With hundreds of hip-hop albums released every year, a few are sure to fly past your radar. That said, there's a handful of essential hip-hop albums every music fan should own. No hip-hop library is complete without these albums. From Biggie's classic debut to Public Enemy's sophomore smash, here are 10 hip-hop albums every head should own.
Lauryn Hill - 'The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill'
Lauryn Hill's solo debut, The Miseducation Of Lauryn Hill, offered the most memorable fusion of rap and R&B in hip-hop history. Hill's brilliant songwriting flourished from song to song, whether she was grappling with spirituality ('Final Hour,' 'Forgive Them, Father') or stroking sexuality without exploiting it ('Nothing Even Matters'). Like Lyte and Latifah before her, Lauryn changed the game on her own terms.
- 'Lost Ones'
- 'Doo Wop (That Thing)'
- 'Everything Is Everything'
- 'Nothing Even Matters'
UGK - 'Ridin' Dirty'
If you've ever wanted to know where your favorite southern rappers got their game from, if you've ever been curious about the coast-to-coast influence of Bun B and Pimp C, then Ridin' Dirty is for you. It's UGK's most commercially successful album to date (it moved over 800,000 units) and one of the best hip-hop albums ever recorded. It thoroughly captures the essence of the Texas duo through gems like the title track and 'One Day' and 'Murder.'
- 'One Day'
- 'Murder'
- 'Ridin' Dirty'
Ready To Die Album Sales
2 Pac - 'Me Against The World'
Me Against The World captures 2Pac in his prime: no excessive braggarts, no name-inscribed lyrical missiles aimed at New York rivals. The two sides of his personality compete on this album: occasionally vulnerable, occasionally cantankerous. (In fact, he pays homage to rap pioneers on 'Old School.') This is simply Pac and his poignant, albeit defiant, multifaceted dispositions. And you wonder why he's still the most imitated rapper of all time.
- 'Dear Mama'
- 'Lord Knows'
- 'Me Against The World'
- 'So Many Tearz'
A Tribe Called Quest - 'Midnight Marauders'
A Tribe Called Quest's Midnight Marauders led the jazz-rap hip-hop movement of the 1990s. No other album showcased this amalgamation of jazz, soul, and rap better than Tribe's third album, Midnight Marauders. It featured an array of Crisco-slick tunes like 'Electric Relaxation' and 'Award Tour.' Produced largely by Large Professor and Q-Tip, Midnight Marauders is Tribe at its best.
- 'World Tour'
- 'Electric Relaxation'
- 'Sucka N---a'
Dr. Dre - 'The Chronic'
Dre's funky bass lines and heavy synths, coupled with the lyrical showcase from the likes of Snoop and RBX, changed the sound of hip-hop and made The Chronic a household name in the genre. But most importantly, The Chronic was instrumental in the commercialization of gangsta rap by introducing the G-Funk style of hip-hop to the mainstream. Dr. Dre's groundbreaking solo debut also served as a podium for bourgeoning west coast rappers including Lady of Rage, Kurupt, Daz, and Snoop Dogg. From the abrasive Eazy-E dis, 'Dre Day', to the headphone favorite, 'Nuthin' But A G Thang', Dre's chemistry with Snoop was as captivating as it was refreshing.
- 'Stranded On Death Row'
- 'Nuthin' But A G Thang'
Wu-Tang - 'Enter The Wu-Tang (36 Chambers)'
This introductory Wu-Tang album became a career-defining platform for the rise of all 9 original clan members and their 1,073 affiliates. In fact, the 12-track-long album didn't provide enough ventilation for RZA, Ghostface, GZA, Raekwon, the late Ol' Dirty Bastard, Method Man, Masta Killah, Inspectah Deck, and U-God to stretch out their unique eccentricities. But it was just enough to set the bar high for the several rap crews that would later attempt to re-write the Wu recipe.
- 'C.R.E.A.M.'
- 'Protect Ya Neck'
- 'Can It Be All So Simple'
Jay-Z - 'Reasonable Doubt'
Reasonable Doubt arrived in a year that churned out many heavyweight rap releases, including 2Pac's Me Against The World, Fugees' The Score, and Nas' It Was Written, to keep the list brief. Yet, Jay-Z's 'unified steady flow,' witty lyricism, and confident (if not cocky) delivery made him stand tall. Even when The Notorious B.I.G.'s cameo on 'Brooklyn's Finest,' threatened to steal the show, Hov held his own, going pound for pound with the late legend. Sprinkling slick and memorable one-liners here and there, Reasonable Doubt established Jigga as a charismatic MC. His best work so far? Absolutely!
