I’ve been moved to do a few more music posts by some other posts I’ve seen recently. And also as a continuation of my 22 greatest MCs post. Many of those posts are on the excellent J-Notes blog, which mainly focuses on jazz and R&B (James took me back with his recent Flashback Friday on Phyllis Hyman). The other being Arbitrary’s Personal Top Ten Favorite Hip-Hop Albums. So this post will be my favorite hip-hop albums. Judging by my favorite albums, I may have to move De La Soul up into my top 20 list of MCs.
Dr. Dre – The Chronic
This is my all-time favorite for many reasons. First and foremost is Dr. Dre’s music/production. The sound of this CD is amazing – full, booming bass, elements of funk, jazz, classic soul, etc. Add vocals by Snoop, RBX, Rage, Nate Dogg, Kurupt, as well as Dre’s rhymes(which were most likely written by the D.O.C.) Favorite tracks: *&%$ With Dre Day, Let Me Ride (with the Mothership Connection sample), The Day the Niggaz Took Over (haunting track), Nuthin’ But a “G” Thang, Lil’ Ghetto Boy (Snoop at his best), A Nigga Witta Gun (an ill track, ridden to its fullest), Lyrical Gangbang (Rage raging, RBX at his finest over a classic Dre track), High Powered (the slow-flow, with RBX’s unforgettable line ‘I drop bombs like Hiroshima’), Stranded on Death Row (classic posses cut, over one of the illest tracks ever)
Brand Nubian – One for All
It doesn’t get much better than this! Grand Puba, Lord Jamar, and Saddat X (Derrick X), caught wreck on this CD. Check out All for One, Ragtime, To the Right, Drop the Bomb, Wake Up, Step to the Rear, Slow Down (still packs the dance floor in the club), Who Can Get Busy Like This Man?, Grand Puba, Positive and L.G. (add Positive K to the mix, over that Nobody Can Be You sample), Wake Up (w/that classic Everybody Loves the Sunshine sample)
A Tribe Called Quest – Low End Theory
The Tribe at their best. This is when Phife showed his lyrical skills. Innovative music, with all the jazzy samples. Packed with jams: Excursions, Buggin’ Out, Verses From the Abstract (One of the smoothest tracks ever! Ron Carter on the bass. Lines like ‘Girls love the Jim cuz it causes crazy friction/When it goes up in, it fluctuates their diction.’ And Vinia Mojica killing the chorus.), Show Business (breaking down the music industry, with Sadat X and Lord Jamar – ‘You’re a million dollar man that ain’t got no dough…’), Check the Rhime (if you don’t know… you don’t know hip-hop – ‘You on point Phife?’ – ‘OK if knowledge is the key, then just show me the lock/got the scrawny legs but I move just like Lou Brock…’ ‘Industry Rule #4080, record company people are shaaady ), and of course the Scenario with Leaders of the New School, on which Busta lost his damn mind! (rah, rah, like a dungeon dragon/change your little draws cuz your pants are saggin’)
Public Enemy – It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back
Do I even need to say anything about this album? Chuck dropping knowledge, Flav providing the comic relief, Terminator X speaking with his hands, the Bomb Squad on the production. Classic is an understatement. You can’t tell me that Chuck is not a top 10 all-time MC. Check the lyrics. Bring The Noise (‘Bass! How low can you go?’ ‘Now they got me in a cell/cuz my records, they sell/cuz a brotha like me said, well…’ ), Don’t Believe The Hype, Terminator X To The Edge Of Panic (Bomb Squad at their finest with the noise on this track, that backwards siren from Rebel w/out a Pause), Night Of The Living Baseheads, Black Steel In The Hour Of Chaos (That funky piano over that beat! ‘I got a letter from the government the other day…’), Rebel Without A Pause (I don’t even know what to say about this — it’s the perfect song, the beat, the noise, the lyrics)
N.W.A. – Straight Outta Compton
Once again Dre’s production work sets this album apart. Combine Dre’s amazing beats with Cube & MC Ren’s lyrics and you can’t go wrong. Favorite tracks: Straight Outta Compton, F*&$ tha Police (Even without the lyrics, the track is simply amazing. Add the lyrics, and oh boy!), Gangsta Gangsta, If It Ain’t Ruff (the track! check the bass as it rips from left to right.), Dopeman.
