Now you're down to 130. You thought it was difficult at 150, but this is another level. Now you have to cut 30 songs you really wanted to make the list. So you start cutting songs. Just to be sure you're not missing anything, you're exploring options you maybe missed and then you stumble on a few songs you realize need to make the list. So now you're adding songs instead of cutting them. So you have the 100 songs. You still need to order the songs, write the post, in the middle of writing the post you realize you don't like where one song is ordered so you move it which makes you wonder if you don't like the order of any other spots, and then you tweak the order again. So yeah, it was a long process.
Even though he didn't provide any of the top 20 songs that will be listed here, Maq (@elmaquino) looked over my initial list and added 25 songs and I picked some of his songs for this list. He's also a huge Jay-Z fan and I was not, so he in some way influenced most of the Jay-Z selections as well. So special shoutout to him for helping me with the list.
I'm going to do something a little different here. Since I consider all of these songs to be the best of the best, I'll be posting a few lines from the song that highlight the lyrical talent of the artist. Let's get started.
#20 "ATLiens" - Outkast
Album: ATLiens
Year: 1996
Now, my oral illustration be like clitoral stimulation
To the female gender, ain't nothing better
Let me know when it's wet enough to enter
If not I'll wait, because the future of the world depends on
If or if not the child we raise gon' have that nigga syndrome
I really feel that if we tune it, it just might get picked on
Or will it give a fuck about what others say and get gone
I don't think this is the best written Outkast song. Andre 3000 and Big Boi have both had songs where they've been better lyrically. But it seems like if you wanted to show somebody a song that best represents what Outkast is, this is the song you show them. It doesn't hurt that the beat is an earworm and the hook is catchy. In fact, with "if you like fish and grits and all that pimp shit," Outkast is representing Southern rap. I don't usually like when rappers twist words to fit a rhyme scheme, but damn if "O-yea-yer" doesn't work for some reason. In what is clearly a song designed for party use more than introspection, the lyrics are better than they need to be, especially my highlighted portion.
#19 "Moment of Truth" - Gang Starr
Album: Moment of Truth
Year: 1998
Now I'm contemplating in my bedroom pacing
Dark clouds over my head, my heart's racing
Suicide? Nah, I'm not a foolish guy,
Don't even feel like drinking or even getting high
But wait, I've been through a whole lot of other shit before
So I ought to be able to withstand some more
I'm ready to lose my mind, but instead I use my mind
I put down the knife, and take the bullets out my nine
Rap is a young man's game. Rakim was 19 when he made Paid in Full, Biggie was 21 when he was working on Ready to Die, and Nas was 20 when Illmatic was released. It's also common for rappers to decline pretty fast. Gang Starr is the exception in both regards. Guru, the MC portion of Gang Starr, was 27 when Gang Starr released their first album. He became better lyrically with each successive album. By the time Moment of Truth was released in 1998, he was 36-years-old. That's pretty much unheard of in rap (at least at the time). But listen to these lyrics. "Actions have reactions, don't be quick to judge, you may not know the hardships people speak of, it's best to step back and observe with couth, for we all must meet our moment of truth." That's the kind of lyric that makes you feel insignificant and petty for judging other people. We're all the same. Have empathy. This just is a really great song to listen to if you're struggling.
#18 "Dear Mama" - 2Pac
Album: Me Against the World
Year: 1995
Cause when I was low you was there for me
And never left me alone because you cared for me
And I could see you coming home after work late
You're in the kitchen trying to fix us a hot plate
Ya just working with the scraps you was given
And Mama made miracles every Thanksgiving
But now the road got rough, you're alone,
You're trying to raise two bad kids on your own
And there's no way I can pay you back
But my plan is to make you understand
You are appreciated
I don't know if I'd made this point before, but I give extra points for rappers who choose to explore topics that nobody else does. I don't believe that making a song dedicated to your mother was a popular thing before 2Pac made "Dear Mama." It has become something of a popular thing since then, but 2Pac showed it was ok to be a thug and still make an extremely heartfelt song for your mother. It's the details in this song that make it great. And 2Pac comes across as extremely genuine throughout the song, just wanting to show his mom that he appreciates her. He acknowledges that he was a bad kid and it was difficult for her to raise him. He even tries to explain why he's gone the direction he's gone, saying he doesn't feel guilty because he likes to pay rent on time.
#17 "Jesus Walks" - Kanye West
Album: College Dropout
Year: 2004
We rappers is role models, we rap we don't think
I ain't here to argue about his facial features
Or here to convert atheists into believers
I'm just trying to say the way school need teachers
The way Kathie Lee needed Regis, that's the way I need Jesus
So here go my single dog radio needs this
They say you can rap about anything except for Jesus
That means guns, sex, lies, video tapes,
But if I talk about God my record won't get played huh?
Where the hell is this Kanye right now? I needed a reminder after Life of Pablo that Kanye could actually.. you know rap. This song is fantastic. As far as individual songs go, Kanye does not getter better than this. I acknowledge he has made a better album than College Dropout, but he has not made a better song than "Jesus Walks." The production, the lyrics, it's all perfect.
#16 "Shook Ones Part II" - Mobb Deep
Album: The Infamous
Year: 1995
I don't got time for your petty thinking mind
Son, I'm bigger than those
Claiming that you pack heat, but you're scared to hold
And when the smoke clears, you'll be left with one in your dome
13 years in the projects, my mentality is what, kid?
You talk a good one, but you don't want it
Sometimes I wonder do I deserve to live
Or am I going to burn in hell for all the things I did?
