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1996: The Best Year in Hip Hop Albums
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Amber's Wily
1996: The Best Year in Hip Hop Albums
05.13.2008 | Amber Wiley

I realize these are fighting words. And I’m OK with that. Regardless, I'm claiming that for my generation of late 20-somethings, 1996 was the best year in hip hop albums.

I build this argument on the basis that the illest combination of albums was dropped that year by artists we still respect today. Granted, these albums may not be the best of a particular artist or group’s career. I am not arguing that Stakes is High is better than Three Feet High and Rising, nor am I making the argument that It Was Written can touch Illmatic in terms of a hip hop classic. Hell on Earth cannot match the breakthrough appeal of The Infamous. But taken together these albums present a provocative argument for the establishment of 1996 as the pinnacle year in hip hop album production and releases. Many of the albums listed below need no argument- Reasonable Doubt, Illadelph Halflife, and ATLiens are prime examples that are, for all intents and purposes, self-explanatory for the average hip hop head.

This list is about more than just the obvious, though. Critical shifts in the way we listened to and appreciated our music artists happened in 1996. For instance, 1996 introduced us (for better or worse) to the prototypical female rap acts of the late ‘90s, who would influence the industry for all female rap acts to follow by either emulating or rejecting the standards of- you guessed it - Lil’ Kim and Foxy Brown. Both of their debut solo albums, Hardcore and Ill Na Na, respectively, dropped in 1996, and whether or not you agreed with their sexually explicit lyrics and the obvious ghostwriting going on, you could not deny their prominence on the hip hop scene and the tremendous impact they had on the hip hop game and how women defined themselves within it. Counter their debut albums with another released by a strong female figure, Bahamadia, whose Kollage received less publicity and is still underrated today.

This can be partially blamed for what many see as the monotony of her flow (a characterization shared by Guru, who helped produce the album), but her consistency and her self-asserted wordplay skills (“Wordplay” is also a single on that album) are due their fair share of recognition, and that album is part of what makes 1996 a great year in hip hop albums, despite being overshadowed in the mainstream by Kim and Foxy. Then there was Lauryn Hill, who added another dimension to this matrix as the female component of The Fugees, whose album The Score literally overshadowed their previous work Blunted on Reality released in 1994. Lauryn helped blur hip hop and the newly coined “neosoul” with the multidimensionality of her flow and songstress skills.

Granted, singles from CDs dropped in 1995 were floating around in 1996 (think AZ's "Sugar Hill" from the Do or Die or “Ice Cream” from Raekwon’s Only Built 4 Cuban Linx), as were singles from albums to be released in 1997 (Camp Lo’s “Luchini AKA This Is It” from Uptown Saturday Night is one example), blurring the chronology of singles to album release dates. However, the list of albums dropped in 1996 is crucial, and I am done with introducing my argument. Much more can said about these artists and the way their music interacted and elevated the hip hop game in 1996, but now it is time for the list to speak for itself.

1. Jay-Z - Reasonable Doubt
2. Outkast - ATLiens
3. The Roots - Illadelph Halflife
4. Makavelli - The Don Killuminati: 7 Day Theory
5. Fugees - The Score
6. Nas - It Was Written
7. De La Soul - Stakes is High
8. Tupac - All Eyez on Me
9. U.G.K. - Ridin Dirty
10. Lil Kim - Hardcore
11. Foxy Brown - Ill Na Na
12. Bahamadia - Kollage
13. A Tribe Called Quest - Beats, Rhymes, and Life
14. Ghostface Killah - Ironman
15. Jeru tha Damaja - Wrath of the Math
16. Ras Kass - Soul On Ice
17. Smoothe the Hustler - Once Upon A Time in America
18. Redman - Muddy Waters
19. O.G.C. - The Storm
20. Heltah Skeltah - Nocturnal
21. Mobb Deep - Hell on Earth
22. Busta Rhymes -The Coming
23. E-40 - Hall of Game

Bonus hip hop influenced albums in other genres:
24. R+B Album: Aaliyah - 1 in a Million
25. Soundtrack Album: The Nutty Professor OST

That being said, maybe I am stuck in the mid-90s and hold my deepest love for hip hop there. Maybe it was that life changing concert I attended in December of 1996 – Tribe, Roots, and Da Bush Babees - that solidified the year for me. But, if you disagree with 1996 as the illest album release year in hip hop, let it be known. You have to support your conclusions though. And beat that list.

