Author | Message |
VH1's top 50 Hip Hop acts ever VH1 50 Greatest Hip Hop Artists
1. Run-DMC 2. Public Enemy 3. Tupac Shakur 4. Notorious B.I.G. 5. LL Cool J 6. Eminem 7. Dr. Dre 8. Grandmaster Flash 9. Salt-N-Pepa 10. Jay-Z 11. Beastie Boys 12. P. Diddy 13. N.W.A. 14. Missy Elliott 15. Wu-Tang Clan 16. Ice-T 17. The Fugees & Lauryn Hill 18. Afrika Bambaataa 19. Nas 20. Eric B. & Rakim 21. KRS-One 22. DMX 23. OutKast 24. Queen Latifah 25. Snoop Dogg 26. Ice Cube 27. A Tribe Called Quest 28. Busta Rhymes 29. Nelly 30. Will Smith & DJ Jazzy Jeff 31. Naughty By Nature 32. Cypress Hill 33. De La Soul 34. Lil' Kim 35. Big Daddy Kane 36. Master P 37. The Roots 38. Biz Markie 39. Ja Rule 40. Gang Starr 41. MC Lyte 42. Kurtis Blow 43. Coolio 44. MC Hammer 45. Heavy D & The Boyz 46. Eve 47. Arrested Development 48. Kool Moe Dee 49. Tone Loc 50. Sugarhill Gang I have yet to find one person who doesn't have issues with this list. Including people like Ja Rule, Coolio and Eve while leaving out Digital Underground, Whodini and The Fat Boys are my biggest complaints. I'm not going to go through my top 50 but I am listing my top 10. I would interested in seeing others. Besides your own taste, make sure you take into account the number of hits, flow, creativity and their impact on hip hop while compiling your list. Mine is as follows. 1. Tupac Shakur 2. Run-DMC 3. Public Enemy 4. Kurtis Blow 5. LL Cool J 6. Digital Underground 7. NWA 8. Eric B & Rakim 9. A Tribe Called Quest 10.(t) Snoop & Too Short Bringing Together Five Decades of R&B/Funk/Soul/Dance
http://reunionradio.blogspot.com/ | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
I thought I didn't see Lauryn there...I was about to say!!! [This message was edited Mon Apr 21 12:03:06 PDT 2003 by Starmist7] | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
This list is illegitimate. While right on many counts, no Mos Def, No Talib, no Common, no Pharcyde, no Mobb Deep, and they put NELLY and COOLIO on that list? Please. You can tell who compiled this list. Good night, sweet Prince | 7 June 1958 - 21 April 2016
Props will be withheld until the showing and proving has commenced. -- Aaron McGruder | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Before I contribute here, I do want to mention the "disclaimer" that I have only a "casual" interest in hip-hop & only a "general knowledge" of a few of its biggest names, which would probably explain much of my commentary..
that said, I too am surprised that neither DIGITAL UNDERGROUND or Whodini were in the top 50 (then again, this IS "wanna be cool, wanna be all-up-in-hip-hop-without-ACTUALLY-showing-the_videos VH1.. what does anyone expect? & why did VH1 do only "50"??? they didn't know about/couldn't find 50 more?) the "Fat Boys"..? Hm. To even call them a "hip-hop novelty" act would be generous.. where was "Guru", of "Jazzmatazz" fame? I would essentially agree with the top 3, but I would put Public Enemy 1st because of "social conciousness" & that they were more.. they were more of several things, none of which I seem to be able to articulate at this time.. Those who should have been ranked higher: Salt-N-Pepa Beastie Boys Queen Latifah Tribe Called Quest even "Big Daddy Kane".. MC Lyte Surprised these weren't ranked higher, generally speaking: Snoop Dog The Roots Arrested Development Outkast De La Soul Ice Cube Should have been ranked lower: P. Diddy Master P Wu-Tang Clan Shouldn't have been ranked at all: Tone-Loc Appropriately omitted: JJ Fad Fu-shnikens (sp?) Digable Planets Chi Ali Yo-Yo Doug E. Fresh (& Slick Rick) Rob Base Vanilla Ice etc. etc. (damn.. most hip-hop performers DO have a VERY SHORT "shelf life"..) I'll see you tonight..
in ALL MY DREAMS.. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
yeah, you can tell this list is not from HIP/HOP fans...come on Rakim wasn't higher.