No time to dwell on that cause my brain reacts
A lot of rap songs have dark content in their lyrics, but not many songs have managed such a threatening beat. You don't want to get caught hanging around this beat. This beat alone has the capability of killing you. This is Mobb Deep's threat towards wannabe gangsters. The shook ones refer to people who are halfway crooks, who aren't willing to go as far as they need to go in order to succeed in Queensbridge. Havoc and Prodigy are willing to do that. I picked my highlighted lyric because it reveals the mentality behind Havoc (and probably Prodigy) - he briefly wonders if he's going to hell, but can't linger on that thought too much because it will make him a halfway crook. This beat is probably now more well-known as the beat behind the climactic battle in 8 Mile.
#15 "Juicy" - Notorious B.I.G.
Album: Ready to Die
Year: 1994
And my whole crew is lounging
Celebrating every day, no more public housing,
Thinking back on my one-room shack
Now my mom pimps a Ac with minks on her back
And she loves to show me off of course,
Smiles every time my face is up in The Source,
We used to fuss when the landlord dissed us,
No heat, wonder why Christmas missed us
Birthdays was the worst days,
Now we sip champagne when we thirsty
If you want an idea of how "Started from the Bottom" is supposed to sound like, look no further than "Juicy" which actually explains how his life use to be, how is life is now, and some of the hardships he had to go through. In the first verse, it's almost a rap history lesson as he goes through some of the people who he used to listen to and that hip hop was never supposed to take it this far. But he's also explaining his origins - how he got into rap the first place - so it works. In the next two verses, he explains the differences between then and now. It's got his trademark flow, and an inspirational hook. What more can you ask for?
#14 "Life's a Bitch" - Nas
Album: Illmatic
Year: 1994
I'm destined to live the dream for all my peeps who never made it,
Cause, yeah, we were beginners in the hood as 5 Percenters
But something must've gotten in us, cause all of us turned to sinners,
Now some are resting in peace and some are sitting in San Quentin,
Others, such as myself, are trying to carry on tradition,
Keeping this Schweppervescent street ghetto essence inside us,
Cause it provides us with the proper insight to guide us
Even though we know, somehow we all gotta go,
But as long as we leaving thieving,
We'll be leaving with some kind of dough
As you can see, I posted just about AZ's entire verse here. It might legitimately be one of the best verses of all time. You listen to this verse and you wonder why AZ never got big. Fun fact about this song: Nas almost sampled "Juicy Fruit," otherwise known as the same song that Biggie sampled in "Juicy." That would have been a weird coincidence and I'm glad it worked out this way. This is somewhat of a depressing song in the sense that "life's a bitch and then you die" is sort of nihilistic point of view. It's a viewpoint I'm sure a lot of people understand though and it's a twisting of the common hip hop topic: you never know when you're gonna die, so live for today. Nas chooses to smoke weed. If you listen to the Illmatic, you would not believe how much he references smoking.
#13 "It Was a Good Day" - Ice Cube
Album: The Predator
Year: 1992
Today was like one of those fly dreams,
Didn't even see a berry flashing those high beams
No helicopter looking for a murder
2 in the morning, got the Fatburger
Even saw the lights of a Goodyear blimp,
and it read "Ice Cube's a pimp,"
Drunk as hell but no throwing up,
Halfway home and my pager still blowing up,
Today I didn't even have to use my AK
I gotta say it was a good day
How great does Ice Cube's good day sound? It sounds amazing. He gets with a girl he's been crushing on since the 12th grade, he plays a game of pickup basketball with his friends and plays like MJ, he's ignored by the cops, there's no smog in LA, nobody dies, and a freaking blimp says "Ice Cube's a pimp." It switches back-and-forth between things that could happen (like playing really well in a basketball game) and things that are hopeful, but probably won't (the blimp thing). It's a good day for him and the world really - nobody got murdered and people can go outside without the threat of smog. This is a song that instantly puts me in a good mood and makes me feel like I'm having a good day.
#12 "D'Evils" - Jay-Z
Album: Reasonable Doubt
Year: 1996
Whoever said illegal was the easy way out, couldn't understand
The mechanics and the workings of the underworld, granted
Nine to five is how you survive, I ain't trying to survive,
I'm trying to live it to the limit and love it a lot
Life ills poisoned my body, I used to say fuck mic skills,
I never prayed to God, I prayed to Gotti,
That's right it's wicked, that's life I live it
There are not that many wildly acclaimed and near unanimously agreed upon classic albums. Reasonable Doubt, one of those albums, was my one blind spot where I hadn't really given it a listen. In preparation for this post, I gave it a listen. A serious listen. I was expecting the Biggie/Jay-Z song to be the one that hit me the hardest. Not that it was bad, but it kind of underwhelmed me. I loved D'Evils almost instantly. This is a DJ Premier beat and the beat goes a long way towards why I loved this song immediately. Then I looked at the lyrics and Jay-Z comes up with this line:
"My hand around her collar, feeding her cheese,
she said the taste of dollars was shitty so I fed her fifties,
About his whereabouts, I wasn't convinced,
I kept feeding her money 'til her shit started to make sense."
That worldplay is insane. And that wasn't even the excerpt of the song I picked. Nor was it my favorite line. "Nine to five is how to survive, I ain't trying to survive, I'm trying to live it to the limit and love it a lot" was. This song is about how the "d'evils" - basically temptation and greed - corrupts the ghetto and how it has affected him. (And if you're wondering why d'evils, he pronounces it da evils, but spelled out it's devil so the devil is tempting him)
#11 "Mind Playing Tricks On Me" - Geto Boys
Album: We Can't Be Stopped
Year: 1991
I often drift while I drive
Having fatal thoughts of suicide,
Bang and get it over with
And then I'm worry free, but that's bullshit
I got a little boy to look after
And if I died then my child would be a bastard
I had a woman down with me
But to me it seemed she was down to get me
She helped me out in this shit
But to me she was just another bitch
Now she's back with her mother
Now I'm realizing that I love her
Now I'm feeling lonely
My Mind is playing tricks on me
I have loved this song for a very long time. I don't think rap verses can get much better than the two Scarface verses. Willie D's verse is alright and Buschwick Bill's is just kind of weird, but Scarface's two verses are why this song is here. "Now I'm realizing that I love her, now I'm feeling lonely" is said in just about the most depressing and honest way I've ever heard in a rap song. It makes you think he fucked it up and is regretting it. Gangsta rap tends to glorify the drug-dealing lifestyle and the Geto Boys are no exception, but this song makes it sound fucking horrible. He's constantly in fear of his life, he's on the verge of suicide, he's ruined his relationship, nothing at all sounds good about the way he's living his life. The lyrics come equipped with a beat that somehow sounds disapproving? I hear the beat and my first thought is one of my parents just standing there in silence, shaking their head in disapproval. This is not a complaint as the beat goes perfectly with the song.
