Thanks Street Fighter trailer
2Pac, Outlawz, Ta'He — Still I Rise
Trending since · peaked at 27 charts
Dear LordAs we down here, struggle for as long as we knowIn search of a paradise to touch (Johnny J)Dreams are dreams, and reality seems to be the only place to go
A Street Fighter trailer dropped in April featuring an unreleased 2Pac track, and the ripple has pulled the broader posthumous catalog back into circulation — including this 1999 collaboration with the Outlawz and Ta'He, now broadly charting across 27 country and platform charts after averaging fewer than nine over the prior week. Still I Rise was the title track of the album 2Pac and the Outlawz recorded largely before his 1996 death, assembled and released three years later; it opens with a devotional quality — spare piano, an almost hymnal address — before settling into the album's harder-edged West Coast register. The song sits at the reflective end of 2Pac's posthumous catalog, closer in mood to "Dear Mama" than to the combative energy that defined his commercial peak. The current surge tracks a pattern familiar from prior moments of renewed 2Pac visibility: one piece of new context — a sync, a film, a cultural event — tends to lift the whole catalog at once rather than a single track.