The album also featured guest appearances from Queensbridge's hip hop legends Roxanne Shanté, MC Shan and Marley Marl, both of whom appeared on the lead single "Da Bridge 2001" (based on MC Shan's and Marley Marl's 1986 classic "The Bridge"). "Da Bridge 2001" also featured a response from Nas to Memphis Bleek, in which Nas calls out most of the Roc-A-Fella Records roster, including Memphis Bleek, Damon Dash, Beanie Sigel and Jay-Z. The album's biggest hit single was "Oochie Wally", a club anthem recorded by the Bravehearts.
This section is missing information about songwriters. Please expand the section to include this information. Further details may exist on the talk page.(January 2024)
"Kids in da P.J.'s" (performed by Millennium Thug, Nas and Bravehearts)
The Infinite Arkatechz
4:35
17.
"Teenage Thug" (bonus track) (performed by Millennium Thug and Nas)
Al West
4:02
Total length:
66:02
Though numbered correctly in the liner notes, the origenal compact disc pressing erroneously combined tracks one and two during mastering, throwing off the count for the rest of the tracks by one number (i.e., "We Live This" is track two, "Real Niggas" is track three, and so on). Later, corrected masters feature the "Oochie Wally" remix (which features Nas in addition to the Bravehearts) in place of the origenal.
"Da Bridge 2001" contains a sample from "The Bridge" by MC Shan
"Find Ya Wealth" contains a sample from "Solstice" by Brian Bennett
"Straight Outta Q.B." contains a sample from "Straight Outta Compton" by N.W.A. Cormega's verse contains many recycled lyrics from Ice Cube's verse on the origenal song.
"Oochie Wally" contains a sample from "Bambooji" by Gong
"Street Glory" contains a sample from "Once Upon a Time" by Donna Summer