No people checked out Mobb Deep because of Shook Ones Part II. The release of that song and it being banned from MTV which was a big deal sparked people's interests over the controversy and hype of the song.
Again, you are conflating Mobb Deep finding direction/purpose because through hearing their homie's album with "opening the doors". Nas didn't put Mobb Deep on. People didn't start listening to Mobb Deep JUST BECAUSE they heard Illmatic. That's like saying Tragedy Khadafi opened the doors for Nas because Trag's from Queensbridge and Nas found motivation from his music. That's bullshyt logic you are spewing.
And Biggie and Jay-Z is a totally different situation. Biggie didn't "open the doors" for Jay-Z. Jay-Z only wanted to release ONE ALBUM which was Reasonable Doubt. Jay-Z at the time didn't care for rap because he was already making huge money hustling. He and Dame wanted a legit outlet and focus on running a record label. It wasn't until Biggie died that Ja-Z felt an obligation to continue on rapping and fill Biggie's shoes. It took TWO and nearly a half full YEARS until Jay-Z got big. That wasn't because of Biggie who was well dead by that point, but because of hard work and dope music and elevating his own Roc-a-Fella brand. Jay-Z with the help of Dame and Biggs put himself on. Biggie didn't sign him to Undeas like he did with Junior Mafia. Jay-Z wasn't part of Bad Boy. But just because they were CLOSE doesn't automatically mean Biggie "opened doors" for Jay-Z. Especially during that period, Jay-Z's interest was having an one and done album.
Dude, listen to Jay-Z in Original Flavor and then listen to Jay-Z on Reasonable Doubt
One's from 1993, ones from 1996, yet they sound totally different.
what happened?
Biggie
Why does "It Was Written" sound so different than "Illmatic"?
Biggie
That's what it means to "open doors", brother.
Jay-Z is still on some fake Das-EFX type shyt if Biggie hadn't done "Big Poppa" and "One More Chance" and "Juicy" and showed all them nikkaz how to sell records.
Nas would've still been doing Boom Bap type shyt if it wasn't for Biggie.
That's what opening doors means.
Biggie opened the door for everybody on the East Coast to sell records because virtually none of them nikkaz was selling shyt before him in comparison to Snoop, Dre, 2pac, Ice Cube, Ice T, and even Cypress Hill
I don't know what to say to you, Prodigy admitted Nas opened doors for them and you ain't hearin' it.
Nas being great (which he was) has nothing to do with the fact that Mobb Deep was bigger than Nas in 1995
Mobb Deep blew up before Nas (mainstream wise)
As someone who was like the biggest Nas stan back then in 1995 you average causal Hip-Hop fan barely knew who Nas was....you had to remind them
If you think more people knew Prodigy & Havoc than Nas in 1995, I don't know what to say to you.
You obviously aint watch BET or read The Source, Vibe, or any Hip-Hop centered publication.
Seems like House music was right up there too during that particular time
THIS!!!!!
Everybody forgets how big House used to be back in the days.
Infamous went Gold in 2 months and AZ had a platinum selling album with a top 40 single. AZ indisputably blew before Nas.
Dude, remember Nas' "Illmatic" suffered from rampant bootlegging, so you can't just go by records sold. That's in any story that has ever been written about the record, how the whole city of New York had the album the year before it came out.
That's why I'm talking as somebody who was actually steeped in Hip-Hop culture at the time.
There's no way in hell that more people on Earth knew who Mobb Deep or AZ were than Nas.
The only reason people knew who either of them were was because of their relationship to Nas.
Prodigy admitted it in the interview I posted and AZ's verse on "Life's A bytch" is one of the most heralded in Hip-Hop history.