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Black (Hip-Hop) Music Month Timeline II: '92 - '95 
Published Thursday, June 12, 2008 8:00 AM
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By Donyel Griffin



The early 90s spawned some of the most classic Hip-Hop albums still relevant to this day.1992-1995 foreshadowed the dynamic recording careers of iconic artists like ‘Pac, Biggie, Snoop,  Dr. Dre and more. Sure, Hip-Hop was heavily influenced by “gangsta rap” earlier in the decade but the fusion of newcomers from the east coast and other regions like Atlanta and Chicago brought forth new sounds that would alter Hip-Hop’s landscape it forever.

Keeping it real, there was no shortage on talent or cunning emcees who’d lure you in with just one verse. After years of little recognition female rappers finally seemed to be getting their just due, artists were crossing over effortlessly and naysayers who didn’t believe Hip-Hop would last checked themselves at the door. Hip-Hop was here to stay. The more things change the more things stay the same; artists like Nas, Common, Snoop, The Roots, Outkast are still dropping albums over a decade later. The names, slang, and styles have changed but this era’s impact on Hip-Hop is an undeniable truth; here’s a few highlights from back in the day.


1992


•    January 1992 – After taking offense to comments made by him in Details Magazine, KRS-One bumrushes PM Dawn off the stage at NYC's Sound Factory. Pay for a PM Dawn Show get a BDP one instead,

•    January 17, 1992 – Epic urban drama, Juice, starring Tupac Shakur and Omar Epps hits theaters igniting the former's acting career and can be considered the precursor to his “thug” persona.

•    February 25, 1992 – Sex and Violence, the sixth and last album by  Boogie Down Productions is released.




•    March 1992 - Ice-T’s anti-police song, “Cop Killer” stirs national controversy due to excessive violent lyrics; the song is later pulled from his hardcore punk album Body Count.

•    April 15, 1992 - The Bill Duke directed Deep Cover, starring Larry Fishburne (he wasn't going by Laurence yet) hits theaters. The soundtrack features Dr. Dre's "Deep Cover," the debut of one Snoop Doggy Dogg.

•    April 30, 1992 – After eight seasons the last episode of The Cosby Show airs.

•    Pre-teen rap outfit Da Youngsta’s drop Something 4 Da Youngsta’s…DJ Premier would scratch a line from the song “Pass Da Mic” on the chorus for Gang Starr’s “Mass Appeal.”  There’s your answer.

•    A group known as A.T.B.A.N. Klann released an album on Ruthless Records... two of the members of the group were Will 1X and apl.de.ap. In 1995, the Black Eyed Peas, now including Taboo, were born (as was Will.I.Am) when Atban Klann was dropped from the label after Eazy E's death.

•    Marion “Suge” Knight and Dr. Dre establish Death Row Records which would become a powerhouse label in the early and mid 90s.

•    Eric “Eazy E” Wright sues Suge Knight citing he used threats of violence to force Eazy E to release former N.W.A member, Dr. Dre out of his contract.

•    The video to Sir-Mix-A-Lot’s chart topping crossover hit "Baby Got Back" is temporarily banned from MTV due to the song’s candid and sexual lyrics. Sir-Mix-A Lot later won a Grammy for Best Rap Performance for the single in ’93.

•    May 5, 1992 – Gang Starr’s Daily Operation is released.

•    June 9, 1992 – Pete Rock & CL Smooth drop Mecca And The Soul Brother.

•    June 23, 1992 - After the success of the acclaimed, Don’t Sweat the Technique, Eric B. and Rakim split up after reported problems over contracts to pursue solo ventures.

•    July 1, 1992 – The film Boomerang is released and stars Eddie Murphy, Halle Berry, Martin Lawrence and numerous other top black actors of the day. The soundtrack features ATCQ’s “Hot Sex.”



•    July 28, 1992 – The future of Queen of Hip-Hop/R&B Mary J. Blige drops her debut album What’s the 411?

•    July28, 1992 – EPMD’s Business Never Personal drops; features “Crossover” a leading hit single for the duo which diligently warns against selling out.

•    August 27, 1992 – Martin Lawrence's hilarious sitcom, Martin debuts on the FOX Network.