#10 "The Message" - Grandmaster Flash & The Furious Five
Album: The Message
Year: 1982
Broken glass everywhere,
People pissing in the stairs, you know they just don't care
I can't take the smell, can't take the noise
Got no money to move out, I guess I got no choice
Rats in the front room, roaches in the back,
Junkies in the alley with a baseball bat
I tried to get away but I couldn't get far
Cause a man with two truck repossessed my car
Don't push me, cause I'm close to the edge
I'm trying not to lose my head
It's like a jungle sometiems
It makes me wonder how I keep from going under
I doubt this was the first socially conscious rap song, but it had to have been one of the first and the others probably weren't assisted by a fantastic beat that very much sounds like it was made in 1982 but also still sounds really good now. Before 1987 - essentially before Paid in Full - the rhymes were extremely simple, putting an inordinate amount of focus on the content of the lyrics. Considering hip hop started as a party genre, most rap songs haven't exactly aged very well. (For an example of someone who has not aged well, look no further than Kurtis Blow.) This is a notable exception and the reason is because the content of "The Message" stands the test of time. Rapped by Melle Mel, this song paints a portrait of a poor neighborhood. Obviously they're trying to send out a message and the song lives up to the title.
#9 "I Ain't No Joke" - Eric B & Rakim
Album: Paid in Full
Year: 1987
Write a rhyme in graffiti in every show you see me in
Deep concentration cause I'm no comedian
Jokers are wild if you want to be tamed
I treat you like a child then you're gonna be named
Another enemy, not even a friend of me
Cause you'll get fried in the end when you pretend to be
Competing cause I just put your mind on pause
And I can beat you when you compare my rhyme with yours
I wake you up and as I stare in your face you seemed stunned
Remember me, the one you got your idea from?
But soon you start to suffer, the tune'll get rougher
When you start to stutter, that's when you had enough of
Biting it will make you choke, you can't provoke
You can't cope, you should have broke
Because I ain't no joke
Just say that verse out loud and you realize it's poetry. Nobody before Paid in Full was anywhere near what Rakim was doing here. It wasn't typical to write a verse that essentially was just you announcing your superiority above all other rappers and just letting the words speak for themselves. But the rhymes were simple. Rakim essentially invented the multisyllabic rhyme in hip hop, or at the least popularized it. It sounds weird now, but nobody was rhyming "enemy" with "friend of me." The kind of rhyme that doesn't look like it rhymes until you say it out loud. Eric B wasn't among the best producers of the time, but he was probably in the second tier. (Off the top of my head, Rick Rubin, the Bomb Squad, and Dr. Dre were all better. He was probably equal to BDP and Marley Marl though I'm definitely willing to accept both were better too.)
#8 "Fight the Power" - Public Enemy
Album: Fear of a Black Planet
Year: 1990
Elvis was a hero to most,
But he never meant shit to me you see
Straight up racist that sucker was
Simple and plain
Mother fuck him and John Wayne
Cause I'm black and I'm proud
I'm ready and hyped plus I'm amped
Most of my heroes don't appear on no stamps
Sample a look back you look and find
Nothing but rednecks for 400 years if you check
Don't worry be happy was a number one jam
Damn if I say it you can slap me right here
Oh boy. We're getting into political motherfucking songs. I love this verse. He backtracks a bit later in life on calling Elvis a racist. But the point I think was that he made a shit ton of money making black music. Also this was a song that demanded attention. I can forgive an exaggeration. Just look at the content of the lyrics. He's making some good points. And it's still relevant today.
"To revolutionize make a change nothing's strange,
people people were are the same,
no we're not the same,
cause we don't know the game."
Tell me that still doesn't apply to today. White people and black people don't operate under the same rules. This song will be as relevant and important as the day it came out until things change.
#7 "Stan" - Eminem
Album: Marshall Maters LP
Year: 2000
See, I'm just like you in a way; I never knew my father neither
He used to always cheat on my mom and beat her
I can relate to what you're saying in your songs
So when I have a shitty day, I drift away and put 'em on
Cause I don't really got shit else so that shit helps when I'm depressed
I even got a tattoo of your name across the chest
Sometimes I even cut myself to see how much it bleeds
It's like adrenaline, the pain is such a sudden rush for me
See everything you say is real and I respect you cause you tell it
My girlfriend's jealous 'cause I talk about you 24/7
This is about as good as storytelling rap can get. Eminem knows how to craft a compelling story. It's told basically perfect too. He slowly reveals hints that his fan is unhinged, gradually revealing more and more things that make you start to be concerned about what's gonna happen. The production is top notch as well, foreshadowing the dark ending with a haunting beat. Also the background noises such as the thunderstorm going on when he's driving in his car make it feel more real. This is probably the song that even non-Eminem fans will listen to and be like "Ok so he's definitely talented." I put this at #7 despite the fact that I genuinely do not listen to this song very much. I'll skip it if it comes on and I think the reason is because I need to listen to the whole thing and I need to pay attention. This isn't background music that you can listen to when you're studying.
#6 "Suicidal Thoughts" - Notorious B.I.G.