- 'Dead Presidents II'
- 'Can't Knock The Hustle'
- 'Regrets'
- '22 Two's'
Public Enemy - 'It Takes A Nation of Millions To Hold Us Back'
Lacing up-tempo tracks with social commentary, Chuck D, Professor Griff, Terminator X, Flavor Flav, and Bill Stephenney—collectively known as Public Enemy—helped introduce revolution-on-wax with their debut, Yo! Bum Rush The Show. But it wasn't until the explosive follow-up, It Takes A Nation of Millions..that hip-hop fans started to grasp the concept of a socially conscious, hardcore sound. Chuck challenged everything that challenged the upliftment of black people: police brutality, racial profiling, stereotypes, negligence, etc. A definitive hip-hop essential by one of the greatest groups of all time.
- 'Rebel Without A Pause'
- 'Don't Believe The Hype'
- 'Black Steel In The Hour of Chaos'
- 'Night of The Living Baseheads'
The Notorious B.I.G. - 'Ready To Die'
With the help of Puff Daddy, Biggie helped concoct the formula for 90's rap albums by including club singles like 'Big Poppa' and 'One More Chance,' on a street LP like Ready To Die. The shock-inducing, highly dramatic debut was successful due to Biggie's crisp, meticulously-structured flow and distinct delivery. Serious tales about the harsh realities of street life, suicidal thoughts, and nightmarish death threats, many of which B.I.G. claimed were drawn from real experiences, help make Ready To Die a mainstay of east coast rap. Eight million people would later agree. (Although Ready To Die has enjoyed a tremendous amount of sales since Biggie's demise on March 9, 1997, the album suffered a setback on March 19, 2006. Following a copyrights infringement lawsuit, a judge has ordered that sales of the album be halted, because the title track for Ready To Die sampled Ohio Players' 'Singing in The Morning' without permission.)
![Ready To Die Album Sales Ready To Die Album Sales](https://image.tmdb.org/t/p/w1280/iiE6X1gnZpPpbIgLoGzSJCYvfeV.jpg)
- 'Juicy'
- 'Big Poppa'
- 'Ready To Die'
- 'Unbelievable'
Nas - 'Illmatic'
Often heralded as the 'hip-hop bible' by fans and critics alike, Illmatic is proof that you don't need a 22-song CD to create a masterpiece. Nas packed into 39 minutes more potent material than most rappers are able to produce in twice that amount of time. With A-list producers (DJ Premier, Large Professor, Pete Rock and Q-Tip) supplying the beats, then 19-year-old Nasir Jones dispensed endless chains of multi-syllabic rhymes throughout his debut LP, tossing vivid imageries and metaphors like confetti. Illmatic is the paragon of lyricism and stellar production. It's the greatest hip-hop album of all time and a must-own for every hip-hop head.
- 'Halftime'
- 'It Ain't Hard To Tell'
- 'The World Is Yours'
- 'New York State of Mind'
- 'Memory Lane'
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Ready to Die is the debut studio album of American rapper The Notorious B.I.G., released September 13, 1994 on Bad Boy Records. Recording sessions for the album took place from 1993 to 1994 at The Hit Factory and D&D Studios in New York City.
The partly autobiographical hardcore hip hop album gained strong reviews on release and became a commercial success, reaching quadruple platinum sales. It was significant for revitalizing East Coast hip hop at a time when… read more
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The album shipped 57,000 units in its first week of release. However, it was then certified gold by the RIAA only two months after its release on November 16, 1994, and was certified double platinum on October 16, 1995, only a year and one month after its release. Ready to Die was then certified triple platinum on August 26, 1998 and was later certified 4x platinum by the RIAA on October 19, 1999.
Weird. I thought RTD sold way more than that. But I guess it sold much more later on because of the smash hit singles (Juicy, Big Poppa, One More Chance [Remix]), and also because of Biggie’s later untimely death in ‘97.
I also wonder how much Illmatic would have done if there weren’t any bootlegs.
The album’s five radio singles failed to obtain considerable Billboard success, as each single did not gain significant charting on the Billboard Hot 100.
This probably explains why Illmatic didn’t go gold until almost two years later (January 17, 1996) after it’s release, unlike RTD which went gold and platinum rather quick after the singles started going big.
The album also suffered from extensive bootlegging prior to its release. Saint seiya online mmorpg. “Regional demand was so high,” writes music critic Jeff Weiss, “that Serch claimed he discovered a garage with 60,000 bootlegged copies.”
So 60,000 bootlegs? 59,000 + 60,000 = 119,000. Obviously, if there were no bootlegs, Illmatic would have sold much more.