•    September 22, 1992 - Redman’s introduction as a comical but lyrically on-point rapper begins with his debut Whut? Thee Album generating a following of fans.

•    September 22, 1992 – Diamond D drops Stunts, Blunts and Hip Hop.

•    October 20, 1992 – Grand Puba has dipped from Brand Nubian and drops his debut Reel to Reel. Brand Nubian moves on and doesn’t skip a beat with their own hit “Punks Jump Up to Get Beat Down.”

•    November 10, 1992 - UGK drops their sophomore effort Too Hard To Swallow.

•    November 17, 1992 – The same year he converts to Islam, Ice Cube’s most successful album The Predator brings hit singles like, “Check Yo Self”, and “Today Was a Good Day.”




•    November 24, 1992 - The Pharcyde releases their seminal debut Bizarre Ride II The Pharcyde.
•    December 15, 1992  - Death Row Records releases it first album, Dr. Dre’s landmark The Chronic which goes on to sell three million units, but only gets 4 ½ mics in The Source (later “corrected” to five).


1993



•    Original Flavor drops their second album Beyond Flavor, the single “Can I Get Open?” features a then relatively unknown Jay-Z.



•    KMD’s DJ Subroc (MF DOOM’s brother) is tragically killed after being struck by a car.

•    The Roots record Organix and sell the album at their shows throughout Europe. ?uestlove, then BROther ?, can be heard rhyming on “Pass the Popcorn.”

•    February 1993 - Georgia-based group, Arrested Development becomes the first rap act to win a Grammy for the Best New Artist Award. We don’t know where they are now.

•    February 23, 1993 – The energetic New Jersey rap group with flows for days, Naughty by Nature releases their second album, Nineteen Naughty III known for the classic feel good jam “Hip Hop Hooray.”

•    March 12, 1993 – CB4 (starring Chris Rock, produced by Nelson George) hits theaters with the film being a caricature of a gangsta rap. The film spawns the underappreciated classic "Sweat From My Balls."

•    March 28, 1993 – The Hughes Brother directed film Menace II Society hits theaters.

•    April 23, 1993 - Dr. Dre and Ed Lover star in, Who’s The Man, a film heavily inspired by Hip-Hop with appearances from Fab 5 Freddy, Queen Latifah, House of Pain, Run-DMC, Eric B, Ice-T, Flavor Fav and Kool G Rap.

•    May 4, 1993 - Run-DMC starves off rumors of a creative slump with Down With the King, an album which outsells their previous release. The title track is produced by Pete Rock.

•    Quincy Jones founds the innovative Hip-Hop & R&B entertainment magazine, VIBE; the test issue featured Treach from Naughty By Nature, the first proper issue’s cover was Snoop Dogg.

•    July 6, 1993 - 8Ball & MJG release their debut Comin’ Out Hard.

•    July 9, 1993 – The last episode of A Different World airs on NBC after a six season run.

•    July 27, 1993 – Fat Joe Da Gangsta drops his debut album Represent.




•    September 6, 1993 – Souls of Mischief releases their debut 93 'til Infinity, sparking greater interest in their Heiroglyphics crew founded by Del the Funkee Homosapien.

•    September 28, 1993 – KRS-One releases his solo debut, Return of the Boom Bap, with most of the production handled by DJ Premier.

•    October 6, 1993 – Michael Jordan announces his retirement from the NBA (yeah, right.).

•    October 12, 1993 - The success of Salt-N-Pepa’s Very Necessary with top singles, such as “Shoop”, “Whatta Man”, eventually leads the group into becoming the first female rap act to go multi-platinum.

•    October 13, 1993 - Brooklyn dwellers Black Moon drop their outstanding debut, Enta Da Stage. Lazy journalists everywhere soon start calling underground Hip-Hop music  "backpack rap" ad nauseum.

•    October 26, 1993 – Shaquille O’Neal drops his debut album Shaq Diesel…it goes platinum.