Boogie Down Productions – Live Hardcore Worldwide
KRS-ONE live in concert, displaying why he’s #1. Jamalski sets it off on Lick A Shot. The Eye Opener over that classic reggae beat (Kris chatting ‘Jesus Christ, a mi say Jesus Christ-a, Jesus Christ was Black/read and study and know thyself because this too is a fact…’), The freestyle version of Still #1 (“It’s going, it’s going, it’s going, it’s gone/Your heart has left because Kris is strong/and mighty, undefeated, I mean it/Pick up the album, turn it over and read it/Written, produced, directed, and mixed/Get off the tip, or get off the many tips…/Pick a tip, any tip, get off of it/I got ridiculous rhymes about bussin’ it/You sit at home with a pen & a pad/Going dad… mad… glad… bad… sad/That style is from ’78/A little late/So make a tape of the great/Blastmaster poetic, your record sounds pathetic/oh, I mean demo tape/I’ll give you credit…”), the Reggae Medley w/9mm Goes Bang over a smooth-a$$ reggae beat, Bo Bo Bo over another famous reggae beat, Come to the Teacher over yet another ill reggae track.
Run-D.M.C. – Raising Hell
Not much needs to be said about this one. Some of Run-DMC’s best material – Peter Piper, It’s Tricky, My Adidas, Walk This Way, Hit It Run, Raising Hell, You Be Illin’.
Poor Righteous Teachers – Pure Poverty
Many people cite Holy Intellect (with Rock Ds Funky Joint) when speaking of PRT. But I this this album is better. Wise Intelligent can flow with the best of them. Check out Shakiyla, Easy Star (Wise lets loose over an incredible track), Self-Styled Wisdom (that beat!), Each One Teach One (Wise rides that beat), Just Servin’ Justice, Freedom or Death, Pure Poverty.
Mos Def – Black on Both Sides
One of the few CDs that’s stayed in my car’s CD player for over a year. It took a minute for this album to grow on me, but when it did… Mos is one of the best lyricists of all time, IMO. Check Hip Hop, Ms. Fat Booty, Speed Law, Do It Now (Mos & Busta go at it!), Got (Mos tells how fools get got on a daily. Check the lyrics. If you’re “wearing a month’s paycheck around your neck” you’re bound to get got!), Umi Says (Will I Am from the Black Eyed Peas killing the Fender Rhodes), New World Water, Rock N Roll, Know That, Brooklyn (done in 3 movements), Mr. Nigga (Check the lyrics! Q-Tip on the chorus) Here’s just a portion:
You can laugh and criticize Michael Jackson if you wanna / Woody Allen, molested and married his step-daughter / Same press kicking dirt on Michael’s name / Show Woody and Soon-Ye at the playoff game, holding hands / Sit back and just bug, think about that / Would he get that type of dap if his name was Woody Black? / OJ found innocent by a jury of his peers / They been f*cking with that Nigga for last five years / Is it fair, is it equal, is it just, is it right? / Do they do the same shit when the defendant’s face is white? / If white boys doing it, well, it’s success / When I start doing, well, it’s suspect / Don’t hate me, my folks is poor, I just got money / America’s five centuries deep in cotton money / You see a lot of brothers caked up, yo straight up / It’s new, Y’all living off of slave traders paper / But I’m a live though, yo I’m a live though / Putting up the big swing for my kids yo / Got my mom the fat water-front crib yo / I’m a get her them pretty bay windows / I’m a cop a nice home to provide in / A safe environment for seeds to reside in / A fresh whip for my whole family to ride in / And if I’m still Mr Nigga, I won’t find it surprising
Eric B. & Rakim – Paid in Full
Pure poetry from Rakim, and some timeless beats from Eric B. This album changed the face of hip-hop. Rakim may have been the first MC that you had to sit down and think about what was just said. Classic joints like: I Ain’t No Joke, My Melody, I Know You Got Soul (talk about someone riding a beat!), Move The Crowd, Paid In Full (nuff said), Eric B. Is President, Chinese Arithmetic
OK, that’s the top 10. But I couldn’t stop there, so here are the others (in alphabetical order, more or less) that I have to mention (notes to come later):
Big Pun – Capital Punishment
Notorious B.I.G. – Ready to Die
Notorious B.I.G. – Life After Death
Black Star – Mos Def & Talib Kweli Are Black Star
Boogie Down Productions – Criminal Minded
Boogie Down Productions – Ghetto Music: The Blueprint of Hip Hop
Boogie Down Productions – Edutainment
