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View Full Version : name some none new york classic albums that get over looked


DRAGONSAMURAI
05-31-2005, 03:00 AM
most classic albums outside the east coast gets over looked hell even albums just outside new york gets overlooked so what albums do you guys think needs more recognition?

The-Scorpion
05-31-2005, 03:38 AM
Arested Development-3 Years 5 Months & 2 Days in the Life of--This 1992 debut was both a blessing and a curse to Speech and his talented band of hip hop/boho Gypsies. While the music here hasn't aged a day in the last decade, the message of positivity, communal living, self esteem, self reliance and spiritual oneness has been so copied and diluted by lesser artists that "3 Years, 5 Months...." doesn't sound as revolutionary as it once did. Secondly, this LP was so popular and the band became so ubiquitous that the listening public quickly tired of them and missed out on a superior and brilliant followup (1994's "Zingalamaduni") and that is a terrible injustice. The standard set by this album has also made it nearly impossible for Speech to maintain a successful solo career, to most fans he will always just be "that guy from Arrested Development".


PM.Dawn--Of The Heart, Of The Soul And Of The Cross: The Utopian Experience--Back in 1991, when the Cordes brothers released their beautiful debut, the notoriously prickly hip-hop community had a collective fit. How dare that fat kid, who spoke in parables, call himself a rapper? Sampling Spandau Ballet? Talking all that hippie crap? The hardcore fans filed PM Dawn in the alternative section, but the open-minded embraced the dreamy soundscape without questioning its origins. If De La Soul worked with Brain Wilson, you'd be halfway to figuring out the flowing melodies and stream-of-consciousness raps (OK, Prince Be never was much of a microphone fiend) that PM Dawn unleashed. Years later this CD stands up, if only because the rest of the world has caught up to the confusion that Be felt in his troubled soul and translated into music so well. Simply lovely stuff

Geto Boys-We Can't Be Stopped--This was the first full length album I heard from Houston's Geto Boys and it is still as hard edged today as it was 11 years ago when I first heard it. I recommend buying this album as it has the classic Geto Boys line up (Scarface, Bushwick Bill, and Willie D) and they tackle a broad range of topics on this album, making it interesting upon subsequent listenings.

Scareface-Diary--For those who don't know who this rapper is, he was part of the Geto Boys, which formed around the late 80's-early 90's(DUH!). They were also best known for their incredible story-telling on 'My Mind's Playin' Tricks on Me'. In 1994, rap was at the top of the charts. With classic albums like Illmatic, Enter the Wu-Tang, Hard to Earn, Ready to Die, Enta Da Stage and more, Scarface put out an INCREDIBLE album that proved to others that the South could do it too.

Without the The Diary, rap wouldn't be quite the same.
Slick Rick was best known for his story-telling. Scarface is also best known for telling stories but with a gritty pace and dark mood. And believe me, his rapping technique is something quite different. He has an extraordinary powerful voice which will totally deafen your ears if you have this up loud. His voice is incredibly strong and while rappers like KRS-One, Ice Cube, Erick Sermon etc. have powerful voices, I reckon Scarface can contend with them all.

Twista-Adrenaline Rush-- Twista's debut "Adrenaline Rush" (1997) is an excellent album. Twista's fastpaced unique flow matched with some very sick beats, and a few well chosen guest appearances make this an entertaining and memorable album. Traxster's production is tight. Running in at thirteen tracks (including intro), its a short and sweet album

Bone Thugs-N-Harmony-E 1999 Eternal--It wouldnt be a list without this group.alot of midwestern rap is over looked but i'm gonna get to that later.This is probably one of the most underrated rap albums in hip hop history.think of it as a rap version of pink floyds dark side of the moon album.this album doesn't sound dated at all,it still sounds fresh even to this day.with its contradictory subject matter of the occult,and god.and its contradictory mix of harmony,and dark gangsta rap sing song hybrid.the album has this dark melodic,consistent atmosphere for the whole album,each song flowing into the next like water.the album is like one verry dark long song.

The Dayton Family-F.B.I--I can't say enough good things about this album. The Dayton Family is the most slept-on group in hip-hop. From beginning to end, and everything in between, F.B.I. is UNBELIEVABLE. I feel The Dayton Family really needs to get more props. These brothers are hard for sure, but they ARE NOT one-dimensional, as most gangsta rap groups are. This album is EASILY a classic. In my vast hip-hop collection, this CD ranks in the top. Please, trust me, if you don't have this album, BUY IT NOW. You DEFINITELY will not be disappointed.