•    November 9, 1993 - Wu-Tang Clan’s debut album, Enter the Wu-Tang: 36 Chambers locks the young Staten Island natives in as one of the most prolific rap groups, ever. The nine rappers (RZA, GZA, Ghostface Killah, Method Man, Ol’ Dirty Bastard, U-God, Raekwon and Inspectah Deck) offer their individual rhyming agility to the album.

•    November 9, 1993 - A Tribe Called Quest’s third album Midnight Marauders drops featuring a Who’s Who of Hip-Hop as the album’s multiple covers.

•    November 23, 1993 - Snoop Dogg (known as Snoop Doggy Dog at the time) releases Doggystyle which receives rave reviews from critics and became the first debut rap album ever to appear as #1

•    November 13, 1993 - Queen Latifah’s Black Reign album is released and eventually becomes the first female rap solo artist to reach gold status.

•    Future music/business mogul, Sean Combs starts Bad Boy Entertainment (Bad Boy Records) after being fired from Uptown Records and focuses on the future careers of Craig Mack and The Notorious B.I.G.

•    MC Lyte’s love for thugs in “Ruffneck” makes her the first solo female rap artist to ever have a gold single.

•    After four albums together, Erick Sermon and Parrish Smith of EPMD split up over tension and personal conflicts.


1994

•    Joe Clair and Big Lez begin hosting BET Rap City (peace to Chris Thomas.).

•    March 8, 1994 – Gang Starr releases Hard to Earn.

•    After Dave Mays slips in a feature story on the Almighty RSO into The Source Magazine, staff members walk out in protest.

•    February 1, 1994 – The Fugees drop their debut Blunted On Reality. The album is suspect but is saved by Salaam Remi’s remix to “Nappy Heads.”



•    Sacha Jenkins and Elliott Wilson co-found ego trip Magazine.

•    April 19, 1994 - Nas drops Illmatic, earning the Queens rapper instant recognition and a slot as an influential MC.

•    April 26, 1994 - OutKast emerges from Atlanta with the highly acclaimed Southernplayalisticadillacmuzik making the way for an underrepresented Southern influence in Hip-Hop.



•    E-40 & Click drop their second album The Mail Man, which features the hit “Captain Save-A-Hoe.”

•    A remix of Capleton's "Tour" is burning up dancefloors with its Slick Rick flavored drums...the producer is one Lil Jon, yes, that Lil Jon.

•    Craig Mack’s “Flava in Ya Ear” draws attention to the newly formed, Bad Boy Entertainment. The heat is really on when they drop the remix featuring LL Cool J, Busta Rhymes and the Notorious B.I.G.

•    September 13, 1994 Notorious B.I.G’s first album, Ready to Die is released hosting future hits like “One More Chance”, “Big Poppa” and "Juicy." Bad Boy never looks back.

•    June 28, 1994 – Da Brat’s debut album, Funkdafied, reaches number #1 and makes her the first female rapper ever to go platinum.

•    After ditching the dance music format, New York’s Hot 97 becomes NYC’s first all Hip-Hop formatted radio station.

•    The B Boy Summit is created to bring together Hip-Hoppers all over the globe for an event that hosts events, discussions, all pertaining to the Hip-Hop/b-boying culture.

•    October 18, 1994 – Receiving five mics from The Source at the time, Scarface’s The Diary earns the Houston rapper platinum status and another critically  acclaimed album.

•    October 1994 - Common (formerly Common Sense) releases Resurrection which features one of the best Hip-Hop songs on the ‘90s, “I Used to Love H.E.R”, a song about the changing scene and impact of Hip-Hop music where Common unleashes his disappointment.

•    During a senate hearing rap music comes under fire as C. Delores Tucker, Dionne Warwick and other community leaders speak out against  “gangsta rap” and violent, explicit and misogynistic lyrics.

•    November 8, 1994 - Keith Murray drops his verbose but fresh debut The Most Beautifullest Thing In This World.




•    November 15, 1994 - Method Man becomes the first Wu-Tang Clan member  to release a solo LP with his hugely successful Tical.

•    November 30, 1994 – Tupac Shakur is robbed and shot five times outside a recording studio in New York City.

•    December 1, 1994 – Following his shooting, Tupac is convicted of a sexual assault accusation from 1993.

