Their Greatest Album (Rap)

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Critical Beatdown is the debut studio album by American hip hop group Ultramagnetic MCs, released on October 4, 1988, by Next Plateau Records.
Although it charted modestly upon its release, Critical Beatdown has since been acclaimed by critics as a classic album of hip hop's "golden age" and new school aesthetic. AllMusic editor Stanton Swihart found the production innovative and deemed Critical Beatdown "an undeniable hip-hop classic [...] one of the finest rap albums from the mid- to late-'80s 'new school' in hip-hop."Pitchfork Media's Alex Linhardt called it "a flawless album—one that stands tall today as one of Golden Age's most ageless,"Rolling Stone writer Peter Relic cited it as the group's "quintessential release."

Track listing
All songs were written by Cedric Miller, Keith Thornton, Maurice Smith (DJ Moe Love), and Trevor Randolph.[25]

# Title Producer(s) Length
1. "Watch Me Now" Ced-Gee, Ultramagnetic MCs 4:40
2. "Ease Back" Ced-Gee, Ultramagnetic MCs 3:24
3. "Ego Trippin' (Original 12" Version)" Ced-Gee, Ultramagnetic MCs 5:26
4. "Moe Luv's Theme" Ced-Gee, Ultramagnetic MCs 2:14
5. "Kool Keith Housing Things" Ced-Gee, Ultramagnetic MCs 3:15
6. "Travelling at the Speed of Thought (Remix)" Ced-Gee, Ultramagnetic MCs 1:51
7. "Feelin' It" Ced-Gee, Ultramagnetic MCs 3:31
8. "One Minute Less" Ced-Gee, Ultramagnetic MCs 1:58
9. "Ain't It Good to You" Ced-Gee, Ultramagnetic MCs 3:33
10. "Funky (Remix)" Ced-Gee, Ultramagnetic MCs 3:40
11. "Give the Drummer Some" Paul C 3:43
12. "Break North" Ced-Gee, Ultramagnetic MCs 3:24
13. "Critical Beatdown" Ced-Gee, Ultramagnetic MCs 3:42
14. "When I Burn" Ced-Gee, Ultramagnetic MCs 2:32
15. "Ced-Gee (Delta Force One)" Ced-Gee, Ultramagnetic MCs 2:49
 
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One for All is the debut album by American hip hop group Brand Nubian. It was released by Elektra Records on December 4, 1990. The album was highly acclaimed for its politically charged and socially conscious content.One for All charted at number 130 on the U.S. Billboard 200, spending 28 weeks on the chart.[10] It also reached number 34 on the BillboardTop Black Albums chart, on which it spent 40 weeks.[10] Alex Henderson of Allmusic writes of the album's commercial performance, "In black neighborhoods of New York and Philadelphia, [One for All] was actually a bigger seller than many of the platinumgangsta rap releases outselling it on a national level."One for All was a critical success upon its release.[11]Los Angeles Times writer Steve Hochman called it "an impressive debut" and commended "the power of the lessons delivered with style and creativity", stating "There's a playful ease to this record recalling the colorful experiments of De La Soul, and there's as much sexual boasting as Islamicteaching."In 1998, the album was selected as one of The Source's 100 Best Rap Albums and its lead single "Slow Down" was featured on the publication's 100 Best Hip-Hop Singles of All Time list.[13] One year later, Rolling Stone placed it on a list of the Essential Recordings of the 90's.[14] It was additionally ranked #2 on ego trip's 1999 list of "Hip Hop's 25 Greatest Albums by Year (1980–98)".

Track listing
1 "All for One"
2 "Feels So Good"
3 "Concerto in X Minor"
4 "Ragtime"
5 "To the Right"
6 "Dance to My Ministry"
7 "Drop the Bomb"
8 "Wake Up (Stimulated Dummies Mix)"
9 "Step to the Rear"
10 "Slow Down"
11 "Try to Do Me"
12 "Who Can Get Busy Like This Man..."
13 "Grand Puba, Positive and L.G."
14 "Brand Nubian"
15 "Wake Up (Reprise
in the Sunshine)"
16 "Dedication"
 
Ice Cube
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Death Certificate is the second studio album by American rapperIce Cube, released October 29, 1991, on Priority Records. Highly anticipated with over one million advanced orders,[1] the album was certified platinum in sales on December 20, 1991.[2]

Due to some of its racially charged content, and Ice Cube's acerbic statements on drug dealing, racial profiling, and the right to keep and bear arms, Death Certificate was the source of much controversy upon its release. In 2003, Priority Records re-releasedDeath Certificate with the bonus track "How to Survive in South Central," which originally appeared on the Boyz n the Hoodsoundtrack.

Track listing[edit]
The Death Side
No.
Title Producer(s) Length
1. "The Funeral (Intro)" Sir Jinx 1:37
2. "The Wrong Nigga to Fuck Wit" Sir Jinx, Ice Cube 2:48
3. "My Summer Vacation" Boogiemen, Ice Cube 3:56
4. "Steady Mobbin'" Boogiemen, Ice Cube 4:10
5. "Robin Lench (Interlude)" Boogiemen, Sir Jinx 1:13
6. "Givin' Up the Nappy Dug Out" Boogiemen, Ice Cube 4:15
7. "Look Who's Burnin'" Sir Jinx, Ice Cube 3:53
8. "A Bird In the Hand" Boogiemen, Ice Cube 2:17
9. "Man's Best Friend" Boogiemen, Ice Cube 2:06
10. "Alive On Arrival" Boogiemen, Ice Cube 3:11
11. "Death" (featuring Khalid Abdul Muhammad) Ice Cube 1:03
The Life Side
No.
Title Producer(s) Length
12. "The Birth" (featuring Khalid Abdul Muhammad) Sir Jinx, Ice Cube 1:21
13. "I Wanna Kill Sam" Sir Jinx, Ice Cube 3:22
14. "Horny Lil Devil" Boogiemen, Ice Cube 3:42
15. "Black Korea" Sir Jinx, Ice Cube 0:46
16. "True to the Game" Sir Jinx, Ice Cube 4:10
17. "Color Blind" (featuring Deadly Threat, Kam, the Maad Circle,King Tee and J-Dee) Boogiemen, Ice Cube 4:29
18. "Doing Dumb Shit" Boogiemen, Ice Cube 3:45
19. "Us" Sir Jinx, Ice Cube 3:43
20. "No Vaseline (N.W.A Diss)" Sir Jinx, Ice Cube 5:15
Total length:
Amerikkkas most wanted is better than this one!
 
