Dude, nobody listened to Juvenile Hell outside of Queens.
When "Shook Ones" came out, a lot of people thought they were a new group.
Nas's "Illmatic" was as my man said above, a critical success from day one, and "The World Is Yours" and "It Aint Hard To Tell" ruled the "Rap City Top 10" for all of '93-'94, which was a huge deal at the time because BET, like The Source was still respected.
That's how I got into it, far from New York.
What Biggie did was make East Coast Rap pop, simple as that.
Puffy admitted, him and Biggie listened to what Dre & Ice Cube were doing on the West Coast and copied it because that's what was selling at the time.
Wu-Tang didn't go platinum immediately either, neither did "Midnight Marauders" or "Enta Da Stage" by Black Moon, which had more successful singles than all of those records (outside of Biggie of course).
"It Was Written" was written about as a failure when it happened, musically at least.
It was seen as Nas "selling out" and that's the record that's standing has improved over time.
"It Was Written" was seen as a pop sellout, now it's viewed as classic.
"Illmatic" was classic before it came out.
Yeah, I think it was Prodigy that said Nas' success is why labels were willing to give Mobb Deep a 2nd chance.
Fred.