Album: Ready to Die
Year: 1994
All my life I been considered as the worst
Lying to my mother, even stealing our her purse
Crime after crime, from drugs to extortion
I know my mother wished she got a fucking abortion
She don't even love me like she did when I was younger
Sucking on her chest just to stop my fucking hunger
I wonder if I died would tears come to her eyes,
Forgive me for my disrespect, forgive me for my lies
We're starting to reach the point where I just want to post the whole song as my example lyric. In an album where Biggie has consistently and constantly expressed his willingness to die, this was the only way to end the album. I'm fairly certain Ready to Die would still be considered a classic if this wasn't the ending, however this is the perfect ending to that album. This is another song that is greatly helped by the background noises. Usually an annoying presence, Diddy (or whatever he's calling himself now) is on the other end of the phone. The song being framed as a phone conversation makes it sound like this guy is really about to commit suicide. Diddy gradually starts getting more frantic and worried as the song goes on as you notice that he keeps interjecting more and more. It adds to the tension of the song. The gunshot at the end and the phone drop also sound real. Apparently to make it sound authentic, Biggie actually fell on the ground and made the huge thud himself.
#5 "Verbal Intercourse" - Raekwon feat. Nas
Album: Only Built 4 Cuban Linx
Year: 1995
Through the lights, cameras, and action, glamour glitters and gold
I unfold the scroll, plant seeds to stampede the globe
When I'm deceased, by then the beast arise like yeast
To conquer peace leaving savages to roam in the streets
Live on the run, police paying me to give in my gun
Trick my wisdom with the system that imprison my son
Smoke a gold leaf I hold heat, nonchalantly
I'm raunchy, the things I do is real, it never haunts me
While, funny style niggas roll in the pile
Rooster heads profile on a bus to Riker's Isle
Holding weed inside they pussy with they minds on the pretty things in life
Props as a true thug's wife
It's like a cycle, niggas come home, some'll go in
Do a bullet, come back, do the same shit again
From the womb to the tomb, presume the unpredictable
Guns salute life rapidly, that's the ritual
Holy fucking shit. I had to post Nas' entire verse because I couldn't figure out what to cut out. That is one of the greatest rap verses of all time. I recommend going on Rap Genius and looking at the annotations. Guess what? You get to listen that verse and then you listen to Raekwon. And then you get to listen to Ghostface Killah. It does not get better than that. I have nothing else to add to this honestly.
#4 "Fuck Tha Police" - NWA
Album: Straight Outta Compton
Year: 1988
Fucking with me cause I'm a teeenager
With a little bit of gold and a pager
Searching my car, looking for the product
Thinking every nigga is selling narcotics
You'd rather see me in the pen
Than me and Lorenzo rolling in a Benz-o
Beat a police out of shape
And when I'm finished, bring the yellow tape
To tape off the scene of the slaughter
Still getting swoll off bread and water
I don't know if they fags or what
Search a nigga down, and grabbing his nuts
And on the other hand, without a gun they can't get none
But don't let it be a black and a white one
Cause they'll slam ya down to the street top
Black police showing out for the white cop
If there's one weakness to this song, it's that Ice Cube pretty much says everything that needs to be said in his one verse. MC Ren and Eazy-E don't have bad verses, but they pale in comparison to Ice Cube's verse. Any questions you might bring up are answered. What about the black police? Oh they're showing out for the white cop. This is certainly one of the most iconic songs in hip hop. It's probably one of the songs that make people not like hip hop. It expressed a long held belief by black people that felt they were being unfairly treated by cops. It may have arguably even led to the LA riots, though obviously not directly. It may seem like I shouldn't like a song that says "Fuck the police" - a view which I don't share (fuck police unions though) - but I really do believe black people were and are treated differently by cops. This is a natural extension of the frustration that results from that. And it's one of the best records of all time.
#3 "They Reminisce Over You (T.R.O.Y.)" - Pete Rock & CL Smooth
Album: Mecca and the Soul Brother
Year: 1992
When I date back I recall a man off the family tree
My right hand Poppa Doc I see
Took me from a boy to a man so I always had a father
When my biological didn't bother
Taking care of this so who am I to bicker
Not a bad ticker but I'm clocking pop's liver
But you can never say that his life is through
5 kids at 21 believe he got a right too
First thing you need to understand about this song is that it was made in remembrance of "Trouble" T. Roy. Hence the name of the song. He was a good friend of Pete Rock and CL Smooth. Somehow Pete Rock created one of the most perfect beats of all time in mourning for his friend. This song has a power over me. Whenever I hear this song, I have to pause. Pete Rock is a fucking genius. This perfectly sums up every emotion that has ever existed when you think of a memory of someone. It has hints of sadness, regret, happiness, pretty much any emotion you have felt when remembering someone who you've lost. If I ever lose a really good friend of mine, I will listen to this song sometime after it happened and I’ll just start fucking weeping. I am positive of this. CL Smooth composes the lyrics and it's almost biographical.
#2 "C.R.E.A.M." - The Wu-Tang Clan
Album: Enter The Wu-Tang (36 Chambers)
Year: 1993
But as the world turn I learned life is hell,
Living in the world no different from a cell
Every day I escape from Jakes giving chase, selling base
Smoking bones in the staircase
Though I don't know why I chose to smoke sess
I guess that's the time when I'm not depressed
But I'm still depressed and I ask what it's worth?
Ready to give up so I seek the old Earth
Who explained working hard may help you maintain
To learn to overcome the heartaches and pain
We got stickup kids, corrupt cops, and crack rocks, and
Stray shots, all on the block that stays hot
Leave it up to me while I be living proof
To kick the truth to the young black youth
You didn't actually think this wasn't going to make the list, did you? This classic song might have the most iconic and referenced hook in hip hop history and for good reason. It basically represents the ethos of all of rap music. Hell, it represents the ethos of life in general. We all make decisions based off money. That's probably why this song resonates so well. While your life is probably way
different than the Wu-Tang, all of us are still going through life to get money. Inspectah Deck has the better verse here, going through his issues - how he went to jail and it still feels like jail when he got out - but that he got some good advice to work hard from the elders. He's going to use his street cred - which he gained from going to jail - to "kick the truth to the young black youth." Not exactly stated what the truth is, but I'm guessing he's using the advice from his elders - to work hard - and will pass that down. Raekwon doesn't have a bad verse himself and actually pens one of the more memorable beginning lines in hip hop "I grew up on the crime side, the New York Times side, staying alive was no jive."