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3 Feet High and Rising is the debut studio album from the American hip hop trio De La Soul, released March 14, 1989. It marked the first of three full-length collaborations with producer Prince Paul, which would become the critical and commercial peak of both parties. It is consistently placed on 'greatest albums' lists by noted music critics and publications.[1]Robert Christgau called the record "unlike any rap album you or anybody else has ever heard."[2] In 1998, the album was selected as one of The Source Magazine's 100 Best Rap Albums. It is listed on Rolling Stones' 200 Essential Rock Records and The Source's 100 Best Rap Albums (both of which are unordered). When Village Voice held its annual Pazz & Jop Critics Poll for 1989, 3 Feet High and Rising was ranked at #1, outdistancing its nearest opponent (Neil Young's Freedom) by 21 votes and 260 points. It was also listed on theRolling Stones The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time.

Track listing[edit]
All songs written by Paul Huston, David Jolicoeur, Vincent Mason and Kelvin Mercer, except where noted. Artists sampled by the group are officially credited as songwriters for tracks 3, 9, 14 and 20.

No. Title Writer(s) Length
1. "Intro" 1:41
2. "The Magic Number" 3:16
3. "Change in Speak" Huston, Jolicoeur, Mason, Mercer, Patrick Patterson,Steve Scipio 2:33
4. "Cool Breeze on the Rocks" 0:48
5. "Can U Keep a Secret" 1:41
6. "Jenifa Taught Me (Derwin's Revenge)" 3:25
7. "Ghetto Thang" 3:36
8. "Transmitting Live from Mars" 1:12
9. "Eye Know" Walter Becker, Donald Fagen, Huston, Jolicoeur, Mason, Mercer 4:13
10. "Take It Off" 1:53
11. "A Little Bit of Soap" 0:57
12. "Tread Water" 3:46
13. "Potholes in My Lawn" 3:50
14. "Say No Go" Sara Allen, Daryl Hall, Huston, Jolicoeur, Mason, Mercer,John Oates, Scipio 4:20
15. "Do as De La Does" 2:12
16. "Plug Tunin' (Last Chance to Comprehend)" Jolicoeur, Mercer 4:07
17. "De La Orgee" 1:14
18. "Buddy" (featuring Jungle Brothers and Q-Tip) Jonathan Davis, Nathaniel Hall, Huston, Jolicoeur, Mason, Mercer, Michael Small 4:55
19. "Description" Davis 1:32
20. "Me Myself and I" George Clinton, Huston, Jolicoeur, Mason, Mercer,Philippé Wynne 3:50
21. "This Is a Recording 4 Living in a Fulltime Era (L.I.F.E.)" 3:10
22. "I Can Do Anything (Delacratic)" 0:41
23. "D.A.I.S.Y. Age"
De la soul is dead is better than this IMOP.
 
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Only Built 4 Cuban Linx... is the solo debut album of American rapper and Wu-Tang Clan member Raekwon, released on August 1, 1995, by Loud Records and RCA Records
Upon its release, Only Built 4 Cuban Linx... debuted at number four on the
Billboard 200 chart, and number two on theTop R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart, while selling 130,000 copies in its opening week.[3] The album was certified gold by theRecording Industry Association of America (RIAA) on October 2, 1995,[4] and according to Nielsen Soundscan, it has sold 1.1 million copies in the United States alone.[5] Although it failed to acquire the same initial sales success as previous Wu-Tang solo albums, Cuban Linx achieved greater critical praise, with many complimenting its cinematic lyricism and production.

Only Built 4 Cuban Linx... has received acclaim from music critics and writers over the years, with many lauding it as one of the greatest hip hop albums of all time. Cuban Linx is the most acclaimed solo Wu-Tang work.
[6] In 2012, Rolling Stone magazine placed it at number 480 on their 500 Greatest Albums of All Time list.
Track listing

All songs produced by RZA.
No. Title Length
1. "Striving for Perfection" 1:43
2. "Knuckleheadz" (featuring Ghostface Killah &
U-God) 4:03
3. "Knowledge God" 4:24
4. "
Criminology" (featuring Ghostface Killah) 3:47
5. "Incarcerated Scarfaces" 4:42
6. "
Rainy Dayz" (featuring Ghostface Killah & Blue Raspberry) 6:02
7. "Guillotine (Swordz)" (featuring Inspectah Deck, Ghostface Killah & GZA) 4:22
8. "Can It Be All So Simple (Remix)" (featuring Ghostface Killah) 5:38
9. "Shark Niggas (Biters)" 1:38
10. "Ice Water" (featuring Ghostface Killah &
Cappadonna) 3:38
11. "Glaciers of Ice" (featuring Masta Killa & Ghostface Killah) 5:20
12. "Verbal Intercourse" (featuring Nas & Ghostface Killah) 3:31
13. "Wisdom Body" (featuring Ghostface Killah) 2:38
14. "Spot Rusherz" 3:13
15. "
Ice Cream" (featuring Method Man, Ghostface Killah & Cappadonna) 4:13
16. "Wu-Gambinos" (featuring Method Man, RZA, Masta Killa & Ghostface Killah) 5:39
17. "Heaven & Hell" (featuring Ghostface Killah) 4:56
Man this strength of this album can never be duplicated.
 
OK top 5 Hip Hop Albums that changed the game completely. some of them were already up there but here you go.
1.
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2.
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3.
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4.
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5.
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Livin' Like Hustlers is the debut album by the rap group Above the Law, released in February 1990. Production for the album came from Dr. Dre (who was in N.W.A at the time), as well as Above the Law and LayLaw. In 1998, the album was selected as one of The Source's 100 Best Rap Albums Ever.

Track listing
  1. "Murder Rap" – 4:14
  2. "Untouchable" – 3:45
  3. "Livin' Like Hustlers" – 5:45
  4. "Another Execution" – 4:21
  5. "Menace to Society" – 4:33
  6. "Just Kickin' Lyrics" – 4:22
  7. "Ballin'" – 4:19
  8. "Freedom of Speech" – 4:20
  9. "Flow On (Move Me No Mountain)" – 3:57
  10. "The Last Song" [feat. N.W.A.] – 6:21
 
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Only Built 4 Cuban Linx... is the solo debut album of American rapper and Wu-Tang Clan member Raekwon, released on August 1, 1995, by Loud Records and RCA Records
Upon its release, Only Built 4 Cuban Linx... debuted at number four on the
Billboard 200 chart, and number two on theTop R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart, while selling 130,000 copies in its opening week.[3] The album was certified gold by theRecording Industry Association of America (RIAA) on October 2, 1995,[4] and according to Nielsen Soundscan, it has sold 1.1 million copies in the United States alone.[5] Although it failed to acquire the same initial sales success as previous Wu-Tang solo albums, Cuban Linx achieved greater critical praise, with many complimenting its cinematic lyricism and production.

