Bruh, this was in the era that most albums got 2 or 3 singles. That's not noteworthy.
To contrast, I love UGK. They are arguably my favorite group. And even though I LOVE Dirty Money,
I didn't vote it as a classic when we did their thread. The deluxe version has 6 singles on it...but the original
issue only has 3.
The average rap fan might know or be familiar with those singles, but they may not know or have even cared to hear
the rest of the album. So I couldn't in good conscience call that a classic.
Ok what are your barometers for rating something a classic?
My first thing is quality. It must pass the quality barrier. Let me give you two examples: Cuban Linx and Blowout Comb.
Now the former also has additional variables, relevancy, impact, influence even to an extent beyond rap culture. Definite classic.
Blowout Comb has quality, but suddenly you look at what's outside it and you realise there's nothing else it can hang its hat on. Not a classic.
Now back to Black on Both Sides, I feel it has the quality, at least just enough to progress to 'round 2' of my assessments. I also think it is relevant, has stood the test of time, and was pretty influential on shaping that particular sub-genre of rap, though arguably Black Star album was more instrumental in it. I feel this is a 1/2 way album, whether you say yes or no it doesn't matter so long as you have reasons for doing so.