I know.
It was inspired by the breh @stomachlines thread about Vol 2. I was thinking about how Jay was at his absolute peak on RD.
So was Prodigy on HOE
Nas was still sharp as ever
Andre 3000 ramped up
Was 96 the peak of rhyming?
I'm waiting on someone to make a case for another year.
I would never say that 96 was the greatest year in hip hop. For me that would be 95 (with 94 coming in second). I know others would point to 88.
But this thread is just about the rhyme side of things.
Check the resume:
Nas - yeah, It Was Written wasn't as good as Illmatic, but Nas' pen was just as sharp.
Jay-Z - Reasonable Doubt was Jay's peak as an emcee, he never rhymed that well ever again.
Prodigy - Hell On Earth. The greatest rapper of all time at his absolute peak. Hell on Earth second verse. . Apostles Warning Nighttime Vultures Predicting that a certain someone's days were numbered in low digits
Andre 3000 - Duke ramped up in a way nobody saw coming
Ras Kass - West Coast god The album may have had its flaws But some consider it the most lyrical album ever.
Heltah Skeltah - Overlooked album at the time. But Ruck and Rock were killing shyt the whole way through
Am I dead wrong about this brehs?
I could be
But what year was better though
#tpc #tnt
I know.
It was inspired by the breh @stomachlines thread about Vol 2. I was thinking about how Jay was at his absolute peak on RD.
So was Prodigy on HOE
Nas was still sharp as ever
Andre 3000 ramped up
Was 96 the peak of rhyming?
I'm waiting on someone to make a case for another year.
1994
Nas on Illmatic
Common on Resurrection
B.I.G. on Ready to Die
Redman on Dare Iz A Darkside
OutKast on Southernplaya (best Kast album IMO)
O.C. on Word...Life
Scarface on The Diary
Jeru on Sun Rises
Considering pac dropped hiphop's GOAT album AEOM,plus 7 day theory,plus recorded all those great songs that would later be put out while on deathrow.
Yea hiphop kinda died on 9-13-96
R.I.P. pac
The budgets got huge around '97, but the standard changed too. It lowered. Just seemed like a lot of MC's lost their identify after '96. Image definitely became more of a concern than skill on a large-scale, and that kinda killed what was so dope about the culture prior to that.
Not sure I saw anyone mention Illadelph Halflife. But lyrics took a backseat right after getting so many classic albums that had some of the best lyrics ever on them. It was weird.
Exactly. And the fans back then were extremely critical of rappers who had a wack pen game. I feel like people cared more about lyrics than production In the 90s
I would never say that 96 was the greatest year in hip hop. For me that would be 95 (with 94 coming in second). I know others would point to 88.
But this thread is just about the rhyme side of things.
Check the resume:
Nas - yeah, It Was Written wasn't as good as Illmatic, but Nas' pen was just as sharp.
Jay-Z - Reasonable Doubt was Jay's peak as an emcee, he never rhymed that well ever again.
Prodigy - Hell On Earth. The greatest rapper of all time at his absolute peak. Hell on Earth second verse. . Apostles Warning Nighttime Vultures Predicting that a certain someone's days were numbered in low digits
Andre 3000 - Duke ramped up in a way nobody saw coming
Ras Kass - West Coast god The album may have had its flaws But some consider it the most lyrical album ever.
Heltah Skeltah - Overlooked album at the time. But Ruck and Rock were killing shyt the whole way through
Am I dead wrong about this brehs?
I could be
But what year was better though
#tpc #tnt
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