Only Built 4 Cuban Linx... has received acclaim from music critics and writers over the years, with many lauding it as one of the greatest hip hop albums of all time. Cuban Linx is the most acclaimed solo Wu-Tang work.
[6] In 2012, Rolling Stone magazine placed it at number 480 on their 500 Greatest Albums of All Time list.
Track listing

All songs produced by RZA.
No. Title Length
1. "Striving for Perfection" 1:43
2. "Knuckleheadz" (featuring Ghostface Killah &
U-God) 4:03
3. "Knowledge God" 4:24
4. "
Criminology" (featuring Ghostface Killah) 3:47
5. "Incarcerated Scarfaces" 4:42
6. "
Rainy Dayz" (featuring Ghostface Killah & Blue Raspberry) 6:02
7. "Guillotine (Swordz)" (featuring Inspectah Deck, Ghostface Killah & GZA) 4:22
8. "Can It Be All So Simple (Remix)" (featuring Ghostface Killah) 5:38
9. "Shark Niggas (Biters)" 1:38
10. "Ice Water" (featuring Ghostface Killah &
Cappadonna) 3:38
11. "Glaciers of Ice" (featuring Masta Killa & Ghostface Killah) 5:20
12. "Verbal Intercourse" (featuring Nas & Ghostface Killah) 3:31
13. "Wisdom Body" (featuring Ghostface Killah) 2:38
14. "Spot Rusherz" 3:13
15. "
Ice Cream" (featuring Method Man, Ghostface Killah & Cappadonna) 4:13
16. "Wu-Gambinos" (featuring Method Man, RZA, Masta Killa & Ghostface Killah) 5:39
17. "Heaven & Hell" (featuring Ghostface Killah) 4:56


Still have the original purple tape
 
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The Infamous is the second studio album by the American hip hop duo Mobb Deep. It was released on April 25, 1995, by Loud Records. The album spent 18 weeks on the US Billboard 200 for peaking at number 15, and it also spent 34 weeks on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums charts for peaking at number 3. The Infamous was a certified Gold, with sales by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) on June 26, 1995. Since its initial release, The Infamous has earned additional critical praise and has been widely regarded as a cornerstone album of New York hardcore rap. Allmusic's Steve Huey gave it a five star rating, and commented "The Infamous is Mobb Deep's masterpiece, a relentlessly bleak song cycle that's been hailed by hardcore rap fans as one of the most realistic gangsta albums ever recorded [...] it has all the foreboding atmosphere and thematic sweep of an epic crime drama.

Track listing
No. Title Writer(s) Producer(s) Length
1. "The Start of Your Ending (41st Side)" Albert Johnson, Kejuan Muchita Mobb Deep 4:24
2. "The Infamous Prelude" 2:12
3. "Survival of the Fittest" Johnson, Muchita Mobb Deep 3:43
4. "Eye for a Eye (Your Beef Is Mines)" (featuring Nas andRaekwon) Johnson, Muchita, Nasir Jones, Cory Woods Mobb Deep 4:54
5. "Just Step Prelude" Johnson, TaJuan Perry 1:06
6. "Give Up the Goods (Just Step)" (featuring Big Noyd) Johnson, Muchita, Jonathan Davis, Perry, Mayfield Small, Jr. The Abstract 4:02
7. "Temperature's Rising" (featuring Crystal Johnson) Johnson, Muchita, Davis, Patrice Rushen,Freddie Washington The Abstract, Mobb Deep (co.) 5:00
8. "Up North Trip" Johnson, Muchita Mobb Deep 4:58
9. "Trife Life" Johnson, Muchita, Michael Henderson Mobb Deep 5:19
10. "Q.U. - Hectic" Johnson, Muchita Mobb Deep 4:55
11. "Right Back at You" (featuring Ghostface Killah, Raekwon and Big Noyd) Johnson, Muchita, Dennis Coles, Woods, Perry Mobb Deep, Schott Free (co.) 4:52
12. "The Grave Prelude" 0:30
13. "Cradle to the Grave" Johnson, Muchita Mobb Deep 5:16
14. "Drink Away the Pain (Situations)" (featuring Q-Tip) Johnson, Muchita, Davis, The Headhunters The Abstract, Mobb Deep (co.) 4:44
15. "Shook Ones Pt. II" Johnson, Muchita Mobb Deep 5:24
16. "Party Over" (featuring Big Noyd)
 
ArrestedDevelopment3Years%2C5Months%262DaysintheLifeOf....jpg


3 Years, 5 Months & 2 Days in the Life Of... is the debut album by American hip hop group Arrested Development, released on March 24, 1992.
3 Years, 5 Months & 2 Days in the Life Of... was released to widespread critical acclaim and was later voted as the best album of the year in The Village Voice's Pazz & Jop critics' poll.Entertainment Weekly's James Bernard praised it as a "fresh-sounding debut album" and referred to Arrested Development as "the anti-gangsta" and "perhaps rap's most self-reflective act. Greg Kot of the Chicago Tribune wrote that the group "displays unusual worldliness, wisdom and awareness on its debut, immediately establishing itself as a major new voice in hip-hop", noting Speech's social themes and rejection of "macho boasting and gangster posing"In a negative assessment, Robert Christgau of The Village Voice assigned the album a "dud" rating and wrote that the album was "not horrible by any means" but "too often the beats shambled and the raps meandered",though he would later revise his rating to single out "Tennessee" as a "choice cut".