Boogie Down Productions – Sex & Violence
KRS-ONE – Return of the Boom Bap
De La Soul – 3 Feet High and Rising
De La Soul – De La Soul Is Dead
De La Soul – Art Official Intelligence: Mosaic Thump
D.O.C. – No One Can Do It Better
Jay-Z – The Dynasty: Roc La Familia 2000
Guru – Jazzmatazz, Vol. 2: The New Reality
The best of the Jazzmatazz series – a smooth blend of jazz, hip-hop, and R&B. I was sold when I learned that one of my favorite acid jazz groups, The Solsonics, played on several tracks. But the rest of the line-up says it all: Chaka Khan, Ramsey Lewis, Meshell Ndegeocello, Jamiroquai, Patra, Ronny Jordan, Donald Byrd, Freddie Hubbard, Ini Kamoze, Mica Paris, Sharon Nelson, Reuben Wilson, Courtney Pine, Kool Keith of Ultramagnetics, Kenny Garrett, Bahamadia …
Big Daddy Kane – Long Live the Kane
Big Daddy Kane – It’s a Big Daddy Thing
L.L. Cool J – Radio
Classic L.L. The only thing missing is the original version of Rock the Bells. Remember that? The 7 minute long joint with the cowbells (Rumor has it that you’re tired of my scratchin & drums / and of course I wanna span(?) to the maximum…) I always liked that version beter, but it seems to be forgotten.
Malcolm Mclaren – Buffalo Gals Back to Skool
Classic material. I’d been trying to find all the old Malcolm Mclaren & The World Famous Supreme Team material for a long time. Then this great compilation dropped. Talk about someone having a big-ass smile on their face! Check the line-up: Buffalo Gals, Hey DJ, Do You Like Scratchin?, She’s Looking Like a Hobo (this is what most people think is the Buffalo Gals beat… This is one of the illest tracks of all time!), World Famous (that piano!)
Method Man & Redman – Blackout
Kardinal Offishall – Quest for Fire: Firestarter, Vol. 1
Naughty By Nature – Naughty By Nature
Public Enemy – Yo! Bum Rush the Show
The Roots – The Roots Come Alive
Roots Manuva – Run Come Save Me
Snoop Dogg – Doggystyle
I don’t think anyone has ridden Dre’s (incredible) tracks better than Snoop did on this album. Rage did her thing very well on this album too. (I wonder why we haven’t heard more from her.) And of course there’s Nate Dogg singing the hooks as only he can – witness Ain’t No Fun (If My Homies Can’t Have None) 🙂 . Again, this is one of those albums that I often forget just how good it is. Dre could have done many of these as just instruments and they’d still rock.
Various Artists – Soundbombing, Vol. 2
Makaveli’s 7 day Theory is a masterpiece.
Charles,
I have to admit that I haven’t heard that whole ‘7 Day Theory’ album. I see that several songs that I really like are on it, but I’ll take the Greatest Hits.
Walter,
You’re right, that whole era (88-92) produced some of the best hip-hop ever. Note how many of my favorites are from that period. And I had the exact same experience with P.E.. That CD opened my eyes to so much. Along with KRS-ONE, X-Clan, PRT, Brand Nubian…
As for Outkast, I really like certain songs of theirs, but I just don’t go reaching for an entire album. Now a greatest hits of theirs would be on my list. I love that “Get up get out & get something” joint on their first CD.
Kudos on Maclom Mclaren…great fun songs.
Missing: Afrika Bambaataa & Soul Sonic Force -“Planet Rock” and PE -“Fear of a Black Planet”.
In my opinion “Fear of a Black Planet” is the greatest rap album of all time. I come from a punk rock background and this a punk album…loud, fast, intense, anti-establishment…
ahhh yes, X-Clan… VAINGLORIOUS! I absolutely love that album.
Brother J says YUCK!
Props for Kardi, too.
I may have to take another look @ your list here, but at 1st glance, I didn’t notice any Common material… :-
Okay, you get mad props for mentioning Malcolm McLaren…
Where’s De La’s ‘Buhloone Mind State’?? 😉
RudeBoy – Of course “planet Rock” is one of my all-time favorite songs, but I’m just talking albums. PE’s ‘Black Planet’ just doesn’t make the cut for me.
hardCord – Many of the CDs you list I don’t even own, so they can’t be on my favorites list. But for the ones that I do own, they just don’t quite make the cut for me.
blunted – “With a key, in the ignition… a black boot stomp…” I need to do my write-up on X-Clan’s CD. Great stuff, the samples, Grand Verb’s flow… As for Comomn, I like many of his songs, but there’s not a whole CD of his that I can bump without skipping 2/3 of the tracks.