•    Warren G., the step brother of Dr. Dre, releases  Regulate….G Funk Era which demonstrates a more laid back sound to West Coast rap.


1995



•    January 11, 1995 – Higher Learning, the coming of age film involving racism, politics, and sexuality on a college campus, starring Omar Epps and rappers Ice Cube and Busta Rhymes comes to the big screen.

•    February 1995 - Queen Latifah wins Rap Solo Grammy for female empowerment anthem, “U.N.I.T.Y.”

•    February 1995 - Salt-N-Pepa become the  first female rap group to win the Best Rap Performance Award with “None of Your Business.”

•    March 25,  1995 - At the age of 31, influential West Coast rapper and record executive, Eazy E dies of AIDS complications at the Cedar-Senai Medical Center in Los Angeles.

•    March 28, 1995 – Ol’ Dirty Bastard drops his solo debut Return to the 36 Chambers: The Dirty Version.

•    August 29, 1995 – Junior M.A.F.I.A. drops Conspiracy, which features The Notorious B.I.G. and Lil Kim.

•    April 25, 1995 - Mobb Deep drops The Infamous, the follow up to their ’93 debut, earning the rappers much more credit for their gritty and street smart rhymes, especially on the classic track with the sinister beat, “Shook Ones Part II.”

•    May 1, 1995 – Friday, the ultimate comedy of ’95 with rapper Ice Cube and comedian Chris Tucker was released; the Friday soundtrack  showcased a variety of songs from several Hip-Hop performers including Dr. Dre’s party anthem, “Keep Their Heads Ringin’.”

•    July 25, 1995 – After the moderate success of their first album, the tongue twisting, rapidly rhyming Bone Thugs-N-Harmony release E. Eternal 1999, a bigger hit for the Cleveland group.

•    August 1, 1995 – Wu-Tang Clan’s Raekwon the Chef drops the “purple tape”, Only Built 4 Cuban Linx. Ghostface gets his props and every wannabe rapper suddenly wants to be a coke dealer.




•    August 25, 1995 – The Show, a documentary examining the Hip-Hop culture with interviews with several of Hip-Hop’s legends and newcomers comes out; The Show Soundtrack which is more like a Hip-Hop carnival with a list of big names in Rap and R&B peaks at #1 on R&B/Hip Hop charts.

•    October 1995 - Suge Knight posts Tupac’s bail of $1.4 million dollars and the West Coast rapper joins Death Row Records where he’d remain until his untimely death.

•    October 31, 1995 - Tha Dogg Pound (Dat N***a Daz & Kurupt) releases Dogg Food, which eventually goes double platinum.

•    November 7, 1995 - Recovering from disappointing sales of his ’93 album (14 Shots to the Dome), LL Cool J tweaks his former formula and releases Mr. Smith well-known for the female friendly hits, “Hey Lover”, “Loungin”, and “Doin It”

•    November 21, 1995 - Goodie Mob, a Atlanta-based quartet often attributed with popularizing the term “dirty south” releases their first album, Soul Food.

•    November 30, 1995 - At the peak of his stardom as a rap artist, Snoop (Snoop Doggy Dog) stands murder trial for the death of a California man (He is later acquitted in ‘96).

•     Common finds himself in beef as members of Westside Connection retaliate against “I Used to Love H.E.R”  with “Westside Slaughterhouse” in response to lyrics they believe are accusing West Coast rap for a shift in Hip-Hop’s direction and authenticity; Common responds with the blistering “The B***h in Yoo.”

•    March 14, 1995 – Tupac’s Me Against the World becomes the first album by an imprisoned artist to debut at #1.

•    August 2005 - Yo! MTV Raps, the first Hip-Hop oriented show on MTV that helped spread Hip Hop’s popularity ends after seven  years.

•    Tensions rise between  Death Row Records and Bad Boy Entertainment; reports of a East Coast/West Coast rap beef are sensationalized as the rift between the prominent rappers, Tupac and Notorious B.I.G worsens.

•    November 7, 1995 – Wu-Tang Clan’s the Genius/GZA drops his sophomore triumph Liquid Swords.