Retrospectively, Steve Huey of AllMusic wrote that the rise of gangsta rap abruptly put an end to what seemed to be a "shining new era in alternative rap" heralded by 3 Years and that the album, while not "quite as revolutionary as it first seemed", was nonetheless "a fine record that often crosses the line into excellence", further crediting it as "a major influence on a new breed of alternative Southern hip-hop, including Goodie Mob, Outkast, and Nappy Roots".[2]

Track listing
  1. "Man's Final Frontier" – 2:39
  2. "Mama's Always on Stage" (Speech) – 3:25
  3. "People Everyday" (Speech) – 4:57
  4. "Blues Happy" – 0:45
  5. "Mr. Wendal" (Speech) – 4:06
  6. "Children Play with Earth" – 2:39
  7. "Raining Revolution" (Speech) – 3:25
  8. "Fishin' 4 Religion" (Speech) – 4:06
  9. "Give a Man a Fish" (Headliner/Speech) – 4:22
  10. "U" (Speech) – 4:59
  11. "Eve of Reality" – 1:42
  12. "Natural" (Speech) – 4:18
  13. "Dawn of the Dreads" (Speech) – 5:17
  14. "Tennessee" (Speech) – 4:32
  15. "Washed Away" (Speech) – 6:24
  16. "People Everyday [Metamorphosis Mix]" (Speech) – 4:55
 
220px-Raekwon_only.jpg

Only Built 4 Cuban Linx... is the solo debut album of American rapper and Wu-Tang Clan member Raekwon, released on August 1, 1995, by Loud Records and RCA Records
Upon its release, Only Built 4 Cuban Linx... debuted at number four on the
Billboard 200 chart, and number two on theTop R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart, while selling 130,000 copies in its opening week.[3] The album was certified gold by theRecording Industry Association of America (RIAA) on October 2, 1995,[4] and according to Nielsen Soundscan, it has sold 1.1 million copies in the United States alone.[5] Although it failed to acquire the same initial sales success as previous Wu-Tang solo albums, Cuban Linx achieved greater critical praise, with many complimenting its cinematic lyricism and production.

Only Built 4 Cuban Linx... has received acclaim from music critics and writers over the years, with many lauding it as one of the greatest hip hop albums of all time. Cuban Linx is the most acclaimed solo Wu-Tang work.
[6] In 2012, Rolling Stone magazine placed it at number 480 on their 500 Greatest Albums of All Time list.
Track listing

All songs produced by RZA.
No. Title Length
1. "Striving for Perfection" 1:43
2. "Knuckleheadz" (featuring Ghostface Killah &
U-God) 4:03
3. "Knowledge God" 4:24
4. "
Criminology" (featuring Ghostface Killah) 3:47
5. "Incarcerated Scarfaces" 4:42
6. "
Rainy Dayz" (featuring Ghostface Killah & Blue Raspberry) 6:02
7. "Guillotine (Swordz)" (featuring Inspectah Deck, Ghostface Killah & GZA) 4:22
8. "Can It Be All So Simple (Remix)" (featuring Ghostface Killah) 5:38
9. "Shark Niggas (Biters)" 1:38
10. "Ice Water" (featuring Ghostface Killah &
Cappadonna) 3:38
11. "Glaciers of Ice" (featuring Masta Killa & Ghostface Killah) 5:20
12. "Verbal Intercourse" (featuring Nas & Ghostface Killah) 3:31
13. "Wisdom Body" (featuring Ghostface Killah) 2:38
14. "Spot Rusherz" 3:13
15. "
Ice Cream" (featuring Method Man, Ghostface Killah & Cappadonna) 4:13
16. "Wu-Gambinos" (featuring Method Man, RZA, Masta Killa & Ghostface Killah) 5:39
17. "Heaven & Hell" (featuring Ghostface Killah) 4:56


I was waiting for this to be on there!

I was gonna call BS on the list if it wasn't
 
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1. "Intro" Christopher Wallace, Sean Combs Sean "Puffy" Combs 3:24
2. "Things Done Changed" Wallace, Dominic Owen, Kevin Scott Darnell Scott 3:58
3. "Gimme the Loot" Wallace, Osten Harvey Easy Mo Bee 5:04
4. "Machine Gun Funk" Wallace, Harvey Easy Mo Bee 4:17
5. "Warning" Wallace, Harvey Easy Mo Bee 3:40
6. "Ready to Die" Wallace, Harvey Easy Mo Bee 4:24
7. "One More Chance" Wallace, Norm Glover, Reginald Ellis, Chucky Thompson, Combs Bluez Brothers, Chucky Thompson, Combs 4:43
8. "Fuck Me (Interlude)" Wallace, Combs Combs 1:31
9. "The What" (featuring Method Man) Wallace, Clifford Smith, Harvey Easy Mo Bee 3:57
10. "Juicy" Wallace, Peter Philips, Combs, Jean Oliver Poke, Combs (co.) 5:02
11. "Everyday Struggle" Wallace, Glover, Ellis Bluez Brothers 5:19
12. "Me & My Bitch" Wallace, Glover, Ellis, Thompson, Combs Bluez Brothers, Chucky Thompson, Combs 4:00
13. "Big Poppa" Wallace, The Isley Brothers Chucky Thompson, Combs (co.) 4:13
14. "Respect" Wallace, Diana King, Harry Casey Poke, Combs 5:21
15. "Friend of Mine" Wallace, Harvey Easy Mo Bee 3:28
16. "Unbelievable" Wallace, Christopher Martin DJ Premier 3:43
17. "Suicidal Thoughts"
 
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1. "Intro" Christopher Wallace, Sean Combs Sean "Puffy" Combs 3:24
2. "Things Done Changed" Wallace, Dominic Owen, Kevin Scott Darnell Scott 3:58
3. "Gimme the Loot" Wallace, Osten Harvey Easy Mo Bee 5:04
4. "Machine Gun Funk" Wallace, Harvey Easy Mo Bee 4:17
5. "Warning" Wallace, Harvey Easy Mo Bee 3:40
6. "Ready to Die" Wallace, Harvey Easy Mo Bee 4:24
7. "One More Chance" Wallace, Norm Glover, Reginald Ellis, Chucky Thompson, Combs Bluez Brothers, Chucky Thompson, Combs 4:43
8. "Fuck Me (Interlude)" Wallace, Combs Combs 1:31
9. "The What" (featuring Method Man) Wallace, Clifford Smith, Harvey Easy Mo Bee 3:57
10. "Juicy" Wallace, Peter Philips, Combs, Jean Oliver Poke, Combs (co.) 5:02
11. "Everyday Struggle" Wallace, Glover, Ellis Bluez Brothers 5:19
12. "Me & My Bitch" Wallace, Glover, Ellis, Thompson, Combs Bluez Brothers, Chucky Thompson, Combs 4:00
13. "Big Poppa" Wallace, The Isley Brothers Chucky Thompson, Combs (co.) 4:13
14. "Respect" Wallace, Diana King, Harry Casey Poke, Combs 5:21
15. "Friend of Mine" Wallace, Harvey Easy Mo Bee 3:28
16. "Unbelievable" Wallace, Christopher Martin DJ Premier 3:43
17. "Suicidal Thoughts"
:rolleyes2:
Note: Artists with four or more albums.
 