#1 "New York State of Mind" - Nas
Album: Illmatic
Year: 1994
I've taken rappers to a new plateau, through rap slow
My rhyming is a vitamin held without a capsule
The smooth criminal on beat breaks
Never put me in your box if your shit eats tape
The city never sleeps, full of villains and creeps
That's where I learned to do my hustle, had to scuffle with freaks
I'm an addict for sneakers, 20's of buddha and bitches with beepers
In the streets I can greet ya, about blunts I teach ya
Inhale deep like the words of my breath
I never sleep, 'cause sleep is the cousin of death
I lay puzzle as I backtrack to earlier times
Nothing's equivalent to the New York state of mind
For the record, I knew this was my #1 song before I even started finding the songs I would put on my list. It's no contest. This is the greatest hip hop song of all time made by the greatest rapper and greatest producer on the greatest album of all time. Just for good measure, there's also a sample of the first truly great rapper, Rakim, on this song. "New York State of Mind" is the perfect hip hop song. There's technically no chorus, just four and half minutes of nothing but rapping. Nas doesn't need a hook on this song. There's only one weak line in this entire song "And the stuff that I write is even tougher than dykes" which yeah that's a pretty weak line. But I can forgive especially when he writes shit like
"Rappers, I monkey flip 'em with the funky rhythm I be kicking,
Musician, inflicting composition,
I'm like Scarface sniffing cocaine
Holding an M16, see with the pen I'm extreme."
This just broke all the rules in the same way Paid in Full did back in 1986. Nas just rhymed monkey flip 'em with funky rhythm, musician, and composition. And it's not like he's just saying words, it all makes sense. This song is unbelievable and I do not think it will ever be topped.
If you're interested, below is a playlist of the 100 songs listed here and a bunch of other songs that were considered. I had to save some of the songs on my computer so they may not be available to you - such as D'Evils by Jay-Z - but 95% of the songs are available. I may add a few more (such as more Illmatic or Ready to Die songs), but I won't make the playlist longer than 200 songs.
#16 "Shook Ones Part II" - Mobb Deep
Album: The Infamous
Year: 1995
I don't got time for your petty thinking mind
Son, I'm bigger than those
Claiming that you pack heat, but you're scared to hold
And when the smoke clears, you'll be left with one in your dome
13 years in the projects, my mentality is what, kid?
You talk a good one, but you don't want it
Sometimes I wonder do I deserve to live
Or am I going to burn in hell for all the things I did?
No time to dwell on that cause my brain reacts
A lot of rap songs have dark content in their lyrics, but not many songs have managed such a threatening beat. You don't want to get caught hanging around this beat. This beat alone has the capability of killing you. This is Mobb Deep's threat towards wannabe gangsters. The shook ones refer to people who are halfway crooks, who aren't willing to go as far as they need to go in order to succeed in Queensbridge. Havoc and Prodigy are willing to do that. I picked my highlighted lyric because it reveals the mentality behind Havoc (and probably Prodigy) - he briefly wonders if he's going to hell, but can't linger on that thought too much because it will make him a halfway crook. This beat is probably now more well-known as the beat behind the climactic battle in 8 Mile.
#15 "Juicy" - Notorious B.I.G.
Album: Ready to Die
Year: 1994
And my whole crew is lounging
Celebrating every day, no more public housing,
Thinking back on my one-room shack
Now my mom pimps a Ac with minks on her back
And she loves to show me off of course,
Smiles every time my face is up in The Source,
We used to fuss when the landlord dissed us,
No heat, wonder why Christmas missed us
Birthdays was the worst days,
Now we sip champagne when we thirsty
If you want an idea of how "Started from the Bottom" is supposed to sound like, look no further than "Juicy" which actually explains how his life use to be, how is life is now, and some of the hardships he had to go through. In the first verse, it's almost a rap history lesson as he goes through some of the people who he used to listen to and that hip hop was never supposed to take it this far. But he's also explaining his origins - how he got into rap the first place - so it works. In the next two verses, he explains the differences between then and now. It's got his trademark flow, and an inspirational hook. What more can you ask for?
#14 "Life's a Bitch" - Nas
Album: Illmatic
Year: 1994
I'm destined to live the dream for all my peeps who never made it,
Cause, yeah, we were beginners in the hood as 5 Percenters
But something must've gotten in us, cause all of us turned to sinners,
Now some are resting in peace and some are sitting in San Quentin,
Others, such as myself, are trying to carry on tradition,
Keeping this Schweppervescent street ghetto essence inside us,
Cause it provides us with the proper insight to guide us
Even though we know, somehow we all gotta go,
But as long as we leaving thieving,
We'll be leaving with some kind of dough
As you can see, I posted just about AZ's entire verse here. It might legitimately be one of the best verses of all time. You listen to this verse and you wonder why AZ never got big. Fun fact about this song: Nas almost sampled "Juicy Fruit," otherwise known as the same song that Biggie sampled in "Juicy." That would have been a weird coincidence and I'm glad it worked out this way. This is somewhat of a depressing song in the sense that "life's a bitch and then you die" is sort of nihilistic point of view. It's a viewpoint I'm sure a lot of people understand though and it's a twisting of the common hip hop topic: you never know when you're gonna die, so live for today. Nas chooses to smoke weed. If you listen to the Illmatic, you would not believe how much he references smoking.