Comments Add Comment
First and foremost, props to Amber for such a dope blog...though I do respect and love alot of the albums listed, I have to disagree and give '94 the greatest year in hip hop albums.

It actually starts in 1993....Nov. 9, 1993 to be exact.  This was the day that Wu-Tang Clan's Enter The 36 Chambers and ATCQ's Midnight Marauders albums were released.  As most of you who faithfully read this site should know, these records had a MAAAJOR impact on the year to come b/c of how these albums were constructed. Simply stated...'94 was the last true year that hip hop albums were considered a body of art...the last true year artist released material for the betterment of the craft and not based on commercial aspirations.

Here's a rundown of some of the jewels that dropped that year:

1. Nas - Illmatic
2. Jeru Tha Damaja - Tha Suns Rises In The East
3. Gangstarr - Hard To Earn
4. Digable Planets - Blowout Comb
5. Outkast - Southernplayalisticadillacmuzik
6. The Notorious B.I.G. - Ready To Die
7. Pete Rock & CL Smooth - The Main Ingredient
8. Redman - Dare Is A Darkside
9. Method Man - Tical
10. Common - Resurrection
11. Scarface - The Diary
12. MC Eiht - We Come Strapped
13. Casual - Fear Itself

This is also the year before the advent of the "collabo". For the exception of the obligatory posse cuts, none of these albums were flooded with random guest spots.  Each MC made it known they were the focal point. I compare the era of '93 - '96 (commonly known as the 2nd Golden Era) with the albums made in the early 70's. They paid great attention to detail...the lyrics and production were at there peak in insight and innovation and some of the artist who made albums in these times still hold the benchmark to what's considered a classic.




Posted: May 16, 2008, 03:15:PM
by DJAbleKane
Hmmm.  This is a decent list but i find most of these entries pale in comparison to 1993 or 1996.  In fact, of that second golden era you astutely speak of, i think 1994 was the weakest year.  None of the 94 releases listed, save Illmatic, were as ground breaking or critically acclaimed as albums like "The Score", "Illadelph Halflife", or "Ironman".  These three albums alone changed the face of music as we know it today as two of them ushered in neo-soul and neo soul minded hip and the third is often cited as why producers like Kanye West and 9th Wonder started using soul samples.

Also, Four or five of the artists/albums from your list were followed up by superior projects in 1996.  Namely, "It Was Written", "Wrath of the Math", "Atliens", and "Muddy Waters".  I concede your point that music was definitely making heavy strides for the commercial aspect, but these four projects in particular are superior to their predecessors.  The artistry was still on the rise in my opinion. 

I gotta ride with Amber on this one...1996 it is...

Posted: May 16, 2008, 03:33:PM
by Workingclasshero
I still think that 1988 sets the bar for groundbreaking hip hop look at this line up
 
Public Enemy - Nation of Millions
BDP - By All Means Nessasacary
MC Lyte - Lyte As A Rock
Big Daddy Kane - Long Live The Kane
Bizmarkie - Goin' Off
N.W.A - Straight Outta Compton
EPMD - Strictly Business
Eric B and Rakim - Follow the Leader
Jazzy Jeff and Fresh Prince - He's the DJ I'm the Rapper
Kid N Play - 2 Hype
2 live Crew - Move Somethin'
Easy E - We Want Easy
Slick Rick - The great Adventures Of Slick Rick
 
All of these MC's are bar setter for there areas.  NWA is the Standard of west coast Hip hop.  Lyte is the standard for the female MC's, Kane and the R are the standards for East Coast Hip hop.  Every popular rapper out right now raps about the things that got 2 live crew censored 20 years ago!  Kid and Play and Freash Prince and the standard for cross over hip hop ( white people have loved Will Smith for 20 years and you know you still break out the Kid-n-play Kick step every time a old school set comes on!!!! )
 
93 -96 might have been the Renassance, but the GOLDEN age of hip hop is 1988.

Posted: May 16, 2008, 06:21:PM
by blackricflair
I'm going to have to strongly disagree with some the points you made, WorkingClass.  Namely, the one saying that most of the albums I listed were not as groundbreaking and critically acclaimed as the ones you mentioned.  Not taking anything away from those records but an album like "Southernplayalistic...." put the south on the map and DEFINED their culture, style, & sound for the rest of world.  "Ready To Die"...plain & simple...brought the east coast back from a hip hop landscape dominated by the west coast. (see the infamous 1995 Source Awards)

Even though some of the albums on my list may have been followed by superior projects, (none of which are the ones you mentioned for the exception of "Muddy Waters".....blasphemy for saying "Wrath of the Math" and "It Was Written" were better albums lol)  Alot of those albums are deemed classic and standard to which those artists are held to.