Too $hort
LifeIsTooShort.jpg

Life Is...Too Short is the second studio album by Too Short. The album was released in 1988,[5] by Jive Records and RCA Records, although it appeared as a Dangerous Music/RCA Records release until Jive Records logos appeared on the release on October 25, 1989, after it became successful. It is currently his highest-selling album to date, being certified double platinum by the RIAA for sales of over 2 million copies.
Track listing[edit]
No. Title Producer(s) Length
1. "Life Is...Too Short" 4:34
2. "Rhymes" 4:17
3. "I Ain't Trippin'" 6:41
4. "Nobody Does it Better" 6:15
5. "Oakland" 4:41
6. "Don't Fight the Feelin'"(featuring Danger Zone & Rappin' 4-Tay) 8:18
7. "CussWords" 7:44
8. "City of Dope" 5:31
9. "Pimp the Ho" 5:54
10. "Outro" 0:59
My favorite rap album of all time. Dude was raw as hell, crazy thing is, tracks 1-5 didn't have any cuss words. :eek2:
 
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Criminal Minded is the debut album by Boogie Down Productions, released on March 3, 1987 on B-Boy Records. Considered a highly influentialhip hop album,[1] it is also credited with providing a prototype for the East Coastgangsta rap which emerged in the following decades.
In 1998, the album was selected as one of The Source's 100 Best Rap Albums . About.com ranked Criminal Minded #9 in its list of greatest hip hop albums of all time. In 2003, the album was ranked number 444 on Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 500 greatest albums of all time.
Vibe (12/99, p. 157) - Included in Vibe's 100 Essential Albums of the 20th Century. Vibe (6/02, p. 108) - Ranked #3 in Vibe's "Top 10 rap albums."
Complex Music named the song "South Bronx" as the #9th best diss song of hip-hop.

Track listing
# Title Songwriters Producer(s) Performer (s) Length
1 "Poetry" L. Parker, S. LaRock Ced Gee, DJ Scott La Rock, KRS-One KRS-One 5:01
2 "South Bronx" L. Parker, S. LaRock Ced Gee, DJ Scott La Rock, KRS-One, Partner Lee Smith D-Nice, DJ Scott La Rock, KRS-One 5:10
3 "9mm Goes Bang" L. Parker, S. LaRock DJ Scott La Rock, KRS-One, Partner Lee Smith KRS-One 4:19
4 "Word from Our Sponsor" L. Parker, S. LaRock Ced Gee, DJ Scott La Rock, KRS-One, Partner Lee Smith KRS-One 3:52
5 "Elementary" L. Parker, S. LaRock DJ Scott La Rock, KRS-One DJ Scott La Rock, KRS-One 4:07
6 "Dope Beat" L. Parker, S. LaRock Ced Gee, DJ Scott La Rock, KRS-One, Partner Lee Smith KRS-One, DJ Scott La Rock 5:12
7 "Remix for P Is Free" L. Parker, S. LaRock Ced Gee, DJ Scott La Rock, KRS-One KRS-One 4:20
8 "The Bridge Is Over" L. Parker, S. LaRock Ced Gee, DJ Scott La Rock, KRS-One, Partner Lee Smith KRS-One 3:26
9 "Super-Hoe" L. Parker, S. LaRock Ced Gee, DJ Scott La Rock, KRS-One DJ Scott La Rock, KRS-One 5:30
10 "Criminal Minded" L. Parker, S. LaRock Ced Gee, DJ Scott La Rock, KRS-One KRS-One 5:17
11 "Scott LaRock Mega-Mix"* S. LaRock DJ Scott La Rock DJ Scott La Rock 6:49
 
220px-Goodie-mob-soul-food-1995.jpg


Soul Food is the acclaimed debut album from American rap group Goodie Mob, released by LaFace Records November 7, 1995. Soul Food received critical acclaim for its raw, Southern, socially conscious lyrics and original production from Organized Noize. In 1996, it was certified gold as sales stand at over 500,000 units in the U.S. Soul Food, along with Outkast's Southernplayalisticadillacmuzik, has been regarded as one of the two albums that brought southern hip hop to the mainstream, and it is regarded as a southern classic.

Track listing[edit]
No. Title Writer(s) Length
1. "Free" Thomas Burton, Organized Noize 1:23
2. "Thought Process" (featuring André 3000 of OutKast) Robert Barnett, André Benjamin, Thomas Burton, Cameron Gipp, Willie Knightion, Organized Noize 5:09
3. "Red Dog (Skit)" 0:23
4. "Dirty South" (featuring Big Boi of OutKast & Cool Breeze) King George, Antwan Patton, Organized Noize 3:34
5. "Cell Therapy" Robert Barnett, Thomas Burton, Cameron Gipp, Willie Knighton, Organized Noize 4:37
6. "Sesame Street" Robert Barnett, Thomas Burton, Cameron Gipp, Willie Knighton, Organized Noize 4:36
7. "Guess Who" Robert Barnett, Thomas Burton, Cameron Gipp, Willie Knighton, Organized Noize 4:49
8. "Serenity Prayer (Skit)" 0:09
9. "Fighting" (featuring Joi) Robert Barnett, Thomas Burton, Cameron Gipp, Michael Johnson, Willie Knighton 5:45
10. "Blood (Skit)" 0:53
11. "Live at the O.M.N.I." Robert Barnett, Thomas Burton, Cameron Gipp, Willie Knighton, Organized Noize 4:58
12. "Goodie Bag" Robert Barnett, Thomas Burton, Cameron Gipp, Willie Knighton, Organized Noize 4:25
13. "Soul Food" (featuring Sleepy Brown) Robert Barnett, Brandon Bennett, Marc Benno, Bill Boatman, Thomas Burton, Cameron Gipp, Willie Knighton, Pigmeat Markham, Leon Russell, Organized Noize 3:56
14. "Funeral (Skit)" 0:54
15. "I Didn't Ask to Come" Robert Barnett, Thomas Burton, Cameron Gipp, Willie Knighton, Organized Noize 4:08
16. "Rico (Skit)" 0:07
17. "The Coming" (featuring Witchdoctor) Robert Barnett, Thomas Burton, Cameron Gipp, Eric Johnson, Willie Knighton, Organized Noize 5:47
18. "Cee-Lo (Skit)" 0:28
19. "The Day After" (featuring Roni) Robert Barnett, Thomas Burton, Cameron Gipp, Willie Knighton, Organized Noize 5:00
 
Down71 - The Getaway has got to be top 10 storytelling songs
Oh what a dumb dumb I got yum yummed on a dead end..