#13 "It Was a Good Day" - Ice Cube
Album: The Predator
Year: 1992
Today was like one of those fly dreams,
Didn't even see a berry flashing those high beams
No helicopter looking for a murder
2 in the morning, got the Fatburger
Even saw the lights of a Goodyear blimp,
and it read "Ice Cube's a pimp,"
Drunk as hell but no throwing up,
Halfway home and my pager still blowing up,
Today I didn't even have to use my AK
I gotta say it was a good day
How great does Ice Cube's good day sound? It sounds amazing. He gets with a girl he's been crushing on since the 12th grade, he plays a game of pickup basketball with his friends and plays like MJ, he's ignored by the cops, there's no smog in LA, nobody dies, and a freaking blimp says "Ice Cube's a pimp." It switches back-and-forth between things that could happen (like playing really well in a basketball game) and things that are hopeful, but probably won't (the blimp thing). It's a good day for him and the world really - nobody got murdered and people can go outside without the threat of smog. This is a song that instantly puts me in a good mood and makes me feel like I'm having a good day.
#12 "D'Evils" - Jay-Z
Album: Reasonable Doubt
Year: 1996
Whoever said illegal was the easy way out, couldn't understand
The mechanics and the workings of the underworld, granted
Nine to five is how you survive, I ain't trying to survive,
I'm trying to live it to the limit and love it a lot
Life ills poisoned my body, I used to say fuck mic skills,
I never prayed to God, I prayed to Gotti,
That's right it's wicked, that's life I live it
There are not that many wildly acclaimed and near unanimously agreed upon classic albums. Reasonable Doubt, one of those albums, was my one blind spot where I hadn't really given it a listen. In preparation for this post, I gave it a listen. A serious listen. I was expecting the Biggie/Jay-Z song to be the one that hit me the hardest. Not that it was bad, but it kind of underwhelmed me. I loved D'Evils almost instantly. This is a DJ Premier beat and the beat goes a long way towards why I loved this song immediately. Then I looked at the lyrics and Jay-Z comes up with this line:
"My hand around her collar, feeding her cheese,
she said the taste of dollars was shitty so I fed her fifties,
About his whereabouts, I wasn't convinced,
I kept feeding her money 'til her shit started to make sense."
That worldplay is insane. And that wasn't even the excerpt of the song I picked. Nor was it my favorite line. "Nine to five is how to survive, I ain't trying to survive, I'm trying to live it to the limit and love it a lot" was. This song is about how the "d'evils" - basically temptation and greed - corrupts the ghetto and how it has affected him. (And if you're wondering why d'evils, he pronounces it da evils, but spelled out it's devil so the devil is tempting him)
#11 "Mind Playing Tricks On Me" - Geto Boys
Album: We Can't Be Stopped
Year: 1991
I often drift while I drive
Having fatal thoughts of suicide,
Bang and get it over with
And then I'm worry free, but that's bullshit
I got a little boy to look after
And if I died then my child would be a bastard
I had a woman down with me
But to me it seemed she was down to get me
She helped me out in this shit
But to me she was just another bitch
Now she's back with her mother
Now I'm realizing that I love her
Now I'm feeling lonely
My Mind is playing tricks on me
I have loved this song for a very long time. I don't think rap verses can get much better than the two Scarface verses. Willie D's verse is alright and Buschwick Bill's is just kind of weird, but Scarface's two verses are why this song is here. "Now I'm realizing that I love her, now I'm feeling lonely" is said in just about the most depressing and honest way I've ever heard in a rap song. It makes you think he fucked it up and is regretting it. Gangsta rap tends to glorify the drug-dealing lifestyle and the Geto Boys are no exception, but this song makes it sound fucking horrible. He's constantly in fear of his life, he's on the verge of suicide, he's ruined his relationship, nothing at all sounds good about the way he's living his life. The lyrics come equipped with a beat that somehow sounds disapproving? I hear the beat and my first thought is one of my parents just standing there in silence, shaking their head in disapproval. This is not a complaint as the beat goes perfectly with the song.
#10 "The Message" - Grandmaster Flash & The Furious Five
Album: The Message
Year: 1982
Broken glass everywhere,
People pissing in the stairs, you know they just don't care
I can't take the smell, can't take the noise
Got no money to move out, I guess I got no choice
Rats in the front room, roaches in the back,
Junkies in the alley with a baseball bat
I tried to get away but I couldn't get far
Cause a man with two truck repossessed my car
Don't push me, cause I'm close to the edge
I'm trying not to lose my head
It's like a jungle sometiems
It makes me wonder how I keep from going under
I doubt this was the first socially conscious rap song, but it had to have been one of the first and the others probably weren't assisted by a fantastic beat that very much sounds like it was made in 1982 but also still sounds really good now. Before 1987 - essentially before Paid in Full - the rhymes were extremely simple, putting an inordinate amount of focus on the content of the lyrics. Considering hip hop started as a party genre, most rap songs haven't exactly aged very well. (For an example of someone who has not aged well, look no further than Kurtis Blow.) This is a notable exception and the reason is because the content of "The Message" stands the test of time. Rapped by Melle Mel, this song paints a portrait of a poor neighborhood. Obviously they're trying to send out a message and the song lives up to the title.
#9 "I Ain't No Joke" - Eric B & Rakim
Album: Paid in Full
Year: 1987
Write a rhyme in graffiti in every show you see me in
Deep concentration cause I'm no comedian
Jokers are wild if you want to be tamed
I treat you like a child then you're gonna be named
Another enemy, not even a friend of me
Cause you'll get fried in the end when you pretend to be
Competing cause I just put your mind on pause
And I can beat you when you compare my rhyme with yours
I wake you up and as I stare in your face you seemed stunned
Remember me, the one you got your idea from?