BETs list of HIP/HOP acts looked very different. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
mltijchr said: Before I contribute here, I do want to mention the "disclaimer" that I have only a "casual" interest in hip-hop & only a "general knowledge" of a few of its biggest names, which would probably explain much of my commentary..
that said, I too am surprised that neither DIGITAL UNDERGROUND or Whodini were in the top 50 (then again, this IS "wanna be cool, wanna be all-up-in-hip-hop-without-ACTUALLY-showing-the_videos VH1.. what does anyone expect? & why did VH1 do only "50"??? they didn't know about/couldn't find 50 more?) the "Fat Boys"..? Hm. To even call them a "hip-hop novelty" act would be generous.. where was "Guru", of "Jazzmatazz" fame? I would essentially agree with the top 3, but I would put Public Enemy 1st because of "social conciousness" & that they were more.. they were more of several things, none of which I seem to be able to articulate at this time.. Those who should have been ranked higher: Salt-N-Pepa Beastie Boys Queen Latifah Tribe Called Quest even "Big Daddy Kane".. MC Lyte Surprised these weren't ranked higher, generally speaking: Snoop Dog The Roots Arrested Development Outkast De La Soul Ice Cube Should have been ranked lower: P. Diddy Master P Wu-Tang Clan Shouldn't have been ranked at all: Tone-Loc Appropriately omitted: JJ Fad Fu-shnikens (sp?) Digable Planets Chi Ali Yo-Yo Doug E. Fresh (& Slick Rick) Rob Base Vanilla Ice etc. etc. (damn.. most hip-hop performers DO have a VERY SHORT "shelf life"..) Thanks for such a well thought out post but I respectfully take issue with your comments about the Fat Boys. Most people forget or just don't realize the impact these cats had as well as their vocal skills. The problem is there skills are over-shadowed by the same thing that helped them become big (no pun intended) Most acts that hit big have a novelty. PE ,militant. Queen Latifah, afro-centric pro female. 2PAc, misunderstood thug. NWA, gangsta. Hell even Emenin is a hip-hop novelty in the fact he is a white rapper. The Fat Boys played a big role in the explosion of hip hop in the mid 80's. I would have to include anyone that was on that raising hell tour in the top 50. That tour was ground breaking in so many ways. So I'll stand by my comment that the Fat Boys should be in the top 50. In a list of 50 we need to include all of those who laid the ground work in the 80's. They had a much larger impact than Eve, Ja Rule or Coolio ever will. Bringing Together Five Decades of R&B/Funk/Soul/Dance
http://reunionradio.blogspot.com/ | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Run DMC are cool and all, there place in hip-hop's innovative history is assured BUT does anybody really enjoy listening to them the most and think they're the best? | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Essence said: Run DMC are cool and all, there place in hip-hop's innovative history is assured BUT does anybody really enjoy listening to them the most and think they're the best?
I do. In my car, I carry a collection of albums and 12" mixes I burned onto disk. I play it at least once a month. I can always enjoy hip hop in it's truest form and RUN-DMC is as real as it gets. Bringing Together Five Decades of R&B/Funk/Soul/Dance
http://reunionradio.blogspot.com/ | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
intha916 said: Essence said: Run DMC are cool and all, there place in hip-hop's innovative history is assured BUT does anybody really enjoy listening to them the most and think they're the best?
I do. In my car, I carry a collection of albums and 12" mixes I burned onto disk. I play it at least once a month. I can always enjoy hip hop in it's truest form and RUN-DMC is as real as it gets. Cool, back at the start they'd of been my favourite but in retrospect I don't rank them amongst the hip-hop music I enjoy the most. I play the greatest hits CD on occasion... | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Essence said: intha916 said: Essence said: Run DMC are cool and all, there place in hip-hop's innovative history is assured BUT does anybody really enjoy listening to them the most and think they're the best?