Fuck it, posting the lyrics. Bone spit so fast a lot of people missed the Cool lyrics of this song

Down 71 - The Getaway lyrics


SH_Mtg_j7VieEYg4KtMoBCn2cWzeIIsQrfnRDpA1x35uvuQ3J86H9fnOzG_EZChOAJ89qwEcFQ=s256-c-e100-nu

Down '71 (The Getaway)
Bone Thugs-n-Harmony

Bizzy Bone
We had to get 'em up wid two thugs
Runnin' side by side wid number one
Murda mo drop my guage on 'em
When the po-po chase,
If they catch me barehanded I'm done
Rip's gripping the six shot pump, so spill it
Copper lettin' the lead off
Copper thought that he had me caught
Little Layzie blew his head off (AAwwwwwww)
Get him up, and get up,
The bullets they start to get lit up,
Number one best start duckin' wid ah gun already buckin'
Bust me lead on the double glock 'n
Where the fiends roll up for rocks 'n,
This perfect getaway,
From the pigs when I peel and I hit the fences,
Rippin' up the trench and,
I'm bailing while they trailing
Better in hell than in the cell
And it ain't no telling where the coppers be dwelling,
One had spotted me, pick up ah piece and shot a me
But I practice what I preach
And see that these slugs up in his body got him,
Run, wid smoke coming from the barrel ah me gun
Hit the bend, oh what the dum dum I got yum yummed on the dead end
They set in, then they lead in,
They wanting me off in the coffin
Cops from everywhere was yellin and wailin' I went unconcious,
From the stompin' taking ah loss, and waking up in the coffin,
And without no stallin'
Cell I was tossed in to be arreigned at dawning,
Looking in the eyes of a judge,
He knew right where to put that thug
Made to be so, wid no parole
In the hole but I won't budge
Sent me to deathrow,
Watchin' the time by fly past
But Rip'll be sittin' mindless never spineless, in silence
Hoping I die fast, but chill,
Never do, sleepa, gotta get put that on all me reefer
Somehow must beat ya, so peep out the creep or the reaper will meet ya

Layzie Bone
Bailin' on ah mission, flippin' the script
Betta check what the wind just blew in
Betta think again, it's a preacher wid ah grin
On ah mission for revenge, wid that Mack-10
Little nigga Rip, had to empty the clip
Gotta pump them slugs up in them cops
Steady made 'em drop glock went pop pop
Goin' out like a thug on the double glock,
Back from hell and ready to bail,
Time to hit they trail cause they wanted my nigga fried
Holdin' the Bible when I got a grenade I'ma go inside the squad,
Gettin' ready for the rumble
When I heard them mumbles, pullin' me guage in laughter
Keep buckin 'em faster all I was thinkin'
When I see them bustas scatter
Betta watch out for them buckshots
Cause them can't fade me guage,
Gotta bust them souls in the grave,
So I'm buckin' them straight to the pave, can't be saved,
I'm bucking, little Ripster reinforcements comin' in faster
Blast give my nigga double Zs the Mack-10
Lettin' the gun gun blaze on they ass,
Gotta rip in them chests through vests
Mack-10s, sawed off eruptions, got plenty ammunition
No missing listen destruction I'm bustin'
Cause I'm making that getaway, bound to getaway,
Niggas got to escape and it's never to late
When you dash and tryna' break
Nigga just can't test the Bone fate
We steadily runnin' duckin'
Comin' up to the front door barri-caded,
And I pulled ah grenade, tossed to the door, let it explode
And we made it, creepin' in the courtyard
So Krayzie feelin' safety coming
Hittin' the fence and jump in it quick
From Krayzie's tech-9 bullets humming.

Narrator
Well it seems as if them two boys Bizzy and Layzie
Done got theyselves into another jam
(Well I'd love to see them boys get theyself outta this one)

Krayzie Bone
Soon as I went in the smoke, rollin' real fast like a dog
And began wid a rage and the guage can't let go
They done labelled my nigga psychotic
Bitches is got him sittin' on deathrow,
Scoping out the tower peeping the scene
So when my niggas trail,
Screaming out one eighty seven and bail,
Gotta get my nigga Rip out that cell, it's all over now,
How my nigga number one disguised as the preacher,
Won't be pullin' ah Bible mission for survival nigga so I creep the
Tech millimetre, somebody done pull the alarm now it's on,
Slaughterin' Bone, sprayed off the tech
Gotta let 'em know which way was on,
We got gone but them police was pullin' up quick nigga what's up
Quick bust in first when he hit that fence niggas got cut the fuck up,
We steady bucking, steady duckin' buckin' while I was jumpin'
All we was thinking is don't get caught
Nigga like me get the gun running
Gunning fronting wid thugs gotta get to the smug
Turn around and we pump slugs, put 'em in the mud,
And all across my face was the red that lay in blood,
Dodging the who, make the gun flip wid ah swoo,
Bailing back on wid my troops,
I'm runnin' wid 4 crazy niggas
That's down wid they niggas they ain't scared to shoot,
Now I'm rolling, no more than ah half ah mile we get stopped
Cops surround Bone, we load glocks
And squeeze say fuck all these road blocks
Busted ah U, then put that bitch in reverse
And I get the swish and I push the button
That boy came out the trunk and,
Put it in drive see that Souljah boy bucking,
Back in the other direction,
Po-po came quick then heat up,
Niggas blast at each other,
Open up they doors and they get they feet up,
I jumped outta the car, had to jump over the hood,
Cause I'm headin' straight for the woods
So the niggas they follow behind me
We getaway smooth, ah nigga made good
Came up quick to the hideout
Wait until midnight till we ride out,
Hit ah car so we can drive out,
While we waited we all got fried out, fool
If youse a thuggish ruggish thug nigga scream mo,
Took one ah my niggas off deathrow now we got one mo to go


I still know 80 percent of this album by heart
Bought it the very first day it came out.