But soon you start to suffer, the tune'll get rougher
When you start to stutter, that's when you had enough of
Biting it will make you choke, you can't provoke
You can't cope, you should have broke
Because I ain't no joke
Just say that verse out loud and you realize it's poetry. Nobody before Paid in Full was anywhere near what Rakim was doing here. It wasn't typical to write a verse that essentially was just you announcing your superiority above all other rappers and just letting the words speak for themselves. But the rhymes were simple. Rakim essentially invented the multisyllabic rhyme in hip hop, or at the least popularized it. It sounds weird now, but nobody was rhyming "enemy" with "friend of me." The kind of rhyme that doesn't look like it rhymes until you say it out loud. Eric B wasn't among the best producers of the time, but he was probably in the second tier. (Off the top of my head, Rick Rubin, the Bomb Squad, and Dr. Dre were all better. He was probably equal to BDP and Marley Marl though I'm definitely willing to accept both were better too.)
#8 "Fight the Power" - Public Enemy
Album: Fear of a Black Planet
Year: 1990
Elvis was a hero to most,
But he never meant shit to me you see
Straight up racist that sucker was
Simple and plain
Mother fuck him and John Wayne
Cause I'm black and I'm proud
I'm ready and hyped plus I'm amped
Most of my heroes don't appear on no stamps
Sample a look back you look and find
Nothing but rednecks for 400 years if you check
Don't worry be happy was a number one jam
Damn if I say it you can slap me right here
Oh boy. We're getting into political motherfucking songs. I love this verse. He backtracks a bit later in life on calling Elvis a racist. But the point I think was that he made a shit ton of money making black music. Also this was a song that demanded attention. I can forgive an exaggeration. Just look at the content of the lyrics. He's making some good points. And it's still relevant today.
"To revolutionize make a change nothing's strange,
people people were are the same,
no we're not the same,
cause we don't know the game."
Tell me that still doesn't apply to today. White people and black people don't operate under the same rules. This song will be as relevant and important as the day it came out until things change.
#7 "Stan" - Eminem
Album: Marshall Maters LP
Year: 2000
See, I'm just like you in a way; I never knew my father neither
He used to always cheat on my mom and beat her
I can relate to what you're saying in your songs
So when I have a shitty day, I drift away and put 'em on
Cause I don't really got shit else so that shit helps when I'm depressed
I even got a tattoo of your name across the chest
Sometimes I even cut myself to see how much it bleeds
It's like adrenaline, the pain is such a sudden rush for me
See everything you say is real and I respect you cause you tell it
My girlfriend's jealous 'cause I talk about you 24/7
This is about as good as storytelling rap can get. Eminem knows how to craft a compelling story. It's told basically perfect too. He slowly reveals hints that his fan is unhinged, gradually revealing more and more things that make you start to be concerned about what's gonna happen. The production is top notch as well, foreshadowing the dark ending with a haunting beat. Also the background noises such as the thunderstorm going on when he's driving in his car make it feel more real. This is probably the song that even non-Eminem fans will listen to and be like "Ok so he's definitely talented." I put this at #7 despite the fact that I genuinely do not listen to this song very much. I'll skip it if it comes on and I think the reason is because I need to listen to the whole thing and I need to pay attention. This isn't background music that you can listen to when you're studying.
#6 "Suicidal Thoughts" - Notorious B.I.G.
Album: Ready to Die
Year: 1994
All my life I been considered as the worst
Lying to my mother, even stealing our her purse
Crime after crime, from drugs to extortion
I know my mother wished she got a fucking abortion
She don't even love me like she did when I was younger
Sucking on her chest just to stop my fucking hunger
I wonder if I died would tears come to her eyes,
Forgive me for my disrespect, forgive me for my lies
We're starting to reach the point where I just want to post the whole song as my example lyric. In an album where Biggie has consistently and constantly expressed his willingness to die, this was the only way to end the album. I'm fairly certain Ready to Die would still be considered a classic if this wasn't the ending, however this is the perfect ending to that album. This is another song that is greatly helped by the background noises. Usually an annoying presence, Diddy (or whatever he's calling himself now) is on the other end of the phone. The song being framed as a phone conversation makes it sound like this guy is really about to commit suicide. Diddy gradually starts getting more frantic and worried as the song goes on as you notice that he keeps interjecting more and more. It adds to the tension of the song. The gunshot at the end and the phone drop also sound real. Apparently to make it sound authentic, Biggie actually fell on the ground and made the huge thud himself.
#5 "Verbal Intercourse" - Raekwon feat. Nas
Album: Only Built 4 Cuban Linx
Year: 1995
Through the lights, cameras, and action, glamour glitters and gold
I unfold the scroll, plant seeds to stampede the globe
When I'm deceased, by then the beast arise like yeast
To conquer peace leaving savages to roam in the streets
Live on the run, police paying me to give in my gun
Trick my wisdom with the system that imprison my son
Smoke a gold leaf I hold heat, nonchalantly
I'm raunchy, the things I do is real, it never haunts me
While, funny style niggas roll in the pile
Rooster heads profile on a bus to Riker's Isle
Holding weed inside they pussy with they minds on the pretty things in life
Props as a true thug's wife
It's like a cycle, niggas come home, some'll go in
Do a bullet, come back, do the same shit again
From the womb to the tomb, presume the unpredictable
Guns salute life rapidly, that's the ritual
Holy fucking shit. I had to post Nas' entire verse because I couldn't figure out what to cut out. That is one of the greatest rap verses of all time. I recommend going on Rap Genius and looking at the annotations. Guess what? You get to listen that verse and then you listen to Raekwon. And then you get to listen to Ghostface Killah. It does not get better than that. I have nothing else to add to this honestly.
