Concerto ologramma tupac biography
The Tupac who appeared onstage during the headlining set by Snoop Dogg and Dr. Dre on Sunday was a hologram, more a feat of technology and bravado than a.!
Expect me, n—a, like you expect Jesus to come back / Expect me … I’m coming.
— Tupac Shakur on the “Outro” of his fourth posthumous album, Better Dayz (2002)
The mood and scene were one and the same out in that empty Southern California field.
Dark and ominous.
M posts.
A wind blew furiously as night fell. Time was running out.
With just four days until the start of the 2012 Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival, there was no room for any more mistakes. Hip-hop impresario Andre “Dr. Dre” Young had a specific vision for his headlining performance with Snoop Dogg.
But the miscues were relentless: unanticipated flashes, rendering errors, plain old glitches, you name it.
Nothing seemed to go right during rehearsal as Dr. Dre looked on with Eminem, who was a scheduled special guest for the show. The hood of Marshall Mathers’ jacket draped over his head as he watched in silence.
Oh, my God.
We’re going to fail.
That’s what Janelle Croshaw, visual effects supervisor of Ac