 
220px-DeLaSoul3FeetHighandRisingalbumcover.jpg

3 Feet High and Rising is the debut studio album from the American hip hop trio De La Soul, released March 14, 1989. It marked the first of three full-length collaborations with producer Prince Paul, which would become the critical and commercial peak of both parties. It is consistently placed on 'greatest albums' lists by noted music critics and publications.[1]Robert Christgau called the record "unlike any rap album you or anybody else has ever heard."[2] In 1998, the album was selected as one of The Source Magazine's 100 Best Rap Albums. It is listed on Rolling Stones' 200 Essential Rock Records and The Source's 100 Best Rap Albums (both of which are unordered). When Village Voice held its annual Pazz & Jop Critics Poll for 1989, 3 Feet High and Rising was ranked at #1, outdistancing its nearest opponent (Neil Young's Freedom) by 21 votes and 260 points. It was also listed on theRolling Stones The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time.

Track listing[edit]
All songs written by Paul Huston, David Jolicoeur, Vincent Mason and Kelvin Mercer, except where noted. Artists sampled by the group are officially credited as songwriters for tracks 3, 9, 14 and 20.

No. Title Writer(s) Length
1. "Intro" 1:41
2. "The Magic Number" 3:16
3. "Change in Speak" Huston, Jolicoeur, Mason, Mercer, Patrick Patterson,Steve Scipio 2:33
4. "Cool Breeze on the Rocks" 0:48
5. "Can U Keep a Secret" 1:41
6. "Jenifa Taught Me (Derwin's Revenge)" 3:25
7. "Ghetto Thang" 3:36
8. "Transmitting Live from Mars" 1:12
9. "Eye Know" Walter Becker, Donald Fagen, Huston, Jolicoeur, Mason, Mercer 4:13
10. "Take It Off" 1:53
11. "A Little Bit of Soap" 0:57
12. "Tread Water" 3:46
13. "Potholes in My Lawn" 3:50
14. "Say No Go" Sara Allen, Daryl Hall, Huston, Jolicoeur, Mason, Mercer,John Oates, Scipio 4:20
15. "Do as De La Does" 2:12
16. "Plug Tunin' (Last Chance to Comprehend)" Jolicoeur, Mercer 4:07
17. "De La Orgee" 1:14
18. "Buddy" (featuring Jungle Brothers and Q-Tip) Jonathan Davis, Nathaniel Hall, Huston, Jolicoeur, Mason, Mercer, Michael Small 4:55
19. "Description" Davis 1:32
20. "Me Myself and I" George Clinton, Huston, Jolicoeur, Mason, Mercer,Philippé Wynne 3:50
21. "This Is a Recording 4 Living in a Fulltime Era (L.I.F.E.)" 3:10
22. "I Can Do Anything (Delacratic)" 0:41
23. "D.A.I.S.Y. Age"

Came here to post this.
 
220px-Dilladonutscover.jpg


1. "Donuts (Outro)" 0:11
2. "Workinonit" 2:57
3. "Waves" 1:38
4. "Light My Fire" 0:35
5. "The New" 0:49
6. "Stop" 1:39
7. "People" 1:24
8. "The Diff'rence" 1:52
9. "Mash" 1:31
10. "Time: The Donut of the Heart" 1:38
11. "Glazed" 1:21
12. "Airworks" 1:44
13. "Lightworks" 1:55
14. "Stepson of the Clapper" 1:01
15. "The Twister (Huh, What)" 1:16
16. "One Eleven" 1:11
17. "Two Can Win" 1:47
18. "Don't Cry" 1:59
19. "Anti-American Graffiti" 1:53
20. "Geek Down" 1:19
21. "Thunder" 0:54
22. "Gobstopper" 1:05
23. "One for Ghost" 1:18
24. "Dilla Says Go" 1:16
25. "Walkinonit" 1:15
26. "The Factory" 1:23
27. "U-Love" 1:00
28. "Hi." 1:16
29. "Bye." 1:27
30. "Last Donut of the Night" 1:39
31. "Welcome to the Show" 1:12

 
220px-The_Marshall_Mathers_LP.jpg

The Marshall Mathers LP is the third studio album by American rapper Eminem. It was released on May 23, 2000, by Aftermath Entertainment, Interscope Records, and Eminem's newly founded label, Shady Records in the United States,[1] and on September 11, 2000, by Polydor Records in the United Kingdom.[2] The album was produced mostly by Dr. Dre and Eminem, along with The 45 King, the Bass Brothers, and Mel-Man. Released a year after Eminem's breakout album The Slim Shady LP, the record features more introspective lyricism including the rapper's response to his sudden rise to fame and controversy surrounding his lyrics.

The album sold more than 1.76 million copies in the US in its first week alone, becoming the fastest-selling studio album by any solo artist in American music history.[3] This record was later broken after 15 years following the release of the album 25 by Adele, which sold over 2.433 million albums within three days of release in November 2015. In 2001, the album won the Grammy Award for Best Rap Album and was nominated for Album of the Year. Eminem lost the latter to jazz-rock duo Steely Dan and their album Two Against Nature.[4] The album was certified diamond by the Recording Industry Association of America in March 2011 for shipping 10 million copies in the United States.[5][6] By December 2016, the album had sold over 12 million copies in the United States and more than 35 million copies worldwide.

Ihe Marshall Mathers LP has been ranked as one of the greatest hip hop albums of all time by Rolling Stone,[82]Time,[83] and XXL. In 2015, the album was ranked number 81 by About.com on their list of "100 Best hip-hop albums of all time".[87] The album was also included in the book 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die.