Black (Hip-Hop) Music Month Timeline I: '88 - '91 (click here)



Comments

 

Lion_Heart said:

1st Bitches

This was when Hip Hop was unstoppable
June 12, 2008 8:40 AM
 

Flamethrower #80 said:

MArtin was a funny show but what about IN LIVING COLOR .. HIPHOP WaS ST8 Back then ,, Moving on
June 12, 2008 9:05 AM
 

C-Unit32 said:

2nd wooooo
These brink back good times
June 12, 2008 9:08 AM
 

Hemi said:

Once again a classic era of rap

Wu-Tang album     classic
Outkasts album     classic
Goodie Mob album  classic
The Chronic  classic
Doggystyle   classic
Me Against the World  classic
Daily Operation  classic
Dogg Food      classic
The Infamous  classic
Purple Tape  classic
Ilmatic   classic
The Diary  classic

4 of these albums are in top ten best rap albums ever in my opinion this is the peak era of music leading up til about 97 then that was it.... Rap music had taken the world by storm at this time
June 12, 2008 9:09 AM
 

adopefemalemc said:

*Damn, what DID happen to Arrested Development? I still be havin "Everyday People" stuck in my head sometimes

*Souls of Mischief--The BAY is in the Area!!!

*I used to knock the hell outta Salt N Peppas "Very Necessary" and rap the lyrics..who'da guessed I'd ended up rappin 4 real..

*I was stuck the 1st time I saw Outkast's video on the screen, they was Aliens & sh*t.

*E-40 and the Click!! The BAY is still in the AREA!!
*Man, I loved Da Brat in '94, she even had the dudes in East Palo Alto walkin w/ a lil mo swag....
*Friday is still a classic and "Keep Their Heads" ringin was my ish!!
*I still kno damn near every song from East 1999 Eternal, courtesy of my big bruh who played it NONSTOP
*Matin is still one of the funniest shows in history!! I miss In Living Color, my mom used to tune in religiously. Damn, when can we get entertainment like that again, followed up w/ Hip-Hop @ the end, that's like a Hip-Hopper's heaven!! Boondocks will suffice for now..
June 12, 2008 9:26 AM
 

richie sick said:

for me, the greatest era of hip-hop.  the true golden era.  everything in the late 70s and the 80s was sort of the classical/formative period.  but the 90s was when hip hop crystallized as a musical form, and took over the world.
June 12, 2008 10:01 AM
 

BKLYNMANN77 said:

THis was by far the best time in Hip Hop music. This reminds me of the days going to high school with the jansport jacket. Walkman on bumpin:

Wu tang 36 chambers
Black Moon- enta da stage
Smif n wesson-da shinin
Biggie- ready to die
Gangstarr-hard to earn & daily operation
Raekwon-only built....
Gza-Liquid swords
Method man-tical
Redman-Whut thee album, Dare iz a darkside
NWA- efil4zaggin
Ice Cube-death certificate
Ice t - original gangster
Tribe...-Low end theory
Tupac-me against the world & stictly 4 my .....
Nas-Illmatic
Mobb Deep-infamous
Dr. dre-chronic
Snoop-doggystyle
Cypress hill
Onyx-Bacdafucup
Anything from BDP
EPMD joints
Jeru da damaja-Sun rises in the east
Ol dirty- Rtn to the 36 chambers
Big L- Lifestyles of the poor
Fat joe- Jealous ones envy
Diamond D-Stunts, blunts hip hop
Lord finesse-funky technician
Kool G Rap-live and let die
Beatnuts-intoxicated demons & self titled joint
Outkast-southern.....
Geto boys

Maaaaaaaan! I'll be here all day. Point is that they don't create classics like this anymore. Now it's all about the money. Not the art, cause back then there wasn't as much money involved until all these big corporations came in and started to rape the art of the music, and only refused to deal with rappers unless they rapped a certain way, hence long gone was the golden era, and here comes the shiny suit/pop/commercial/rap and r&b era. Don't get me wrong there are a lot of new emcees coming out still staying true to the artform, and not following what all these big record execs are telling them to do such as Saigon, Joell ortiz, skyzoo, Sean Price etc etc, and of course a lot of emcess from that era that are still dropping crazy albums, but they just get no exposure anymore. Everything comes around 360, so slowly we'll see a that movement again.