#4 "Fuck Tha Police" - NWA
Album: Straight Outta Compton
Year: 1988
Fucking with me cause I'm a teeenager
With a little bit of gold and a pager
Searching my car, looking for the product
Thinking every nigga is selling narcotics
You'd rather see me in the pen
Than me and Lorenzo rolling in a Benz-o
Beat a police out of shape
And when I'm finished, bring the yellow tape
To tape off the scene of the slaughter
Still getting swoll off bread and water
I don't know if they fags or what
Search a nigga down, and grabbing his nuts
And on the other hand, without a gun they can't get none
But don't let it be a black and a white one
Cause they'll slam ya down to the street top
Black police showing out for the white cop
If there's one weakness to this song, it's that Ice Cube pretty much says everything that needs to be said in his one verse. MC Ren and Eazy-E don't have bad verses, but they pale in comparison to Ice Cube's verse. Any questions you might bring up are answered. What about the black police? Oh they're showing out for the white cop. This is certainly one of the most iconic songs in hip hop. It's probably one of the songs that make people not like hip hop. It expressed a long held belief by black people that felt they were being unfairly treated by cops. It may have arguably even led to the LA riots, though obviously not directly. It may seem like I shouldn't like a song that says "Fuck the police" - a view which I don't share (fuck police unions though) - but I really do believe black people were and are treated differently by cops. This is a natural extension of the frustration that results from that. And it's one of the best records of all time.
#3 "They Reminisce Over You (T.R.O.Y.)" - Pete Rock & CL Smooth
Album: Mecca and the Soul Brother
Year: 1992
When I date back I recall a man off the family tree
My right hand Poppa Doc I see
Took me from a boy to a man so I always had a father
When my biological didn't bother
Taking care of this so who am I to bicker
Not a bad ticker but I'm clocking pop's liver
But you can never say that his life is through
5 kids at 21 believe he got a right too
First thing you need to understand about this song is that it was made in remembrance of "Trouble" T. Roy. Hence the name of the song. He was a good friend of Pete Rock and CL Smooth. Somehow Pete Rock created one of the most perfect beats of all time in mourning for his friend. This song has a power over me. Whenever I hear this song, I have to pause. Pete Rock is a fucking genius. This perfectly sums up every emotion that has ever existed when you think of a memory of someone. It has hints of sadness, regret, happiness, pretty much any emotion you have felt when remembering someone who you've lost. If I ever lose a really good friend of mine, I will listen to this song sometime after it happened and I’ll just start fucking weeping. I am positive of this. CL Smooth composes the lyrics and it's almost biographical.
#2 "C.R.E.A.M." - The Wu-Tang Clan
Album: Enter The Wu-Tang (36 Chambers)
Year: 1993
But as the world turn I learned life is hell,
Living in the world no different from a cell
Every day I escape from Jakes giving chase, selling base
Smoking bones in the staircase
Though I don't know why I chose to smoke sess
I guess that's the time when I'm not depressed
But I'm still depressed and I ask what it's worth?
Ready to give up so I seek the old Earth
Who explained working hard may help you maintain
To learn to overcome the heartaches and pain
We got stickup kids, corrupt cops, and crack rocks, and
Stray shots, all on the block that stays hot
Leave it up to me while I be living proof
To kick the truth to the young black youth
You didn't actually think this wasn't going to make the list, did you? This classic song might have the most iconic and referenced hook in hip hop history and for good reason. It basically represents the ethos of all of rap music. Hell, it represents the ethos of life in general. We all make decisions based off money. That's probably why this song resonates so well. While your life is probably way
different than the Wu-Tang, all of us are still going through life to get money. Inspectah Deck has the better verse here, going through his issues - how he went to jail and it still feels like jail when he got out - but that he got some good advice to work hard from the elders. He's going to use his street cred - which he gained from going to jail - to "kick the truth to the young black youth." Not exactly stated what the truth is, but I'm guessing he's using the advice from his elders - to work hard - and will pass that down. Raekwon doesn't have a bad verse himself and actually pens one of the more memorable beginning lines in hip hop "I grew up on the crime side, the New York Times side, staying alive was no jive."
#1 "New York State of Mind" - Nas
Album: Illmatic
Year: 1994
I've taken rappers to a new plateau, through rap slow
My rhyming is a vitamin held without a capsule
The smooth criminal on beat breaks
Never put me in your box if your shit eats tape
The city never sleeps, full of villains and creeps
That's where I learned to do my hustle, had to scuffle with freaks
I'm an addict for sneakers, 20's of buddha and bitches with beepers
In the streets I can greet ya, about blunts I teach ya
Inhale deep like the words of my breath
I never sleep, 'cause sleep is the cousin of death
I lay puzzle as I backtrack to earlier times
Nothing's equivalent to the New York state of mind
For the record, I knew this was my #1 song before I even started finding the songs I would put on my list. It's no contest. This is the greatest hip hop song of all time made by the greatest rapper and greatest producer on the greatest album of all time. Just for good measure, there's also a sample of the first truly great rapper, Rakim, on this song. "New York State of Mind" is the perfect hip hop song. There's technically no chorus, just four and half minutes of nothing but rapping. Nas doesn't need a hook on this song. There's only one weak line in this entire song "And the stuff that I write is even tougher than dykes" which yeah that's a pretty weak line. But I can forgive especially when he writes shit like
"Rappers, I monkey flip 'em with the funky rhythm I be kicking,
Musician, inflicting composition,
I'm like Scarface sniffing cocaine
Holding an M16, see with the pen I'm extreme."
This just broke all the rules in the same way Paid in Full did back in 1986. Nas just rhymed monkey flip 'em with funky rhythm, musician, and composition. And it's not like he's just saying words, it all makes sense. This song is unbelievable and I do not think it will ever be topped.
If you're interested, below is a playlist of the 100 songs listed here and a bunch of other songs that were considered. I had to save some of the songs on my computer so they may not be available to you - such as D'Evils by Jay-Z - but 95% of the songs are available. I may add a few more (such as more Illmatic or Ready to Die songs), but I won't make the playlist longer than 200 songs.