Tracklist
Public Service Announcement 2000 0:25
Kill You 4:24
Stan 6:44
Paul (Skit) 0:10
Who Knew 3:47
Steve Berman 0:53
The Way I Am 4:50
The Real Slim Shady 4:44
Remember Me? 3:38
I'm Back 5:10
Marshall Mathers 5:20
Ken Kaniff (Skit) 1:01
Drug Ballad 5:00
Amityville 4:14
B**** Please II 4:48
Kim 6:17
Under The Influence 5:22
Criminal
 
220px-Dilladonutscover.jpg


1. "Donuts (Outro)" 0:11
2. "Workinonit" 2:57
3. "Waves" 1:38
4. "Light My Fire" 0:35
5. "The New" 0:49
6. "Stop" 1:39
7. "People" 1:24
8. "The Diff'rence" 1:52
9. "Mash" 1:31
10. "Time: The Donut of the Heart" 1:38
11. "Glazed" 1:21
12. "Airworks" 1:44
13. "Lightworks" 1:55
14. "Stepson of the Clapper" 1:01
15. "The Twister (Huh, What)" 1:16
16. "One Eleven" 1:11
17. "Two Can Win" 1:47
18. "Don't Cry" 1:59
19. "Anti-American Graffiti" 1:53
20. "Geek Down" 1:19
21. "Thunder" 0:54
22. "Gobstopper" 1:05
23. "One for Ghost" 1:18
24. "Dilla Says Go" 1:16
25. "Walkinonit" 1:15
26. "The Factory" 1:23
27. "U-Love" 1:00
28. "Hi." 1:16
29. "Bye." 1:27
30. "Last Donut of the Night" 1:39
31. "Welcome to the Show" 1:12


This shit brings tears to my eyes! You can feel him crying for his life on this whole joint. Then to die within a week of it dropping. Shit is heartbreaking.
 
OK top 5 Hip Hop Albums that changed the game completely. some of them were already up there but here you go.
1.
22254_public_enemy_it_takes_a_nation_of_millions_to_hold_us_back.jpg

2.
SlickRickTheGreatAdventuresofSlickRick.jpg

3.
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4.
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5.
R-314701-1425506136-3488.jpeg.jpg
i love gang starr. LOVE gang starr. but step into the arena isn't even their best album, much less a top 5 of all of time hip hop album. daily operation is better that this one . by the way i still think step into the arena is a dope album.
 
Came here to post this.
de la soul is dead , took out a 357 revolver shot it's d.a.i.s.y. image of itself in the head and reinvent de la. the y came with a new sound, identity and still had some CRAZY single. ring ring ring. saturdays. millie pulled a pistol on santa is some ill but sad story telling. bitties in the bk lounge is funny as shit.
 
Heavy D
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Big Tyme is the second album by American hip hop group Heavy D & the Boyz.
Track listing[edit]
  1. "We Got Our Own Thang"- 3:50
  2. "You Ain't Heard Nuttin Yet"- 4:28
  3. "Somebody for Me"- 5:03
  4. "Mood for Love"- 5:27
  5. "Ez Duz It Do It Ez"- 3:59
  6. "A Better Land"- 4:55
  7. "Gyrlz, They Love Me"- 4:52
  8. "More Bounce"- 4:53
  9. "Big Tyme"- 4:56
  10. "Flexin'"- 3:51
  11. "Here We Go Again, Y'all"- 4:05
  12. "Let It Flow"- 3:45
Real close between this and Peaceful Journey.

dn1SeU.jpg
 
220px-Raekwon_only.jpg

Only Built 4 Cuban Linx... is the solo debut album of American rapper and Wu-Tang Clan member Raekwon, released on August 1, 1995, by Loud Records and RCA Records
Upon its release, Only Built 4 Cuban Linx... debuted at number four on the
Billboard 200 chart, and number two on theTop R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart, while selling 130,000 copies in its opening week.[3] The album was certified gold by theRecording Industry Association of America (RIAA) on October 2, 1995,[4] and according to Nielsen Soundscan, it has sold 1.1 million copies in the United States alone.[5] Although it failed to acquire the same initial sales success as previous Wu-Tang solo albums, Cuban Linx achieved greater critical praise, with many complimenting its cinematic lyricism and production.

Only Built 4 Cuban Linx... has received acclaim from music critics and writers over the years, with many lauding it as one of the greatest hip hop albums of all time. Cuban Linx is the most acclaimed solo Wu-Tang work.
[6] In 2012, Rolling Stone magazine placed it at number 480 on their 500 Greatest Albums of All Time list.
Track listing

All songs produced by RZA.
No. Title Length
1. "Striving for Perfection" 1:43
2. "Knuckleheadz" (featuring Ghostface Killah &
U-God) 4:03
3. "Knowledge God" 4:24
4. "
Criminology" (featuring Ghostface Killah) 3:47
5. "Incarcerated Scarfaces" 4:42
6. "
Rainy Dayz" (featuring Ghostface Killah & Blue Raspberry) 6:02
7. "Guillotine (Swordz)" (featuring Inspectah Deck, Ghostface Killah & GZA) 4:22
8. "Can It Be All So Simple (Remix)" (featuring Ghostface Killah) 5:38
9. "Shark Niggas (Biters)" 1:38
10. "Ice Water" (featuring Ghostface Killah &
Cappadonna) 3:38
11. "Glaciers of Ice" (featuring Masta Killa & Ghostface Killah) 5:20
12. "Verbal Intercourse" (featuring Nas & Ghostface Killah) 3:31
13. "Wisdom Body" (featuring Ghostface Killah) 2:38
14. "Spot Rusherz" 3:13
15. "
Ice Cream" (featuring Method Man, Ghostface Killah & Cappadonna) 4:13
16. "Wu-Gambinos" (featuring Method Man, RZA, Masta Killa & Ghostface Killah) 5:39
17. "Heaven & Hell" (featuring Ghostface Killah) 4:56
Shit bangs hard to this day. One of the greatest hip-hop albums of all time!!!! I'll smack fire out da ass of anyone who don't fuckin agree. :lol::lol::lol:

TbULZ9.jpg
 
220px-DasEFXDeadSeriousalbumcover.jpg

Dead Serious is the debut studio album of American hip hop duo Das EFX, released April 7, 1992 on East West Records and distributed through Atlantic Records.The album was a certified hit, peaking at 16 on the U.S. Billboard 200 chart, topping the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albumschart for five weeks and reaching platinum sales by 1993. Well-received upon its release, Dead Serious has since been regarded by music writers as a significant and influential album in hip hop.

Track listing
  • All tracks produced by Solid Scheme, except where noted.
No. Title Length
1. "Mic Checka" 4:54
2. "Jussummen" 3:29
3. "They Want EFX" 3:39
4. "Looseys" 2:50
5. "Dum Dums" 3:50
6. "East Coast" 4:29
7. "If Only" 4:02
8. "Brooklyn to T-Neck" 4:01
9. "Klap Ya Handz" (Produced by Dexx) 4:07
10. "Straight Out the Sewer"
Man I remember this album. They want EFX was so hype people didn't really pay attention to the rest of the album.

gR58T3.jpg
 
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