8 Notes

somanyshrimp:

What’s missing?? Everything!! No Limit, E-40, Cash Money, SlipNSlide, Banned from TV, Pun, Big L, Ruff Ryders, mothaeffin BEATNUTS, “Benjamins,” the list goes on. I hope every artist missed takes it personal!!

10. DJ Quik - Summer Breeze (Remix)
9. Bone Thugs N Harmony - E1999
8. Do or Die - Po Pimp
7. Gangsta Boo - Where Dem Dollas At
6. Scarface - Never Seen a Man Cry
5. Spice 1 - Strap on the Side
4. MJG - Middle of the Night Remix feat. 8ball and Twista
3. The Dogg Pound - Smooth
2. Too $hort - Just Another Day
1. Tupac - How Do U Want It feat. K-Ci and Jojo 

Interesting list, based off this post. I didn’t give the Pitchfork list much thought, because Pitchfork still isn’t an important part of the rap-writing universe. I don’t get why people continue to care about how they write about rap music. Why do you care what a bunch of hipsters say about rap? (Answer: because you are also probably a hipster that doesn’t interact in a meaningful way with the actual producers and origins of most rap). Yes, it’s an influential tastemaking site, but it has a relatively small readership compared to, say, WSHH. I have to give credit where credit is due in that their old Tracks section, the precursor to the Forkcast/Playlist features, exposed me to a lot of rap I probably wouldn’t have otherwise heard, and I’m hoping this is still the case for a generation of new readers still wrestling with their aural identity. But really, only a few rap albums/mixtapes reviewed a week and a scattered analysis of songs (which occasionally border on ironic/nonserious fawning) don’t equal importance to me. Outside of guys likes Drake and Breihan, these guys simply don’t know rap and cover it from an skewed perspective (judging most rap by the measuring stick of an album is pointless, for example/celebrating Drake because of how much it sounds like “chillwave”, for another example). Anyway, the Pitchfork 90s list kinda proves this point, and Pitchfork won’t be a meaningful barometer of rap music until it either a) stops referring to itself as “the essential guide to independent music and beyond” or b) quits treating rap as a novelty. It’s definitely made strides towards the latter, but it still treats itself as the former, which was a decent illusion in the pre-Myspace/Twitter/Blog/Tumblr age, but is just an outright lie now.

Anyways I was just hoping “25 Lighters” would make this list.

-Flex