Chelle – you know I don’t like the De La album!
Let me add… those of you with blogs, feel free to make your own lists & trackback to me. 🙂
I thought about doing a list of songs, but It would be waaay too long. BUt some of those ‘Planet Rock’ era songs were just incredible – ‘Looking for the Perfect Beat’, ‘Play(& Rock) at Your Own Risk’… How about DWYCK? Don’t get me started…
Don’t forget ‘Clear’ and Kraftworks’ ‘Tour de France’ and ‘Numbers’ (even though they are instrumental for the most part, they are still in the running). Ah, that Old Skool flava… :-))
Then there’s…
Scorpio
Pac Jam
Jam On It
Let’s Jam
And the Beat Goes On
Baby D
The Message
The Show
Buffalo Gals
White Lines
Hey DJ
Roxanne, Roxanne
Five Minutes of Funk
Fly Girl
The list goes on! I just might have to do one myself…
I asked you not to get me started:
One for the Treble
Electric Kingdon
Siberian Knights
Punks Jump Up to Get Beat Down(remix)
187
You Must learn (remix)
Bad Times by Captain Rapp
And My Beat goes Boom
Egypt, Egypt
Rapper’s Delight
Apache
Wild Style
Play that Beat (play it, kick it!)
Top Billin’ !!!!
Just the Two of Us – Chubb Rock
Mind Playin’ Tricks on Me
Triumph – Wu Tang
La Di Da Di
Chief Rocka
Jeeps, Lex Coups, Bimaz & Benz
Bring Da Pain
Shook Ones pt. 2
Quiet Storm
What People Do for Money
Grandmaster Flash on the Wheels of Steel
8th Wonder
and on, and on…
Thanks for the shout-out!!!
I Used To Love H.E.R. – Common
It’s Yours – T La Rock
Back To The Grill – MC Serch, Red Hot Lover Tone, Nas, Chubb Rock (CLASSIC!)
Bubble Bunch – Jimmy Spicer
Double Dutch Bus – Frankie Smith (I think)
Slow Down (Pete Rock Remix) – Brand Nubian
They Reminisce Over You – Pete Rock & CL Smooth
Saab Story – L.O.N.S.
Get Lifted (Remix) – Keith Murray
Left Field – Yaggfu Front
Ring The Alarm – Fu-Schnickens
Who Makes The Loot? – Grand Puba/Brand New Heavies
Fakin’ The Funk – Main Source
I Didn’t Mean To – Casual
Rock This Funky Joint – PRT
The Rain – Oran “Juice” Jones
I Need A Freak – Egyptian Lover
Proud To Be Black – Run DMC
Frosty,
You’re right, I love many of Ice-T’s songs. But I just don’t go reaching for any of his retail albums to bump. I do have a self-made compilation of Ice’s stuff that I love. Same for DJ Quik.
Kool az malcolm Mclaren is da bom. and nas and all of dat. how cum bone thugs ‘n’ harmony aint on there, now they r kool.
ne ways neat list
cool runnings
Sup ?
Neat list, and i’m witcha on most of the Albums, but really missing one of the greatest of all time, which was *in my opinion* a revelation at that time.
Jungle Brothers – Straight out the Jungle
Played that albums to death, and still cue it up once in a while 🙂
Peace,
It’s hard for me to argue against the JB’s. I used to play the hell out of both ‘Straight Out the Jungle’ and ‘Done By the Forces of Nature’. In fact, I think I liked Forces even more. But for some reason I just don’t reach for them any more when I’m flipping throgh my collection. I’m gonna have to play them now and maybe add them to the list.
I love the list, in fact I own most the albums on the list myself, but how the hell you gonna have the blueprint on this list without even mentioning reasonable doubt. And where is enter the Wu- Tang 36 chambers.
What happend to Ice Cube’s Death Certificate? Sheesh!
Hot list! Forgot how dope PRT was.
I think its blasphemous for a tupac master piece like ‘all eyez on me’ together with an album like ‘me against the world’ to be mising from this list
of course you do