Nas' new album
Buckshot and 9th wonder
Heltah Skeltah
EPMD
Redman new joint
Method man
Rae's cuban linx 2
Red and meth
LL
Ghostface
Bobby digital

Just a few people i'm checking for in the upcoming year.














June 12, 2008 10:15 AM
 

SGM said:

I remember my dad had that Scarface album. He let one of my uncles borrow it and we haven't seen it since.
June 12, 2008 10:30 AM
 

mu$h da great said:

da brat funkdafied was one of the first cds I got, I remember cause I got a cd player for christmas that year. damn that was a minute ago lol. those were some classic years.
June 12, 2008 10:38 AM
 

Johndill_4real said:

95 and 96 were the greatest years for rap.
June 12, 2008 10:46 AM
 

DAREALGUNSMOKE said:

DAG BOI THIS WAS THE TIME WHEN IT WAS SOME GTREAT MUSAIC COMIN FROM THE SOUTH, AND IN GENERAL
June 12, 2008 10:46 AM
 

mu$h da great said:

mufuckin pharcyde - drop & can't keep runnin away.....i used to be on rap city so tough back then. outkast players ball, ...... bone had that faces of death cd but it was only cleveland niggas that was hip to that shit.. then they dropped e.1999 I felt like finally cleveland had a voice in this rap/hip hop shit the was nationally recognized & respected & they was reppin to the fullest. mc . brains had oochie coochie but I don't remember him doing to much of anything after that.


what year did the movie "the show" come out?
June 12, 2008 10:50 AM
 

SGM said:

The Midnight Maurader album helped me get through my eighth grade year in 03.I still I gotta get Southernplayalisticadillacmusik, Souls of Mischief, and Black Moon Album
June 12, 2008 10:52 AM
 

mu$h da great said:

" cause 96 gone be da year that all yall players haters can bite me........ around dis bitch........me & you, yo mama, & yo cousin too "


@donyel - you gone have to do another one of these.... preciate the breakdown brova.
June 12, 2008 10:54 AM
 

mu$h da great said:

what about "creepin on a come up" - I know yall remember  "thuggish ruggish bone" "foe tha luv of $"
June 12, 2008 11:00 AM
 

SGM said:

I'm surprise he forgot to mention Buhloone Mindstate by De La Soul break of dawn is one of the coolest tracks they ever made
June 12, 2008 11:10 AM
 

MissDallasTx214 said:

  mu$h da great said:
what about "creepin on a come up" - I know yall remember  "thuggish ruggish bone" "foe tha luv of $"
==============================================
Dayum I was just thinking that? What about Bone Thugz?!?
June 12, 2008 11:33 AM
 

MissDallasTx214 said:

The Crossroads was also a classic, I remember comin home from school ordering it on The Box (music television you control, lol) everyday!!!
June 12, 2008 11:35 AM
 

Water Ur Seeds said:

In My opinion the best Years Of Hip Hop!!!! BLUD FIYA
June 12, 2008 11:43 AM
 

Brooklyn-Compton-Connect said:

Whats WU Shite was that hard shit niggaz dont know the wu started that whole drug dealin rap shit fo real and there are one of the first to be  poppin cristal and shit in they videos

Shout out to tha WU My advise is to go back to that real shit fuck that bobby digital shit
June 12, 2008 11:49 AM
 

risky $mith said:

Great article, to bad none of the videos are available....EVER....

