as others have stated already, what were the flops of '99 before P's album at the end of the year?
they were releasing a lot of the lower-tier acts, which is something that they should be commended for actually.
the stuff that was expected to move units & chart high, did just that.
da crime family's sales may have been a lil disappointing, but they had the hits on there and the relevance.
yea, '97 was the setup & mainstream arrival. but the big mainstream run was really late '97 until late '99. ghetto d was the real takeoff. with "make em say ugh" being the out-the-park homerun solidifier in '98.
cash money was NOT competing with no limit in early '99. BREH. theres a reason why 400 degreez didn't take off like that until the summer, even tho it dropped in novemeber. sure it might've been a big deal down south, but overall, it was a slow-burn. that period was moreso the setup/arrival period for cash money. sure, universal made sure HA was on MTV but that was a "WTF slow-burn" record that took a while to catch on, and when it did catch on, it was a good gimmick or concept record. its not what sold the album. meanwhile, master p was basically a ghetto super-hero at the time.
"cash money is an army" is the song that started turning heads for the label, coupled with juvenile dropping a follow-up hit.
it was the string of summer hits that solidified cash money. back that thang up, bling bling, we on fire, and they had the video with Tear Da Club Up Thugs on the side. not only was that the homerun soidifier but it was the GRAND SLAM solidifier. then when they did the source awards, it as a wrap.
meh, cash money taking over really wasn't amazing.
1.) they were pawns for universal's corporate aqenda to close in on the more independent no limit's turf.
2.) we've seen this a thousand times over. rapper X blows up to the moon, and once the quality has already peaked, and while theyre making all these great moves......back home, rapper Y is blowing up and having a fresh run. back when mainstream rap was more grassroots/organic, as to now where they just force stuff on us, and keep them in rotation for 10 year cycles.
the shifts in the school year aren't surprising. back then, the 2nd half of the school year used to feel completely different than the beginning of that fiscal year.
and its not like we got to see prime cash money & prime no limit duke it out. and they definitely didn't have equal platforms. cash money was pushed to the moon via universal.
and breh, the fact that no limit dropped all those albums with no promo in '98, and they still sold, is like the main thing that no limit is legendary for. and while some of those albums could've been better, most of those artists did drop better works, imo.
snoop's no limit debut >>>> doggfather
so you cant say that's a dropoff.