RennisDeynolds
I am untethered and my rage knows no bounds!
All Eyez on Me >>>>>>>> the chronic
Definitely true for the early 90's.
Two groundbreaking projects that spawned whole sounds and opened the floodgates for copycats and labels to try and go in the same direction.
She's right about that.
It's not about sales though.
Because if it were, we'd be talking Hammer, Whitney, Celine Dion, Garth Brooks and Metallica and sh*t like that.
She said two albums, not artists. The Chronic changed Hip Hop, more than any other project for the first 1/2 of the decade. And anybody that was around back then, knows that Nevermind did the exact same for grunge/rock. It's not about sales or who we think was better. It's about impact. Which is why Buzz from The Melvins said, "We taught Nirvana everything, and they took what we gave them and became the face of the era." That's just a fact.
I don't know why people try to define an entire decade off of one or 2 albums. This is the dumbest shyt ever. The entire 90s wasn't an era. Eras change sometimes every 2 years. In the 90s we started in the pro black era, went to the gangsta rap era, that overlapped with the boom bap era, then shifted to the jiggy/80s sampled hits loops era, which went to down south and the street era again with DMX. All of that took place in 10 years of the 90s in hip hop. In Nirvana's form of music, there were multiple You had Nirvana, Pearl Jam, Smashing Pumpkins, etc. We were not just listening to 3 or 4 albums in the 10 year period of the 90s
I don't know why people try to define an entire decade off of one or 2 albums. This is the dumbest shyt ever. The entire 90s wasn't an era. Eras change sometimes every 2 years. In the 90s we started in the pro black era, went to the gangsta rap era, that overlapped with the boom bap era, then shifted to the jiggy/80s sampled hits loops era, which went to down south and the street era again with DMX. All of that took place in 10 years of the 90s in hip hop. In Nirvana's form of music, there were multiple You had Nirvana, Pearl Jam, Smashing Pumpkins, etc. We were not just listening to 3 or 4 albums in the 10 year period of the 90s
Yup
Those albums were cultural shifts in the music and society at that time
Exactly
And that’s what so many who talk about sales these days always don’t understand.
They miss the whole part about the impact albums like The Chronic and Nevermind had and I think it’s because they’re either too young to remember or weren’t born yet and now are looking back at it with 2025 eyes with just going by how much an album sold.
You might like it more, but AEOM wasn't more impactful or influential than The Chronic. shyt, without The Chronic, AEOM never even gets made.All Eyez on Me >>>>>>>> the chronic
Puff himself said Chronic was the biggest influence on Ready to DieLol east coast dusties were fuming reading the thread title![]()

FACTS!
I was just about to say, they weren't there. No lie, n*ggas in Harlem loved f*ckin' "Smells Like Teen Spirit". Some albums and songs reach way beyond what's expected in an audience. That's literally the only grunge or rock joint I've ever heard played at the Rucker. Sh*t was undeniable.
Nobody cared or knew how much anything sold. It was just about whether or not the sh*t was everywhere! Some albums you just couldn't escape!