


Perhaps the greatest opening lines in the history of hip hop: “I got a letter from the government/The other day/I opened, and read it/It said they were suckers/They wanted me for the army or whatever/Picture me givin’ a damn, I said never.” “Black Steel in the Hour of Chaos” – Public Enemy Snoop Dogg references this song at the beginning of the second verse of “Gin and Juice.”ĩ8. No disrespect to MC Breed, who died of kidney failure when he was 38, but 2Pac is the main attraction here, one of five appearances for him on this list. “Gotta Get Mine” – MC Breed featuring 2Pac (Corrected on 7/7 – added this song to remove an ineligible song from higher on the list.)ĩ9. Ice Cube’s lyrics often led to controversy – something I doubt he minded since even bad publicity sells records – but I don’t think the anti-gay lines in this song would fly today like they did in the early ’90s. Samples an early hip-hop classic, “The Message,” that was already dated before the 1980s ended, with guest vocals by Das Efx on the chorus. That cutoff means no Jay-Z or Eminem and virtually no Nas or Outkast, to pick a few examples, but with one exception (a song recorded before the deadline but released afterwards) I stuck to the deadline for all tracks. I’ve limited the list to songs released, either as singles or on albums, prior to 1996. And it’s about how the songs have held up over time, not which songs I liked when they first came out or how they fared on the charts. This is list is entirely my opinion, and maybe 90% of it is just about how much I personally like the songs, with the other 10% reserved for the song’s influence or importance in hip-hop history. It started out as a top 40, then a top 50, then 75, after which I figured I’d just push it to 100. I’ve been working on this post since late February, but it’s finally done now that the draft crush and our summer east coast swing are over. DJ Jazzy Jeff and the Fresh Prince - Parents Just Don't Understandĩ9.I’m a huge fan of old-school hip-hop music and have wanted for some time to put down some kind of ranking of my favorite songs from that era. Master P ft Sikk, Fiend, Mia-x and Mystical - Make 'Em Say Ughĩ6. NERD ft Lee Harvey and Vida - Lapdanceĩ4. Chamillionaire ft Krayzie Bone - Ridin'ĩ3. Pete Rock & CL Smooth - They Reminisce Over You(T.R.O.Y)ĩ1. Wyclef Jean ft Refugee All Stars - We Tryin' to Stay Aliveĩ0. Three 6 Mafia ft Paula Campbell- Hard Out Here For A PimpĨ6. Big Punisher ft Joe- Still Not A Playerħ7.

Spoonie Gee and The Treacherous Three - Love Rapħ6. Ludacris ft Shawna - What's Your FantasyĦ2 Digable Planets - Rebirth of Slick (Cool Like Dat)Ħ3. Busta Rhymes - Woo-Ha! Got You All In Checkĥ8. Terror Squad ft Fat Joe and Remy - Lean Backĥ6.

Lox ft DMX and Lil' Kim - Money, Power, Respectĥ5. Boogie Down Productions - My Philosophyĥ1. Blige - I'll Be There For You / You're All I Need to Get ByĤ5. Game, The ft 50 Cent - Hate It or Love ItĤ4. Queen Latifah ft Monie Love - Ladies Firstģ7. Puff Daddy & The Family ft Notorious BIG, Lil' Kim and The Lox - It's All About The Benjaminsģ3. Digital Underground - The Humpty Danceģ2. Afrika Bambaataa & Soul Sonic Force - Planet Rockģ0. Kanye West ft Jamie Foxx - Gold DiggerĢ1. LL Cool J - I Can't Live Without My RadioĢ0. Grandmaster Flash & the Furious Five - The Messageġ2. After a quick glance through, one noticeable absence is Jay-Z's 99 Problems ( the AC/DC remix, of course) and where the hell is Vanilla Ice's Ice Ice Baby? Sacrilege… VH1's 100 Greatest Hip-Hip Songsĥ. Whether it's in the correct order or not is, obviously, completely subjective. It's a very impressive list in that it's very long.