Southernplayalisticcadilacmuzic,ATliens,Aquemeni--face it these 3 albums are outstanding!.even stankonia,and the love below/speakerboxxx.Following their ascension from the Atlanta music scene in 1994, Outkast have spent the greater part of a decade creating innovative and challenging music that disproves the persistent rumor of hip-hop's imminent demise,and the south's lack of musical skill. That's because Andre 3000 and Big Boi are artists of the first order. Coming off a run of five critically acclaimed albums, plus a successful collaboration with their extended clan, the Dungeon Family, Big Boi and Dre presented a MASSIVE collection of hits.

Goodie mob-Soulfood--This CD will sound great 20 years from today. It has everything it takes to become a classic - great beats, great vocals, great sound, and creative lyrics. At least 7 tracks can compete for "the best track" title - Thought Process, Dirty South, Soul Food, I didn't ask to come, Call Therapy, The day After, and Guess Who. And the rest are excellent too...
Goodie Mob manage to sound hardcore without loosing the funk
If you are a fan of southern rap, I advise you to check this CD out if you haven't listen to this CD. My most favorite track of this album is "Soul Food," which describes my most favorite dish of all time. There is a catchy line on this song which I do admire up to this date. It is when Cee-Lo raps, "A heap of helping of fried chicken, macaroni and cheese and collard greens, too big for my jeans, smoke steams up under the lid that's on the pot, ain't neva have a lotta, thankful for the little that I got, Why not be, fast-food got me feeling sick, them niggaz think they slick, by trying to make this bullshit affordable, I thank the Lord got my voice, was recordable."

UGK-Riddin Dirty--I'm unsure if The Source reviewed this album back in '96, but if they did, I'm sure the reviewer(s) gave it a rating which just didn't do it justice (they rarely do unless it's something bubblin from the east). I grew up olistening to U.G.K. but this album came out around the time when I already appreciated the culture of hip hop and rap, so I really kind of "came of age" on their hard to swallow debut cd (circa 91)...and still, 10 years later, "Ridin Dirty" is still in my TOP PICKS of best, classic albums of our generation, or any period.

Listening to the introspective, sometimes too real lyrics from the minds of Bun B and Pimp C will do a mind job on you -- these brothers have been through some stuff. Topics that get touched are dealing in the streets, scandalous women, zoning out on how the human experience can be cut short, shiest family members, being afraid to sleep because of the streets, and how the high slice of American pie is basically unattainable for "particular individuals." At times, these cats get so deep, you can't help but think that their venting on this album is a mental mind release, and almost a silent plea for help, and if not help, at least, silently begging the listener to just lend them an ear so you can understand what goes on in their average day. This is "TRILL MUSIC".......uh so to speak

Anywayz These brothers are talented, especially the incredible Pimp C who handled a little more than half of the slick Bluesy WAH WAH guitar driven production on the album.And Bun B's insance breath control, sharp words, and often witty lyricism remains one of the best in the game, even by wordy east coast emcees standards- Bun B is still holdin. It's a screaming shame that Pimp C was locked up recently...check out their back catalog, as well

Eightball & MJG-On Top of the World--well all that i said about ugk can be applied to this album.


Master-P-Ghetto Dope--This cd truly is a southern rap classic and a rap classic in general. These were definitely the days when NoLimit ruled the rap world then getting rid of some of their best talent and of course KLC who always made some of the best beats for the tank soldiers they're mearly a thing of the past but this is a great album for anyone who wants to know why they ruled the rap industry for most of the 90's, i still pop this one in every now and then just to hear how impactful they were.Back in the mid-to-late nineties, after Big and Pac got killed and Death Row collapsed, the question popped up: who would grab for the crown of gutter rap? Enter No Limit records, hailing not from the east or west, but from the dirty south. Looking for lushly produced, keyboard-laden, bling bling, catchy-choruses? Look elsewhere (Cash Money). One of the things I have always respected about No Limit is that they are simply the best if you want straight up, funky, violent, vulgar gangsta rap.

It is not overproduced, polished and mainstream like, say, Dr. Dre(not an insult). This is bare-bones, hard-hitting and straight from the uneducated southern ghettos (not meant as a generalization). The ever-reliable Beats By The Pound bring very simple but very hard and memorable beats to the table, some of the best around. Ghetto D is, among all others, the cohesive essence of the No Limit sound. Some might call the cd "ghetto dumb", but this album, Master P, and No Limit in general are an acquired taste but when you get used to their sound there is nothing like them, no record label sounds like the NL. Truly a classic

Tru-Tru 2 Da Game--ditto for this album,need i say more?









more to come

Darkchild
05-31-2005, 05:25 AM
CBo - Enemy Of The State
Mc Eiht - Death Threatz
Tech n9ne - Anghellic
Living Legends - The Undaworld

Godsunz - Bacardi & Smoke (Possibly one of the best EP's of all time)
Xzibit - 40 dayz & 40 nights
Spice 1 - Immortalised
Daz - Dogg Pound Gangsta LP
UGK - Ridin Dirty
8Ball & MJG - On Top Of The World (Possibly the best southern album of ALL TIME)

The-Scorpion
05-31-2005, 06:00 AM
i have a part2 list coming up,............hey i'm feeling nostaljak give me a break

Synalyptic
05-31-2005, 08:57 AM
TQ-they Never saw me coming
TQ-listen
Outlawz-ride wit us or collide us
Outlawz-Outlawz 4 life
Swollen Members-heavy
swollen members-monsters in the closet
swollen members-balance
swollen members-bad dreams

eliex1
05-31-2005, 05:21 PM
The Arsonists albums
Anything from Psycho+Logical Records
Last Emperor

Synalyptic
05-31-2005, 05:32 PM
yea,the arsonists are sick,also,any everlast album

Chick-N-Bone
05-31-2005, 08:46 PM
geto boys - the foundation

do or die - d.o.d.

tampa tony - ynot

tom g - forgot the name

The-Scorpion
05-31-2005, 09:36 PM
ah yes my part 2 list i told you it was comin


Comptons Most Wanted-Music to driveby--Say what you will about the obvious choices of "The Chronic" and "Doggystyle", my choice will always be Music to Driveby. This album exemplifies what not only great Gangsta rap should sound like but what good hip-hop should sound like as well.
Production is cutting edge as well and again. After the uninspired Staight Checkn'em album, this album returns to the original formula that made It's a Compton Thang so great - creative use of samples. "Hood Done Took Me Under" is the classic example. Eiht rips the Isaac Hayes sample used by Easy Mo B for Notorious BIG a few years later for "Warning", and a good decade before Ludacris used it again on his "Chicken & Beer" album. To top it all off, the loop was vastly superior to either of these uses or numerous others. Or better yet, check the clever use of scratches and snippets on "Who's ****ing Who?" where Tim Dog's voice is used to scorch himself. The complete bastardization of BDP's classic "South Bronx" was even a bold manuver with, to my surprise, absolutely no response from Krs-ONE.And then theres the cold blooded song "Dead Men Tell No Lies". And to wrap it all up, you get the smooth instrumental "Music To Driveby" to round it all out.

Above The Law-Livin' Like Hustlers
,Black Mafia Life,Uncle Sam's Curse,and a verry honorable mention to,Time Will Reveal--Above the law are: Big Hutch, Kmg, Go-Mack and Laylaw, who, on their first 3 and best albums, told us gang stories about their hood, with an original style. Driven by a funk-filled feeling and mood, the album, with samples taken from old seventies soul records, never got too much attention from the hip-hop audience at that time.

Nevertheless, these was real good albums

Spice-1--No doubt many of you have slept on Spice 1. But you must know, Spice 1 is the real deal. You will have a hard time finding a fresher, more hardcore brotha kick real gangsta rhymes. He will crack you in the head with a bottle of St. Ides just for maddoggin' him. Spice 1 is straight West Coast, and comes correct with vivid street tales, social commentary, menace, and wit, accompanied by gangstered out G-funk bass moves. His flow is versatile and tight. He is not a man of just one style. Spice 1 can flip it quick, slow, Jamacian, etc. In addition, 1 was down with Tupac and Too-Short, so there's no doubt. And when he tells you that he's gonna 'kill your baby, your dog, and your Mutha F'in family', you know he means it. Spice 1 is also quite the metaphorical master on tracks like '187 Proof'.

The D.O.C.-No One Can Do It Better--The dicky Dicky DOC...........Long before Snoop Dogg, Eminem, or Xzibit came into the picture, Dr. Dre had already found the perfect MC in the D.O.C., a Texas transplant to Los Angeles. Before he tragically lost his vocal chords in an auto accident, the D.O.C. was easily one of the fiercest lyricists that the West Coast had ever witnessed--a combination of Ice Cube's scowling aggressiveness but balanced with a sophistication that would have rivaled KRS-One at his best. With a ragga-tinged flow, he could drop lyrical bombs with fury on "It's Funky Enough" or sublimely style for "The Formula." Dre supported the D.O.C. with a bevy of funk-laden tracks that were pre-Chronic, meaning that the feel was rough and rugged vs. wet and sticky. Had his voice survived, there's little doubt that the D.O.C. would have become one of Cali's greatest MCs ever. All the supporting evidence is on this album.

Da Lench Mob-Guerillas in tha Mist--ONE OF THE WEST COAST'S ALTERNATIVE TO PUBLIC ENEMY

This is an angry CD.
Almost all of the lyrics on this CD aredirected at someone. It was recorded in '92 ... There was a lot to be mad about-- and on this disc, it all comes out..... maybe to the point where it is almost.... almost... in self-parody....

But it's not. And the anger still resonates, and if this is not remembered as one of THE BEST CDs of the whole 'gangsta' era, it pretty much shows how messed up the world is. I still carry this CD in my car. I still listen to this once a week. In so many ways, it's my favorite rap CD....

If you've not heard it, and want to remember/realize how messed up the world is, buy this disc. If you want to have a CD that is dark.... buy this CD.... another disc from the same year that is pretty tight is the 'Menace II Society' soundtrack-- I'd buy that too... and then watch the movie....

It's all pretty haunting...

The Coup-Party Music--ANOTHER WEST COAST ALTERNATIVE TO PUBLIC ENEMY
Oakland duo the Coup (Boots and DJ Pam, the funkstress) rank in the top three as far as underrated rap groups of the '90s go. That said, because lead MC Boots has no problem suggesting that big corporations are colluding with Satan and that corrupt cops disgust him ("Pork and Beef" implores listeners to "throw a Molotov at the pigs"), this release won't sit well with the apolitical crowd. In fact, the original cover artwork for Party Music depicted the duo detonating the World Trade Center. It was immediately pulled following the events of September 11, 2001. Boots' revolution will obviously not be sanitized, and on the opening track "Everything" he lays down his manifesto: "Every cop is a corrupt one without no cash up in the trust fund.... Every tried man is innocent.... Every boss better run and hide." The list of witty, counterculture songs is long, from "5 Million Ways to Kill a CEO"--a crude exposé of corporate "politricks"--to the poignant "Get Up," where they team up with everybody's other fave raptivists, Dead Prez. Raging against machines and offering solutions to problems that plague low-income communities has never come in a funkier package--the sonic backdrop is mostly live funk instrumentation--and the sheer breadth of topics covered here makes the joints of most top-selling rappers seem inane and unsubstantial. Fans of Mos Def, KRS-One, and Public Enemy will get a rise out of this one.

Pharcyde-Bizarre Ride II the Pharcyde-- Like De La Soul's Three Feet High & Rising, the Pharcyde's 1992 debut came at a time when hip-hop was headed in Multiple directions (style wise), but the group was going somewhere else entirely. A crew of spunky b-boys armed with a self-deprecating sense of humor, the Pharcyde made an album that was fresh and profoundly honest.




i'll add more later

The-Scorpion
05-31-2005, 09:37 PM
keep in mind even though i'm only into hardcore rap,and alternative rap i'm still objective,even though i hate pure hip-hop............



EDIT: ok hate is A STRONG WORD,so i think its best for me to say pure hip-hop doesn't appeal to me like alternative-esque rap,and hardcore/gangsta rap does.

ronartest2004
05-31-2005, 09:47 PM
Luniz-Operation Stackola (I got 5 on it is played out,but that whole album is awesome)

Young Bleed-Balls And My Word (IF YOU DONT HAVE THIS ALBUM,BUY IT,OR GET IT SOME HOW) << I promise you will love this album.

Kurupt-Streetz Iz A Mutha (its kurupt,dont need to explain anymore)


Do Or Die-Picture This (Even with the old Bone beef,this album was great)



And I know you Said no East Coast...But I have to say IMO most underrated rapper of all time is AZ.

sawedoffgangsta1999
06-01-2005, 05:46 PM
master-p-down south hustlers
master-p-ice cream man
mystikal-mind of mystikal
211-hustlin pays the bills
tru-true
l.o.g.-camoflauged down
partners-n-crime-p-n-c-3
fiend-Won't Be Denied

DRAGONSAMURAI
06-01-2005, 08:56 PM
damn tish thats verry thurough.

The-Scorpion
06-02-2005, 07:48 AM
and i'm not even finish yet ,i'm going through my library,with my siblings and a friend of mine whom is a syndicated music columist.(uh...not that i needed the help or anything.)

BoneThugs4Eva3
06-02-2005, 08:02 AM
twista - adrenaline rush.......although this ISNT his debut album like the other guy said it is extremely underated and is an amazing album

dayton family - f.b.i........this album is sick and if u havent heard it yet go out and buy it cuz its worth every penny, cant believe they dont get more recognition

any tech n9ne album.......this guy always spits fire and every album he has ever put out is worth buyin, again cant believe that he doesnt get more recognition

most atmosphere albums - on most of the albums out he is amazing although there are exceptions, mostly all good

mf doom - mmm food - sweet album, he's gettin a little more recognition seeing as he has an article in xxl but still most dont know him and this album is dope as fuck

CHEYENNE
06-02-2005, 06:25 PM
twista - adrenaline rush.......although this ISNT his debut album like the other guy said it is extremely underated and is an amazing album
officialy it is his debut album

rc329
06-06-2005, 07:31 AM
I agree with alot those albums Tish listed.

Here some more

MC Ren - The Villain In Black
Frost - Smile Now, Die Later
Ice T - VI Return Of The Real (well all of Ice T's albums are good but this one was really slept on)
T.W.D.Y. - Lead The Way
Ray Luv - Forever Hustlin
Mac Mall - Untouchable
South Central Cartel - All Day Everyday

bonethugs4life2010
06-06-2005, 08:21 AM
blood in my eye-ja rule
gemini:good vs evil-krayzie bone

Felix Hernandez
06-06-2005, 09:44 AM
and i'm not even finish yet ,i'm going through my library,with my siblings and a friend of mine whom is a syndicated music columist.(uh...not that i needed the help or anything.)

I didn't see any disclaimer that mentions those are not your reviews, so are you trying to pass them off as your own?

Oliver Wang, for one, would be very upset at having his review of Compton's Most Wanted jacked. =[

The-Scorpion
06-07-2005, 06:26 AM
Oliver Wang, for one, would be very upset at having his review of Compton's Most Wanted jacked. =[actually i did make my own review of CMW.you must be talking about something else cause most of it are my reviews.also their really not reviews as they are thoughts on the albums

and theres more i'm gonna add.

Felix Hernandez
06-07-2005, 10:01 AM
Oliver Wang, for one, would be very upset at having his review of Compton's Most Wanted jacked. =[actually i did make my own review of CMW.you must be talking about something else cause most of it are my reviews.also their really not reviews as they are thoughts on the albums

and theres more i'm gonna add.

You must have similar...no, check that, identical ideas to countless other writers, because it took about 2 minutes to find half the reviews you say are yours, word for word, by other people. The other half I'm sure would take me roughly the same amount of time, if I was so inclined to search.

Sorry, as someone who makes his living writing, I find it highly offensive when some no talent fucktard tries to take credit for someone elses work.

The-Scorpion
06-08-2005, 01:10 AM
You must have similar...no, check that, identical ideas to countless other writers, .actually i do..........................otherwise i wouldn' have pick them.did you see who wrote the btnh review? yep its all mine.i pick statements that match mine.hell you could take my list and i wouldn't give a shit.now sit back and enjoy the list.and stop acting like this is the new york times.cause i sure as hell is not Stephen Glass,or Jayson Blair.now shut the fuck up you might learn something outside g-unit.you act like your the serpico of writing.

The-Scorpion
06-08-2005, 03:21 AM
marz-Lung Fu Mo She--INDUSTRIAL HIP-HOP ASSAULT!!! VERY GOOD. WORTH BUYING.i camed across this album when a friend of mine left it in mr ride.industrial rap has been done before but its such a raretyy to find it this good.

Tech9ne-Anghellic,and Absolute Power--Tech details scenes of crime, deceit, abortion, suicide, and more, with a clear-eyed sociological slant that Eminem would envy. At the same time, he employs numerous distinctive rapping techniques; rapid-fire repetition, shifting back and forth between tongue-twisters and short, declarative bursts, and continual flurries of unusual phrasing. In this manner, Tech adds a fresh sonic dimension to his sordid tales, ABSOLUTE POWER is a outstanding album but anghellic,is just sonicly better.their both outstanding cd's though.i will say that it takes longer to get into than Absolute power but its well worth the listen too. Tech has created 2 masterpieces.

MC Lyte-Ain't No Other where were you when this album dropped in 93.yeah sh'e new yor but i'll make a few exceptions.cause you gotta have a roughneck.

yo-yo-91 make way for the mother load-- way more agressive then mc lyte flow wise.then again it might be my west coast bias speaking

conscious daughters-Gamersdon't let their name fool you this is a gangsta rap album,and the best female gangsta rap album.BUT it does have a conscious but its told from the street side.its told from the streets perspective and not from an outsiders highbrow judgemental perspective.its cruely over looked.

Ghetto Twinz-No Pain No Gain not far fron Conscious daughters.ghetto twinz has a rythmic melodic flown,that still has a hard edge.

Too Short-Born To Mack,and Get In Where You Fit In-- Too Short's "Get in Where You Fit in" is an outstanding album. He uses he usual freaky ways and nasty rhymes with this one. He brings a special atmosphere to this album that is like no other before it. It is an excellent disc. but born to mack is slightly better.....yeah i said it.

Warren-G-Regulate...G Funk Era--oh my god i love this album!!.when i was 17 i use to bump this in my ride with the top down.(i'm glad i restored my candy apple red,and gold chrome 63 impala) .this album is both popular and over shadowed by the chronic. the chronic is out standing but regulate was just smooth as wine.it deserves more recognition.

Domino- if you like ghetto jam then you should like this whole album.his flow is so chilled and laid backdeffinatley forgotten and underrated.

rappin 4 tay-off on paroleanother smooth rapper from the bay....uh yay area.

DRAGONSAMURAI
06-08-2005, 03:24 AM
Tech9ne-Anghellic,and Absolute Power--Tech details scenes of crime, deceit, abortion, suicide, and more, with a clear-eyed sociological slant that Eminem would envy. At the same time, he employs numerous distinctive rapping techniques; rapid-fire repetition, shifting back and forth between tongue-twisters and short, declarative bursts, and continual flurries of unusual phrasing. In this manner, Tech adds a fresh sonic dimension to his sordid tales, ABSOLUTE POWER is a outstanding album but anghellic,is just sonicly better.their both outstanding cd's though.i will say that it takes longer to get into than Absolute power but its well worth the listen too. Tech has created 2 masterpieces.
conceptually anghellic is WAY better while absolute power is kinda overrated




*RUNS FOR COVER*

rc329
06-08-2005, 06:01 AM
I agree about Conscious Daughters' Gamers album man that album is so underrated it's criminal. Paris production was outstanding.

They had talent could actually rap and rapped about real shit unlike a lot of these new girls in rap.

I use to have that album I still looking to find it again.

Another thing about Conscious Daughters they have another album coming out and will be on Public Enemy's new album.

Felix Hernandez
06-08-2005, 09:34 AM
You must have similar...no, check that, identical ideas to countless other writers, .actually i do..........................otherwise i wouldn' have pick them.did you see who wrote the btnh review? yep its all mine.i pick statements that match mine.hell you could take my list and i wouldn't give a shit.now sit back and enjoy the list.and stop acting like this is the new york times.cause i sure as hell is not Stephen Glass,or Jayson Blair.now shut the fuck up you might learn something outside g-unit.you act like your the serpico of writing.

You're right, you "sure as hell is not Stephen Glass." At least Mr. Glass was big time, he was getting paid for his thefts. You're more like a non-profit plagiarizer. There won't be any movies made about your childish little antics.

Maybe we'll get lucky, however, and there will be a movie about how you couldn't live with yourself for stealing other peoples hard work, so you killed yourself, thus ridding the world of a no-talent waste of flesh. Spielberg could work absolute magic with that material.

DRAGONSAMURAI
06-11-2005, 02:18 PM
You must have similar...no, check that, identical ideas to countless other writers, .actually i do..........................otherwise i wouldn' have pick them.did you see who wrote the btnh review? yep its all mine.i pick statements that match mine.hell you could take my list and i wouldn't give a shit.now sit back and enjoy the list.and stop acting like this is the new york times.cause i sure as hell is not Stephen Glass,or Jayson Blair.now shut the fuck up you might learn something outside g-unit.you act like your the serpico of writing.

You're right, you "sure as hell is not Stephen Glass." At least Mr. Glass was big time, he was getting paid for his thefts. You're more like a non-profit plagiarizer. There won't be any movies made about your childish little antics.

Maybe we'll get lucky, however, and there will be a movie about how you couldn't live with yourself for stealing other peoples hard work, so you killed yourself, thus ridding the world of a no-talent waste of flesh. Spielberg could work absolute magic with that material.get over yourself and add to the discussion at hand or leave my thread.pm tish about your gripes don't bring it here.

DRAGONSAMURAI
06-11-2005, 02:21 PM
I agree about Conscious Daughters' Gamers album man that album is so underrated it's criminal. Paris production was outstanding.

They had talent could actually rap and rapped about real shit unlike a lot of these new girls in rap.

I use to have that album I still looking to find it again.

Another thing about Conscious Daughters they have another album coming out and will be on Public Enemy's new album.i thought i was the only one that remember that group damn i miss the 90's Sooooo much

jackie121121
09-13-2005, 07:26 PM
South Central Cartel - All Day Everyday

All South Central Cartel albums, in my opinion S.C.C. is one of the most under appreciated groups of all time

Mr.Me
09-14-2005, 04:22 AM
Rappin 4 Tay - Off Parole
C-Bo - Enemy Of The State
Hot Boyz - Guerrilla Warfare
Yukmouth - Thugged Out
Frayser Boy - Gone On That Bay
36 Mafia - 2nd Chapter World Domination
Geto Boys - Da Good Da Bad and Da Ugly
Dogg Pound - Dogg Food
2pac - Until The End Of Time
Eazy-E - Str8 Off The Muthaphukkin Streets Of Compton
Soulja Slim - The Streets Made Me
C-Murder - Life Or Death
Fiend - Street Life
Mack 10 - Bang Or Ball
Young Bleed - My Own
Krayzie Bone - Thug Mentality 1999
Bizzy Bone - The Gift
Turk - Youngin Thuggin
Ice Cube - Lethal Injection
Ras Kass - Rasasination
Outkast - Aquemini
E-40 - Federal
The Click - Game Related
Kurupt - Streetz Iz A Mutha..
Lil Wayne - Lights Outs
Philly's most Wanted - Get Down Or Lay Down
Beanie Sigel - The Truth
Juvenile - 400 Degreez
Bone Thugs - Art Of War
Bone Thugs - E.1999 Eternal
Master P - Ice Cream Man
MC Ren - Kizz My Black Azz
B.G. - Its All On U Volume 1
UGK - Super Tight
T.I. - Urban Legend
Youngbloodz - Against Da Grain
Ghetto Mafia - Straight From The Dec
Brotha Lynch Hung - Season Of Da Siccness
Warren G - Regulate the G-Funk Era
Warren G- Take A Look Over Your Shoulder
DJ Quik - Safe & Sound
DJ Quik - Rythm-al-lism

j__price
09-14-2005, 10:19 AM
Naughty By Nature, dam near all their albums lol
Common - one day it'll all make sense
TQ, just anythin he does

2 Face
09-16-2005, 10:32 AM
AZ Do or Die album thats a hot as cd

j__price
09-17-2005, 01:57 PM
AZ Do or Die album thats a hot as cd

its suppsed to b none new york albums
otherwise yea all AZ's albums wud go in there lol

MistaGrifo
09-18-2005, 11:29 PM
The psycho realM- Self titled, Book I and II
Cypress hilL- Self titled, Black sundaY, Temples of booM, and IV

2 Face
09-19-2005, 05:45 AM
twista - Adrenaline Rush

Illmatic Gemini
09-19-2005, 06:40 AM
...


I immediately thought of pretty much any AZ album...but someone beat me to it ^^.

Confused by the thread title...is it supposed to read "Non-NY Albums"?

Oh well...either way, AZ dropped some heat. lol.

DRAGONSAMURAI
09-24-2005, 06:20 PM
All South Central Cartel albums, in my opinion S.C.C. is one of the most under appreciated groups of all timethat title goes to above the law.

DRAGONSAMURAI
02-19-2006, 05:27 PM
All three of Devin the Dudes albums if that hasnt been mentioned yet.you can blame rap-a-lot for that.