CB4 was the best comedy from the 90's.... man its a trip when you grew up in the 90s , look around now and ask what the fk happened to the minds of those times. Seriously, the leaders turned into ignorance breeders. Minus the chosen few that were really trying to teach and still are. But on the real , why is ignorance so dam rampant???!!...Ima shoot you....nope Im a shoot you....hey lets sell crack and make money then yell about it in all of our songs and wear a cross around our neck to pose as Christians, but in truth we're really manipulators and pimps that need to use our own people to get ahead.....
Isn't that what white people do to the entire world including their own race?..... minus the crack killah muzik









June 12, 2008 12:00 PM
 

Chauncell said:

Damn I remember sittin in my homeboy kitchen getting my haircut listening to that Biggie READY TO DIE.  I was 13 y/o fatboy lost at the time.   Really had that ready to die attitude....."I wonder if I die will tears come to her eyes forgive me for my disrespects forgive me for my lies...."
June 12, 2008 12:09 PM
 

BLUNTBLAZER said:

@adopefemalemc

wha you know bout east paly alto
and yea the bay is in the area

Good lookin out for not forgetin bout tha bay
Coulda mentioned the Luniz in 95 wit "i got 5 on it" tho
June 12, 2008 12:25 PM
 

BLUNTBLAZER said:

@adopefemalemc

wha you know bout east paly alto
and yea the bay is in the area

Good lookin out for not forgetin bout tha bay
Coulda mentioned the Luniz in 95 wit "i got 5 on it" tho
June 12, 2008 12:26 PM
 

BLUNTBLAZER said:

@adopefemalemc

wha you know bout east paly alto
and yea the bay is in the area

Good lookin out for not forgetin bout tha bay
Coulda mentioned the Luniz in 95 wit "i got 5 on it" tho
June 12, 2008 12:26 PM
 

Day4Day said:

I know there's no way to list everything, but act like u know........PETE ROCK....CL SMOOTH....hip hop in the rawest element
June 12, 2008 12:47 PM
 

TX Made Marcuz said:

MAAAAN I AINT EVEN GONNA LYE I DIDNT KNOW THE DAIRY BY SCARFACE WENT PLATINUM....BIG UP TO FACE BUT MY FAVORITE FACE ALBUM HAS TO BE THE WORLD IS YOURS SHIT A CLASSIC IN MY EYES...HAS ONE OF MY FAVORITE WELL TWO OF MY FAVORITE SONGS ON THEIR "HE'S DEAD"...AND "THE WALL" .....BUT I AINT EVEN GONNA LYE I REALLY LUV ALL FACE ALBUMS HE IS ONE OF MY FAVORITE RAPPERS YEEE DIGGGG....AND UGK SECOND ALBUM.....IS STILL BANG'N WIT "TELL ME SOMETHANG GOOD"...."USED ME UP" ....AND SHORT TEXAS".....BUT THEY 4GOT IN '94 THA ALBUM SUPER TIGHT.........BIG UP TO 8BALL & MJG CAUSE COMIN OUT HARD ALBUM IS A CLASSIC IN THA SAWF THEIR IZN'T A SONG THEIR THAT DONT GO HARD TRILL TALK MAYNE
June 12, 2008 1:28 PM
 

TX Made Marcuz said:

OH YEA YAWL GO ADD YA BOI AT HTTP://MYSPACE.COM/BANG_SCREW_4LYFE
June 12, 2008 1:30 PM
 

richie sick said:

best face album to me is "last of a dying breed".  that, of course, and the "mr scarface is back" album.  it goes without saying, that's a hip-hop classic.

they showl did forget about ugk "super tight".  that's the album that sealed their legendary status to me.  it's a perfect album.  aint one wrong song on there.  and yes, of course, "ridin dirty" is a pure hip-hop classic.

and speaking of hip-hop classics, i'll put ball and jg "comin out hard" on that list too.  that's another perfect album.  no flaws, no skits.  just one intro and 8 raw southern songs as original as anything that came out up to that time.
June 12, 2008 2:00 PM
 

Cresent City Connektor said:

1995 The best year of my life, period!!!!
June 12, 2008 2:03 PM
 

grandpa dope smoke said:

man.. .those were the days... why do i have flash backs of being grounded for bad grades, in my room listenin to wu tang
June 12, 2008 2:12 PM
 

BKLYNMANN77 said:

Out of all the Scarface albums my favorite was the Mr. Scarface is back joint. That album was so hard (no homo).