Hip Hop hasn't exactly taken a nosedive (well now it has) but there hasn't been another year with as many groundbreaking, dominant, influential albums a year since. '94 was the year hip hop was reborn.

Posted: May 17, 2008, 10:29:AM
by DJAbleKane
Wow Wow Wow.  Amber, you did your thing with this one.  1996 was it.  I am loving the blog topic, but I am not loving the list rankings. lol.  Without getting too deep into it, "Ironman" shoud be much higher on there, (it's behind "Beat Rhymes..."Huh?).  Also, I would say The Score was the bifggest/best album of that year.

As for the comment topics.  I always argue with my brother on the "golden era" of hip hop.  Was it 1988-1993 or was it 1994-1999?  To compare 94 and 96 tho is a draw to me, because a lot of it was the same era, stepping out of the party (saaay 93') and into the streets, (94').

Just to play along tho, ill say 96' wins by the slightest of margins, due to a higher volume of quality music from different artists.

Posted: May 19, 2008, 12:04:PM
by VernonFycke
I'm going to have to strongly disagree with some the points you made, WorkingClass.  Namely, the one saying that most of the albums I listed were not as groundbreaking and critically acclaimed as the ones you mentioned.  Not taking anything away from those records but an album like "Southernplayalistic...." put the south on the map and DEFINED their culture, style, & sound for the rest of world.  "Ready To Die"...plain & simple...brought the east coast back from a hip hop landscape dominated by the west coast. (see the infamous 1995 Source Awards)

Even though some of the albums on my list may have been followed by superior projects, (none of which are the ones you mentioned for the exception of "Muddy Waters".....blasphemy for saying "Wrath of the Math" and "It Was Written" were better albums lol)  Alot of those albums are deemed classic and standard to which those artists are held to.

Hip Hop hasn't exactly taken a nosedive (well now it has) but there hasn't been another year with as many groundbreaking, dominant, influential albums a year since. '94 was the year hip hop was reborn.


I hear you.  But check what i'm saying here.  While "Southernplayalistc" might have "defined" southern culture, style, and sound (highly debatable, btw) "ATLiens" was just the better album.  That is undeniable fact. 

"Wrath of The Math" is second only to Group Home's "Living Proof" as Primo's finest hour as a producer.

And whereas Illmatic will forever be held up on a pedastal as the the epitome of hip hop.  "It Was Written" was just a better album by a more mature, accomplished, intelligent, and lyrically advanced emcee.  Again...fact. 

We're talking about the best year in hiphop albums.  I think a lot of times folks get caught up in the nostalgia of a particular period (not you necessarily) and let the general sentiment of the time (like how "mainstream" things were getting) cloud what year actually had the objectively better albums. 

The data doesnt lie.

Posted: May 19, 2008, 01:58:PM
by Workingclasshero
My natural inclination was to strongly disagree with this post but first and foremost I have to cosign DjAbleKane's props. Very dope to even attempt this list... With that said, '88, '93 and '94 are all better years. In that order. I would also be remised if I didn't mention at least of the classic '96 albums left off your list. Bush Babees Gravity is easily in the top ten and arguably in the top five. But I will be here all day if I were to try to reorder your list or any of the other list in this forum for that matter... Also one should not sleep on 2000; Supreme Clientèle, Like Water, and Voodoo just to name a few. Do the know. All in all this blog is wild nice. I can definitely dig it.

Posted: May 21, 2008, 06:51:PM
by Brolic Scholar
I just ran across this blog while trying to compile songs from '96 to put on my ipod(im up to 179 tracks) and you hit it right on the head,I myself find '96 to be the greatest year in hip hop as well tho my list would shape a little bit differently

1.2Pac - All Eyez On Me
2.Outkast - ATLiens
3.Nas - It Was Written
4.Heltah Skeltah - Nocturnal
5.Xzibit - At The Speed Of Life
6.Jay-Z - Reasonable Doubt
7.Lil Kim - Hardcore
8.Keith Murray - Enigma
9.Redman - Muddy Waters
10.Jeru - Wrath Of The Math

Honorable Mentions

O.G.C. - Da Storm
Do Or Die - Picture This
Master P-Ice Cream Man
Mo Thugs - Family Scriptures
Nine - Cloud Nine






Posted: June 14, 2008, 05:04:AM
by fukdainduztree
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