The Hip Hop Thread

First Post April 01, 2025 06:30 PM

Eric B. & Rakim - "Follow the Leader" (1988)

The follow-up album to 1987's highly praised "Paid In Full" debut album is a very strong example of the early hip hop sound. Rakim's rapping is excellent & is the main driver behind the duo's success. The opening title track is one of the greatest tracks in hip hop history in my opinion. The overall consistency in the tracklisting means that there's a only a bee's dick between "Follow the Leader" & Public Enemy's classic "It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back" sophomore album that was released just a month earlier which should give you an indication of the overall quality of offer here.

For fans of Boogie Down Productions, EPMD & Big Daddy Kane.

4/5

June 09, 2025 07:43 PM

Ultramagnetic MC's - "Critical Beatdown" (1988)

The debut album from Ultramagentic MC's is a fairly enjoyable affair that perhaps suffers a little from being released in the same year as classic records from Public Enemy & Eric B. & Rakim as it's difficult not to draw comparisons with "Critical Beatdown" sitting on a slightly lower rung. The main reason for that is that the tracklisting doesn't really get going until track seven with all of the best material coming towards the back end of the album. Kool Keith is clearly the better of the MC's with producer Ced Gee being noticeably (& perhaps unsurprisingly) less cool. This is not a bad listen overall however, unlike the two classics I mentioned earlier, I can't see myself feeling like returning to it all that regularly. I'm much more likely to include the best material (like the brilliant "When I Burn") in my custom Spotify playlists.

For fans of Kool Keith, Boogie Down Productions & EPMD.

3.5/5

July 25, 2025 02:35 PM

Freddie Gibbs & The Alchemist - Alfredo 2

I;d say this is in the same league as Alfredo 1.  Might be slightly better, might be slightly worse.

July 26, 2025 02:45 PM

Tyler the Creatore - Don't Tap the Glass (2025)

Genres: Pop Rap, Dance

So one of modern hip hop's most experimental and wide-ranging artists, a total genius in the field, has now done a pop rap and dance album.  Is this selling out?  What reason would Tyler have to sell out?  It's his right to do a pop album if he wants, so judging it based on that merit, this is extraordinarily catchy and clever.  This so-called pop album might not be "experimental," but it's totally unpredictable.  The behavior of the album fits perfectly within the Tyler the Crator canon, cleverly combining many of the tricks and techniques this guy used in the past, even if he's using more pop-oritented genres than soul-oriented ones.  The production is almost constantly balancing out multiple facets with ease.  Maybe fans will miss the more thematic elements of his lyrics and music, but sometimes, a guy just needs to have some fun.  Tyler obviously considered that, and I'd say this is a very fun album full of good bangers.  I'm putting it in the same league as Bjork's Post.

93.5