked" When Notorious B.I.G. Used His Beat On "Suicidal Thoughts"

Lord Finesse gives Fuse a look at his immense collection of records, talks Biggie and “Suicidal Thoughts.”

Notorious B.I.G.’s “Suicidal Thoughts” may arguably be one of the most prominent tracks on the late rapper’s debut album, Ready To Die, but according to Lord Finesse, he was a little leery of what Biggie had in store for the beat which he produced. During Fuse’s Crate Diggers segment, Lord Finesse shared the details of his interactions with Biggie and the initial shock he felt after being informed that his beat was used on Ready To Die’s closing song, “Suicidal Thoughts.” “When I heard this dude, it started with the ‘Party & Bullshit’ remix. When I had a chance to really hear this dude flow I knew he was exceptional then. Just his flow, ’cause it just bounced all over and it came back on beat. I’m playing him beats and he picks this just God-forsaken, don’t-let-me-catch-you-in-the-alley beat. I’m like, ‘What you gonna do with that?’…As a producer I don’t wanna just sell you a beat to make a dollar. I want to make sure you gonna do something incredible with it and I never heard the record until it came out. And when I heard it it was just like crazy. I just remember somebody telling me ‘Yo, your joint made the album’…It actually closes the album. I was shocked.” Later in the interview, Lord Finesse went on to speak on his collection of about 10,000 records, a collection that he says has been referred to as the “low-fat collection” due to the accuracy of his various records. Lord Finesse made headlines last year after suing rapper Mac Miller over “Kool Aid & Frozen Pizza,”featured on the Rostrum Records artist’s K.I.D.S. mixtape. A settlement was reached in the lawsuit earlier this month.

via: rapradar.com