

Last year was the 50th anniversary of hip hop, and in honor of this anniversary, the idea bloomed in my mind that I should review the top 50 albums of that 50 years. As I crunched together a list from various sources, 50 proved to be too restrictive- many of the classics were getting squeezed out. So, to make a little more room, I opted for 100 albums, two for each of hip hop’s 50 years.
For its formative years, hip hop was a live entertainment form, with the first recorded singles not emerging until 1979, and the first albums in 1980. So my review will cover 1980-2023, with 50 posts of two albums each. The only ground rule I made for myself (besides looking for 2×50, aka 100, albums that were widely well-regarded) was that I had to have at least one from each year. As you’ll see by and by, some years get multiple albums, but since we have 100 spots for 43 years, it tends to all work out.
*June 2024 addendum: Due to some medical situations, I took a three+ month hiatus from blogging. It’s unlikely I’ll finish this series this year. But I’m back at it, and I won’t mind extending into 2025 if you don’t!*
And with that, let’s embark on our next installment!
The D.O.C, No One Can Do It Better (1989)– This sounds to me like an encapsulation of 80s hip hop- it’s replete with the breaks, turntabilism, and hard rock samples of the new school, and the soul and funk samples and swing of new jack. It also exemplifies the hard-hitting gangsta rap sound of the eighties as it was turning to the G-funk gangster sound of the nineties, but with a substantive heft more reminiscent of Public Enemy. My initial impression on this is backed up by subsequent research- Tracy Lynn Curry, a.k.a. The DOC, came out of Houston’s Southern hip-hop scene, but became a collaborator with N.W.A. and even contributed lyrics to their debut album. They returned the favor here, Dr. Dre producing this album, multiple N.W.A. members contributing to various tracks, and Eazy-E putting it out on his fledgling record label. For good measure, one of the closing tracks of the album, “The Formula” is even credited as being the first G-funk single. Shortly after release, The D.O.C. would join Dre in becoming one of the co-founders of Death Row Records. All in all, a solid album that feels like the eighties turning into the nineties.
Ice Cube, AmeriKKKa’s Most Wanted (1990)- I think it’s no accident that this installment of the blog is feeling all kinds of liminal. With this album, we have a double milestone- it’s our 34th review, meaning we’ve now made it past one third through, and it’s the first album on the list from the nineties. After Ice Cube split from N.W.A. and their record label amidst various financial disputes, he worked with lyrics from Dr. Dre’s cousin Sir Jinx and production from Public Enemy’s Bomb Squad to make this solo debut. The album feels like it puts together the best of all these worlds- Ice Cube’s hard-hitting delivery, the humor of Southern California gangsta rap, the densely layered production of Public Enemy, and both N.W.A.’s and Public Enemy’s versions of social and political commentary. It also brings along Ice Cube’s considerable misogyny and revelry in scenes of violence. But it sounds consistently powerful and high quality, and dives full-force into its mission of rubbing America’s face in everything about rap in general and Ice Cube in particular that made it uncomfortable. That’s not a bad way for the genre to kick off the nineties!
If you’re curious about the sources I used to compile my list, you can check them out here:
- Beats, Rhymes & Lists- The 50 Best Hip Hop Albums of the 1980s
- Beats, Rhymes & Lists- 250 Best Rap Albums of All Time
- Complex- The Best Rap Albums of the 80s
- GQ UK- The 28 best hip-hop albums that you should listen to immediately
- Hip Hop Golden Age- Top 100 Hip Hop Albums of the 1980s
- Music Grotto- 51 Best Hip Hop Albums of All Time
- ONE37pm- The 62 Best Hip Hop Albums of All Time
- Pitchfork- Highest Rated Hip Hop Albums of All Time
- Rolling Stone- The 200 Greatest Hip-Hop Albums of All Time
- The Source- Hip Hop Albums Rated 5 Mics Out of 5 (as of January 2011)
And if you want to catch up on the previous installments, here they are…
- Sugarhill Gang- Sugarhill Gang (1980)/Kurtis Blow- Kurtis Blow (1980)
- Sugarhill Gang- 8th Wonder (1981)/Grandmaster Flash- The Message (1982)
- Wild Style Original Soundtrack (1983)/Fat Boys- Fat Boys (1984)
- Kurtis Blow- Ego Trip (1984)/Run-D.M.C.- Run-D.M.C. (1984)
- Whodini- Escape (1985)/The Treacherous Three- The Treacherous Three (1985)
- Run-D.M.C.- King of Rock (1985)/LL Cool J- Radio (1985)
- Beastie Boys- Licensed to Ill (1986)/Run-D.M.C.- Raising Hell (1986)
- Boogie Down Productions- Criminal Minded (1987)/Eric B. & Rakim- Paid in Full (1987)
- LL Cool J- Bigger and Deffer (1987)/Big Daddy Kane- Long Live the Kane (1988)
- Boogie Down Productions- By All Means Necessary (1988)/EPMD- Strictly Business (1988)
- Eric B. & Rakim- Follow the Leader (1988)/Jungle Brothers- Straight Out the Jungle (1988)
- N.W.A- Straight Outta Compton (1988)/Public Enemy- It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold us Back (1988)
- Slick Rick- The Great Adventures of Slick Rick (1988)/Ultramagnetic MCs- Critical Beatdown (1988)
- Beastie Boys- Paul’s Boutique (1989)/Big Daddy Kane- It’s a Big Daddy Thing (1989)
- De La Soul- 3 Feet High and Rising (1989)/EPMD- Unfinished Business (1989)
- Geto Boys- Grip It! On That Other Level (1989)/Kool G Rap & DJ Polo- Road To The Riches (1989)
Finally, if you’d like a playlist for the entire list, you can find that here. Listen to it sequentially for the historical development of the genre, or play on shuffle for maximum historical scramble!
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