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This is an Unofficial Music Video i made for the Big Punisher Song: Beware Album: Capital Punishment (1998) Movie Clips: Fresh (1994) Over an ominous-sounding sample from Henry Mancini’s “Theme for the Losers” mixed with a vocal sample from Prodigy’s verse on the first version of Mobb Deep’s “Shook Ones,” Big Pun enters the rap arena issuing a “fair warning” to all challengers that he is ready to punish the competition. Producer JuJu from The Beatnuts talked about the production of the track in a 2004 interview with XXL magazine: "Pun gave me an idea. He told me, ‘I need that dirty, grimy shit. You gotta give me a track that’s gonna let niggas know how I’m coming.’ And I was like, ‘That’s what I’m good at. Some niggas do dance records. I do the grimy, dirty shit.’ So I went into the lab, did a couple of beats. I came back, let him hear some stuff and he was like, ‘This is it, man.’ [It had a Mobb Deep sample in the beginning] ‘I gave you fair warning: Beware.’ Fat Joe also talked about his part on the track: "This is one of my favorite tracks ever by Pun, a greater introduction couldn’t be done. So I got on the back of it and started talking shit, basically trying to tell niggas I’m not alone no more. I found a partner who sees my same point of view, and he’s nasty. Deal with that. Y'all got a problem, let me know. Muthafuckas was like, ‘Not only do we gotta deal with Fat Joe, now we gotta deal with the nicest nigga in the universe.’ Christopher Lee Rios (November 10, 1971 – February 7, 2000), better known by his stage name Big Pun (short for Big Punisher), was an American rapper. Emerging from the underground hip hop scene in the Bronx borough of New York City in the early 1990s, he came to prominence upon being discovered by fellow Bronx rapper Fat Joe, and made his earliest appearance on his 1995 album Jealous One's Envy. In 1997, Big Pun signed with Fat Joe's label, Terror Squad Productions in conjunction with RCA and Loud Records as a solo artist. The same year, he released his Grammy-nominated debut studio album Capital Punishment in April 1998 to critical acclaim and commercial success, peaking at #5 on the Billboard 200 and becoming the first solo hip hop record by a Latino artist to go Platinum. On February 5, 2000, Rios withdrew from a planned Saturday Night Live performance with Fat Joe and Jennifer Lopez due to illness. Two days later while staying at a hotel with his family in White Plains, New York, he suffered a heart attack and respiratory failure and was taken to a hospital, where he died at the age of 28 after paramedics were unable to revive him. His weight had reached a peak of 698 pounds (317 kg) at the time of his death. Rios was survived by his wife, Liza, and their three children, Star, Vanessa and Christopher Jr. Big Pun's second album, Yeeeah Baby, completed after his death, was released in April 2000. It peaked at No. 3 on the Billboard charts and earned gold record status within three months of its release. A posthumous compilation album, Endangered Species, was released in April 2001. Endangered Species collected some of Pun's greatest hits, previously unreleased material, numerous guest appearances, and remixed "greatest verses." As with his other albums, it also peaked in the top ten of the Billboard 200, reaching No. 7, but didn't sell as much as the previous Big Pun albums had. Support the Content via Cash App or Paypal: https://cash.app/$Sykopatheist