I don't give a fuck about the chatter in the background/ni@@az get beat when they step this is AKS town/and if you don't know/i recommend ya check/and ask the muthafuckas how many heads i put to rest.
June 12, 2008 2:15 PM
 

mu$h da great said:

@ chauncell - damn thaz a real fucking dog in yur avi?
June 12, 2008 2:27 PM
 

richie sick said:

"i'm a booorn killa!  you face to face with scarface, you tried to ice an ace, but that's a mutha...fuckin...waste!  you straight fucked up g.  and yo momma shoulda warned you bout a nigga like me!"
June 12, 2008 3:23 PM
 

he chose said:

BIG UPS TO SCARFACE AND OUTKAST! IT'S A SHAME THAT WE BOUGHT INTO THE HYPE OF SHINY SUITS AND OTHER GIMMICKS TIL WE STOP SUPPORTING GREAT MUSIC.
June 12, 2008 3:40 PM
 

TOHN007 said:

MAN THIS WAS THE ERA THAT I REALLY CAME INTO MY OWN AND STARTED TO DEVELOP MY OWN TASTES IN HIP HOP MUSIC. I STILL BUMP MOST OF THESE ALBUMS TODAY. 93 THROUGH 95 WERE MY HIGH SCHOOL YEARS AND WHO EVER COPPED THE TAPE OR A CD FIRST WOULD BE RESPONSIBLE FOR DUBBING IT FOR EVERYBODY IN YOUR CREW. OUTKAST (SOUTHERNPLAYALISTICADILLACMUSIC) WAS THR SHIT! ENTER THE 36 CHAMBERS! READY TO DIE! 93 TIL INFINITY! BIZARRE RIDE TO THE PHARCYDE!

DONT FORGET THE ROOTS SECOND ALBUM, DO YOU WANT MORE? WAS THE SHIT I PUT SO MANY NIGGAS ON TO THAT ALBUM. DAMN I WISH HIP HOP WAS STILL LIKE THAT. NOW DAYS ITS ALL ABOUT RING TONES AND SHIT. NOBODY IS TRYING TO MAKE A DOPE ALBUM ANYMORE.
June 12, 2008 4:13 PM
 

bknewstash said:

what about kriss kross. niggas cant front.i kno i wasnt only nigga with their album.
June 12, 2008 5:33 PM
 

mu$h da great said:

kriss kross was dem niggas too.
June 12, 2008 5:48 PM
 

richie sick said:

i aint frontin either.  i jammed me some kriss kross!  shit, it aint like i wasn't a teenager at that time anyway!
June 12, 2008 6:18 PM
 

Tommy K. said:

GREAT READ!!! So many classic came out in that time it's just crazy. I would added a couple of more things but 4 the most part this was on point!
June 12, 2008 6:24 PM
 

adopefemalemc said:

BLUNTBLAZER said:
@adopefemalemc

wha you know bout east paly alto
and yea the bay is in the area
_____________________________________________________
lol, I'm from EPA, babe, aka Small Town Cemetary. The Bay is def. in the area!!
June 12, 2008 9:11 PM
 

richie sick said:

remember them blackjack niggas?  ha ha!  i used to bump their album tough back in the day.
June 13, 2008 1:07 PM
 

Black (Hip-Hop) Music Month Timeline II: ‘92 - ‘95 - allhiphop.com | Hip Hop Music said:

June 14, 2008 9:08 AM
 

hewhoIS said:

Arrested Development is still making music and touring. They based in ATL now. They got a myspace page I'm pretty sure.
June 16, 2008 6:11 PM
 

KevdaNoizemaker said:

TI and Shawty Lo talkin bout bankhead but they forgot Outkast had everybody doin the "Bankhead Bounce" in that Benz or Beemer video.  All these ATL niggas owe the Dungeon Family big
June 17, 2008 10:48 PM
 

Illmatic T said:

ready 2 die...
June 18, 2008 6:34 AM
 

Sovietnam said:

this site is too major to be making these minor mistakes. E-40's album "the mail man" was solo.

Im from cleveland and i know that. shit, i didnt start liking e-40 until he was on 8ball & MJG's album, even tho i heard about him in 94.

It's not that yall didnt know, its yall being lazy. all the info of the world is at ya fingertips.
June 18, 2008 11:56 PM
 

bk ny24 said:

what about the lost boys
June 25, 2008 4:38 PM
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