I do. In my car, I carry a collection of albums and 12" mixes I burned onto disk. I play it at least once a month. I can always enjoy hip hop in it's truest form and RUN-DMC is as real as it gets. Cool, back at the start they'd of been my favourite but in retrospect I don't rank them amongst the hip-hop music I enjoy the most. I play the greatest hits CD on occasion... I haven't heard much hip hop since that had as much passion and flow (Pac is the only other) as Run and D had. The way they bounced off each other lyrically was an art form that no other duo has been able to match (Chuck and Flav are the next closest) These cats will never be played to me anymore than James Brown or George Clinton will be played when it comes to soul and funk. There is a reason they are all godfathers of this shit. Not that they did it first, but they did it best. Bringing Together Five Decades of R&B/Funk/Soul/Dance
http://reunionradio.blogspot.com/ | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Channels and magazines create these lists simply to promote their network/magazine. It gets people arguing over it, debating it, and making threads on message boards about it. It's good PR for them.
I agree with you Essence, Run DMC, while I still highly respect them and enjoy their output, and how they did more for hip hop on a mainstream basis before anyone else; if I were going to make a list (which would be uncharacteristic of me in the first place) they wouldn't be at the top. Some of their music was progressive for hip hop for that time back in the 80s, but later on in time I don't find some of those same songs to be timeless. And at the same time, they're pioneers of the genre, and they belong in the upper echelon. I notice VH1 never lays out their criteria for these bloody lists. This post not for the wimp contingent. All whiny wusses avert your eyes. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
P Diddy before Afrika? What kind of joke is that shit? Personally . I think we are all Boring with No Lives cause all we do is talk about Prince,Criticize and Gossip. I need a Horny Man is what I Need and probably so do most of yas. We are Sexually Frustrated what we R... Amen..!!! - zelaire | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
intha916 said: Thanks for such a well thought out post but I respectfully take issue with your comments about the Fat Boys. Most people forget or just don't realize the impact these cats had as well as their vocal skills. The problem is there skills are over-shadowed by the same thing that helped them become big (no pun intended) Most acts that hit big have a novelty. PE ,militant. Queen Latifah, afro-centric pro female. 2PAc, misunderstood thug. NWA, gangsta. Hell even Emenin is a hip-hop novelty in the fact he is a white rapper. The Fat Boys played a big role in the explosion of hip hop in the mid 80's. I would have to include anyone that was on that raising hell tour in the top 50. That tour was ground breaking in so many ways. So I'll stand by my comment that the Fat Boys should be in the top 50. In a list of 50 we need to include all of those who laid the ground work in the 80's. They had a much larger impact than Eve, Ja Rule or Coolio ever will.
I'd be the last 1 to entirely discount the "impact" of.. the Fat Boys (brief pause, followed by irrepressible "chuckles"..) the biggest 1, wasn't he 1 of the 1st "human beat boxers"? Yeah, I suppose in some sort of way they made a contribution to hip-hop.. they've certainly contributed more than.. Ja Rule.. THAT'S for damn sho! I'll see you tonight..
in ALL MY DREAMS.. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Since when does Viacom Hits 1 know anything about hip hop. This so called list is insulting. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
it's from VH1, what do you expect? ~KiKi | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
no pharcyde? ! | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
mltijchr said: where was "Guru", of "Jazzmatazz" fame?
FYI -- Guru actually made the list, as the vocal half of Gang Starr (DJ Premier is the turntablist/producer). | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Kool Moe Dee should have been on this list. His 1989 hit "I Go To Work" is a tour de force of lyrical/rhythmic dexterity that few have equalled or surpassed IMO. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Brother915 said: Kool Moe Dee should have been on this list. His 1989 hit "I Go To Work" is a tour de force of lyrical/rhythmic dexterity that few have equalled or surpassed IMO.
He is on it. #48 Bringing Together Five Decades of R&B/Funk/Soul/Dance
http://reunionradio.blogspot.com/ | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
intha916 said: Brother915 said: Kool Moe Dee should have been on this list. His 1989 hit "I Go To Work" is a tour de force of lyrical/rhythmic dexterity that few have equalled or surpassed IMO.
He is on it. #48 Oh yea... I see it now...My bad. | |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |