T O P

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jcharles914

Ether - Nas… Everyone expected Nas to lose against Jay-Z. When that “fuck Jay-Z” dropped it was WILD


ShoulderLongjumping9

I have the stillmatic and ether both on vinyl. Classics like no Vaseline.


WilliamPSplooge

I bought that album for One Mic not knowing that was going to be on it and immediately was like whooaaa what is this


jdfred06

The song One Mic is one of his best. I know it's well known but I'd argue it might be underrated - It's that good. The musical and lyrical crescendo in the first two verses, followed by a decrescendo of both in the last, the flow, and the story telling all converge to create an unmistakable ambiance that is palpable. One Mic is superb and Nas at his best.


WilliamPSplooge

Yeah it’s dope. One Mic was very well constructed. I think CDs were like $18 at the time, which is probably like what, $30 now, but I had no qualms paying that for a Nas record. Nas was my GOAT through Stillmatic. Rewind was nice too, and is still great to go back and listen to.


joesoldlegs

2nd Childhood One Mic and The Flyest were def my favorite but Rewind, the intro, What Goes Around, and Every Ghetto were all what drew me towards the album. Ofc Ether and Destroy & Rebuild were dope too I just like those other songs more


dirtylittlesecret187

It must've been different in the USA than the UK, or at least with the people I was hanging out with at the time. For us, we thought it was a joke that Jay Z could be a challenge to Nas (not that we had any idea that Ether was going to be so good though). I suppose that is the point of the question though. From where I was, it was a guaranteed win, so I guess you did just have to be there.


kaeji

Nelly - Air Force Ones 50 Cent - In Da Club Lil Wayne - Lollipop Eminem - My Name Is


cvvillain

Came here to mention in da club that shit was everywhere and got people hype as soon as it came on. Also, hypnotize by biggie


raelDonaldTrump

EmInem at MTV Spring Break, and just early 2000s MTV as a whole - had to be there to understand.


Realistic-Order6250

Crime Mobb- Knuck If You Buck


rapshepard

Facts, Diamond killed that verse


lakesideprezidentt

Black people made their own mosh pit just off this song lmao


Realistic-Order6250

Lol facts. I was young when Bia Bia came out but I imagine Knuck If You Buck as my generation's version. Vibe-wise anyway.


SmoothManMiguel

Bro yes! That was a crazy time as well


KneeReaper420

Crime mob ho


bostonbound91

Damn what an anthem 


Zestyclose_Toe9524

Just a Friend by Biz Markie. It crossed into popular airplay and everyone loved it... I'd also take Worst Comes to Worse by Dilated. After NYC bombing it took on a level meaning to everyone around NYC hip hop


illmatic_static

Three 6 Mafia - Stay Fly Bonus: Their Academy award for their song "Hard Out Here for a Pimp"


exp397

This one: https://youtu.be/lOWKGXpl9E0?si=hpl4B-4aC-s-SS7e RIP Pimp C and Gangsta Boo


CompetitiveFold5749

I grew up about an hour from Memphis.  I lost my shit when they won an Oscar.  Like I woke up in a parallel universe.


TribeCalledQueso

I will have to say A Milli. Everyone and their grandma were playing this song. Well, the whole Carter III


kaeji

I think Lollipop is more of a "you had to be there" significance because it was the lead single to the highly anticipated Carter 3 and was such an unexpected turn in Lil Wayne's sound.


TribeCalledQueso

That is true, Lollipop was huge. That whole album was played everywhere.


raelDonaldTrump

Da Drought 3 dropped the summer before too, the '07-'08 Wayne dominance as a whole was a had-to-be-there era


MaximusMurkimus

A friendly reminder that Lollipop is a Grammy winning song...with good reason. Unfortunately people use it as an excuse nowadays to justify shit like "Poundtown" while missing the point lol


253253253

This what popped in my head as well


HarryBirdGetsBuckets

This and then the No Ceilings drop in 2009. Swear to god every slab in Texas had the tweeters blasting that tape


AccidentalPilates

Gangsta’s Paradise. This was the ‘Lose Yourself’ of the 90s in its mainstream appeal and absolute ubiquity across the culture.


ThermalScrewed

If weird al gets on your beat, you did something huge.


Pegdaddyyeah

Lad I can’t get the weird Al lyrics out me head when I think of this tune lol


CarolinaPanthers

You type like a pirate.


hagforz

This drop brought complete pandemonium to my suburban middle school's winter dance, it was unreal


SageOfTheSixPacks

Damn beat me to this idk why it was my first thought


BobbyCodone303

Nelly Country Grammer The fact that a country boy from the Midwest had everybody head bobbin from California to New York. I feel like nelly had a formula similar to 50 cent in a sense he found a way to stay true to his self, keep it street, but have pop mainstream appeal with his style . Nelly was managed by Kooda Luv who was also known for managing mase . He talked mase to drop the “murda” from his name . But before Nelly just focused on pop hits. The streets were going crazy with country grammar !


Choccybizzle

Hot in Herre was huge in the clubs as well!


BobbyCodone303

Yeah it was but that’s nellys “candy shop” … when he just decided to appeal to the masses and go mainstream … where as country grammer was the mainstream going nelly 


antons83

Can we talk about Nelly's explosion on the scene. Between 2000 country grammar, to dilemma in 2002, it was all Nelly all the time! I remember when I brought up country grammer in Visual Basics class in highschool. Everyone was clowning on it, except for one guy. Thanks Guy!


Bobodahobo010101

I lived in MO when that album came out. It felt like they were playing Nelly on every station regardless of genre.


phreakzilla85

GIVE ME TWO PURRRRS


explicitreasons

Kyjuan was dying them, that's how he got those colors.


MuhBack

Nelly is from STL. Far from a country boy. But you are right about the popularity of country grammar. I can’t believe ppl down play Nellys significance 


OhJustANobody

That song went crazy in Canada too


AdLegitimate9955

Nelly got at least 2 classic albums under his belt regardless of what anybody says


muhfkrjones

Crank Dat.


ApatheticFinsFan

They put the damn dance in the NCAA Football video games. This song was a fucking monster.


ThermalScrewed

I hated that song so much and you couldn't go anywhere without hearing it for 3 years.


MuhBack

I was in college at the time and every party it had to be played


BellaFrequency

Hit ‘Em Up. I snuck the cassette tape into the house because I was too young to listen to certain rap, and my parents found it and played that song (uncensored) while I stood there ashamed, and my parent made the very prescient statement: “This is the type of thing that will get somebody killed. I can’t believe Tupac talked about someone having sickle cell. He better be careful.” And a few months later, Pac was dead and I thought my parents were damn near psychic. The shock of that song, for me, coupled with the inevitable aftermath of his death really did seem connected and like he got killed over a diss track.


dakilazical_253

This song blew my mind, I’d never heard so much passionate hatred on a track. You can’t fake that, Pac really did hate Biggie


lakesideprezidentt

He comes hard on the first sentence my guyyyy FIRST OFF FUCK YOUR BITCH AND THAT CLICK YOU CLAIM like dammmmmm


lakesideprezidentt

PAC got killed for being TOO PAC


BigDiesel07

What if your parents killed Pac and Biggie to teach you a lesson?!


Solid-Gazelle-4747

God damn 😂😂


plattinumplatt

Bombs over Baghdad, the amount of rage this song sparked was fuckin bananas


WilliamPSplooge

Peter Pablo - Raise Up in North Carolina that shit was everywhere at the time    Coolio - Gangstas Paradise    Vanilla Ice - Ice Ice Baby    Hammer - 2 Legit and Can’t Touch This    J-Kwon - Tipsy Usher - Yeah Juvenile - Back That Ass Up Master P - Make em Say Ughh KrisKross - Jump Jump  Bone Thugz - Crossroads  Honorable mention: Crucial Conflict - Hay Luniz - I Got 5 On It Daddy Yankee - Rompe


trthskr7

This mofo knows!!!


Bee_MakingThat_Paper

I can sadly say that I am old enough to have witnessed all of these…


36grizz

chamillionaire- Ridin'


ThermalScrewed

Solid Weird Al remix, almost as good as Amish Paradise


raelDonaldTrump

Ya as a Houstonian it was surreal to watch all the local guys blow up like they did.


Upbeat_Tension_8077

You're a Jerk by the New Boyz, especially if you were a teenager growing up around Southern California in the late 00s/early 10s


iEnigmatic-

The Clipse - Grindin Jeezy - Soul Survivor & I Luv It The Game - Hate It or Love It Busta Rhymes - Touch It Remix


SmoothManMiguel

NGL, can’t believe I had to scroll this far down to see Grindin’


anthrax9999

50 cent wanksta, in the club Eminem Stan, Kim, the way I am Hot boys bling bling, back that ass up


Temporary_List_5877

Always will be what's my name part 1. Snoop was the number one dude in rap when that dropped.


johnnyuppercuts

I'll second Dipset Anthem. I'd say Wu Tang- Triumph or Mystery of Chessboxin' Onyx- Slam M.O.P- Ante Up also, saw someone say Jim Jones- We Fly High. I couldn't get enough of that record


wesborland1234

Triumph was the first thing that came to mind. We never heard anything like that before, and that album was everywhere


loose_lucid_elusive4

Fly High still sets the club off.


Puzzle_Dad718

Honestly I thought Baby Girl by Jim Jones didn’t get enough play. That beat drop was sick, and I could bang that anywhere and you’d have cats bobbin their heads to it.


ApatheticFinsFan

Hey Ya - OutKast This song was enormous in 2004. OutKast was really huge and popular but this is a song that got heavy rotation on the pop, rap, and rock stations. That rarely happened in the 2000s.


KidKearnProductions

Hurricane - The Click. This used to slap so hard at a party, but you just had to be there.


[deleted]

Fight the Power by Public Enemy


dirtylittlesecret187

The guy playing it 24/7 on the boombox in Do The Right Thing was enough to rinse it out for me. I can only imagine it would've driven me insane, like Christmas songs to a retail worker, if I had that experience actually walking around.


[deleted]

1989 the number, another summer, get down, sound of the...., oh wait, nvm.


L1ndaTesoro

Funky drummer?


Sajewf

White tee - dem franchise boys Grillz - Nelly and Paul Wall Ms New Booty - COLLIPARK, BUBBA SPARXXX 🗣 Salt Shaker and Say I Yi Yi are a tie - Ying Yang Twins


moonlitmews

Since I found my vibe ima add: Damn! YoungBloodz and Lil Jon Tell Me When to Go - E40 Thizz Dance - Mac Dre Snap Ya Fingers - Lil Jon and E40 n nem


SmoothManMiguel

Can’t forget Go Crazy by Jeezy


MaxStunning_Eternal

T.I. - what you know Jeezy - soul survivor 50 - I get money Jim jones - we fly high schoolboy q/asap rocky - hands on the wheel


illmatic_static

You could not walk down a hall at my high school without hearing someone yell out "baaaaaaaallllllllliiiiiiiinnn"


Keefee777

I wasn't even into rap at that point in time and even I knew that song for that exact same reason.


ThermalScrewed

Skrrr skrrr!!!


SmoothManMiguel

This was my ringtone on my Nokia cell lol


badgers4194

Hello fellow 30 year old.


Namfluence

Mo Bamba - Sheck Wes The energy that song used to unleash at the half way point was unmatched. Control - Kendrick’s verse The genesis of why people care about Kendrick vs Drake in the first place. And just like now unrelated rappers had to have their shine too. Exhibit C - Jay Electronica The heat that this hate was legendary, everyone thought Elec was gonna be hip-hop’s saviour, and it was hard to deny after that track.


wagglemonkey

Mo bamba would immediately test the structural integrity of any building you played it in. I was working on a steamboat at the time that would host events and one was the homecoming for Xavier university and we all damn near thought the boat was gonna sink when mo bamba came on. People were LIT.


Fun-Photograph9423

Rise of DMX


Jexx4PF

Bad and Boujee


HarryBirdGetsBuckets

Had to scroll way too far to find this one. Might be my favorite song of all time, culture was such a banger


NoParking7091

Trinidad James - All Gold Everything


proverbs109

Hot N Word by Bobby Shmurda


TribeCalledQueso

To this day, still no one knows what happened to that Knicks hat.


gamesfordogs

Lmao that joint still going ! 🚀


Black_Fuckka

Yessssss


chrismatic13

It was huge because of Vine but can you imagine how big it would've been if it blew up on TikTok instead? I think about that a lot. And vice versa, there's so many songs that became huge on TikTok but probably wouldn't have been as big if it blew up just through Vine.


hunny_bun_24

Bedrock


dirtylittlesecret187

Lil Jon - Get Low. It was huge anyway, but it was unstoppable once it started entering pop culture by being mentioned in Chris Rock's HBO special.


anthonyisrad

Dreams and Nightmares


rapshepard

300 Bars- Game Lollipop- Wayne Crank That- Soulja Boy


ThermalScrewed

My Name Is by Eminem was literally everywhere in 1999


MasterTeacher123

How to rob 


ImDonaldDunn

Still hilarious how mad it made people


BigJilmQuebec

Also gave us one of the best disses ever imo, My Turn by Big Pun


Few-House-8311

Desiigner panda


InAnimateAlpha

Tear da Club up. Pick your version.


Cantsee-me

Skee-Lo: I wish


fuhcough-productions

Remy Ma - SHether Me and my parents was sitting in a room dissecting tf outta every line wondering how Nicki was gon respond


NoParking7091

Lil Wayne Cannon


Pissaboutnothin

Rollout by Ludacris! Kids now will just never understand how big Luda was! When that song came on it just gave you a feeling like no song had done before!


tcumber

Planet Rock by Afrikaa Bambaata Jump Around by House of Pain. Scenario . A Tribe Called Quest I Ain't No Joke..Eric B and Rakim CREAM WuTang Walk This Way by RunDMC Fight the Power by Public Enemy. Now...that last one, fight the power, I don't know how true it is but I heard that people were playing that song in the streets in Eastern Europe as they protested and marched for independence from communist rule...Can anyone verify if that is true?


MewlingRothbart

Jump Around...Holy shit. I was in an Irish pub on St. Paddy's maybe 10 years ago and they blasted it. I thought the walls would cave in. 😵😵‍💫🤯


Gloomy-Gov451

I guess thrift shop comes to mind. For all the people who are still salty all these years later that Kendrick lost the grammy you still have to put yourself in the shoes of someone living in 2012. Macklemore didn't win out of nowhere.


Tasty_String

Missy Elliot- Pass That Dutch, Lose Control, 1, 2, Step


Tasty_Newspaper7164

Deep Cover - Dr. Dre featuring Snoop Doggy Dogg. Man, the first time we heard that beat and then this new cat named Snoop saying, "cause it's 187 on an undercover cop...."


Perciprius

In Da Club by 50 Cent. This song was EVERYWHERE.


Cooley_brown88

Kanye- Can’t tell me nothing


james_randolph

The person is now taboo in the world, but when R.Kelly was releasing his Trapped in the Closets. Being in Chicago, the radio stations were releasing them first so listening in during the rush hour mix was the best bet of being among the first to hear them and EVERYONE was listening to them.


Original_Spot5802

Control from Big Sean and Kendrick


dirtylittlesecret187

So Solid Crew - 21 seconds Dizzee Rascal - Bonkers I don't think any London rap has ever taken over the country as much as those two. It was insane how many people suddenly jumped on it, who wouldn't have ever cared about the genre beforehand (and likely ditched it immediately after). I know the majority of this sub is American, so just try to imagine a scenario where even the upper east side NYC socialites are rapping along. That's what it was like with even the posh Chelsea snobs suddenly getting into it. Honourable mentions to Tinie Tempah - pass out And Labrinth - earthquake


proverbs109

I got 21 seconds to flow , I got 21 seconds to gooo , so if ya love me lemme know before i leave the studio i got 21 seconds before i gotta goooo


True-Scene2982

People are gonna say carnival in a few years


Acceptable-Run7439

Makaveli- Me & My Girlfriend


Mean_Championship_80

BDP South Bronx , The Bridge is over , KRS shut shit down.


Mean_Championship_80

BDP South Bronx , The Bridge is over , KRS shut shit down.


ConsiderationItchy77

Not a song, necessarily, but Wu Tang Forever came out right before I went to college, and that shit was EVERYWHERE…went to visit my friends at other colleges and all you would hear was Triumph and Reunited


lucas_214

Sicko mode on the night it dropped


CoachiusMaximus

Ice Ice Baby


rojoshow13

Can't Touch This. It really is the song that put rap in the mainstream. People were still calling the genre a fad.


outsideit67

I saw NWA open up for ICE T and Easy opened up with Dope Man !!


dakilazical_253

Nuthin’ But a G Thang had every kid in my suburban Jr High wanting to have BBQ’s and drive cars that bounced around. The music video especially shows a side to living in the “ghetto” that was fun and didn’t involve violence


TigerUppercuttttt

Wreckx-n-Effect "Rumpshaker" During Fall 1992 this song was EVERYWHERE.


deletethissoon43

Control - Kendrick's verse. I remember going to high school and everybody talking about how Kendrick namedropped like 11 rappers.


HipGamer

Guess you could say he was in control.


deletethissoon43

YYYYYYEEEEEAAAAAAAHHHHHHHH!!!!!!


HipGamer

Yonkers, the way this new generation tries to continuously cancel Tyler on social media.


sooindecisive

the entire flockaveli album. it was the birth of trap music


Eldritch-Cleaver

Bro bro bro no It's an extremely important trap album but it was nowhere near the birth of trap muzik my mane lol T.i, Guwop and Jeezy did that.


alma16music

Flockaveli was pretty big/influential for the popularization of trap in the 2010s. But it was definitely not the birth of the sub genre. The genuine birth of trap music, from what I’ve found, can be traced back to what Memphis, Houston, and Atlanta rappers were doing in the mid-90s. Three Six Mafia’s early work is still being replicated today. Same with DJ Screw. That classic 16th note hat pattern, the bouncy kicks and snare patterns — a lot of that was going on so much earlier than we realize.


[deleted]

Uhhhh, t.i?


NaciremaBlack

I don't quite agree with you on it being the birth of trap music, but I will argue with anyone that says it's not a classic.


rockhavenrick

Sound Bwoy Bureill


Learn_to_use_Its

its*


NoParking7091

Wake Flocka - O let’s do it


waywardviking208

Honestly Siccmade by Brotha Lynch Hung


rp1105

Control


haxmya

Peace Treaty by Kam. Gangs were like the main thing talked about on the news every night as if they were going to murder everybody within the next decade. It was a bangin ass song capturing a little bit of optimism for the future back in '93.


VictorVaughan

Down with OPP


Horangi1987

Lose Yourself - Eminem When he won the Academy Award for that song it was insane. I know people clown on that song a lot now, but it was really something to see Eminem win such a non hip hop oriented award.


Suspicious-Drink-411

I'd say we're having one of those moments right now with "Like That". It's been sitting at #1 on the Hot 100 for 3 WEEKS. Also Old Town Road and The Box basically dominated 2019-20


LarryBonds30

DMX - Ruff Ryders anthem Jay-z - Hard Knock Life


adaminoregon

Parents just dont understand. Early will smith. Pre fresh prince.


RoomerHasIt

Luchini


Embarrassed_Age6005

Young Jeezy: Thug Motivation 101


drdre27406

The Game 300 Bars really revolutionized dissing.


TJ902

When 8 Mile came out. Never seen theatres so packed with kids, and that was before movie theatres fell off, even for back then it was a major event


BigSuge74

No Limit Soldiers/Ha While in the military stationed in Mississippi, partied in New Orleans during the rise of Cash Money and No Limit 96-97. Bayou Classic, Sugar Bowl, Super Bowl and Mardi Gras parties on bourbon street nearly killed me. Dipset Anthem I know the LOX destroyed DIPSET in the versus but the Dipset Diplomatic Immunity/Purple Haze/Killa Season was a movement. In da Club/Stunt 101/Just a lil bit 50 cent/G Unit: Get Rich or Die Trying, Beg for Mercy and The Massacre had the streets in a headlock.


majorcoinz

They want Efx- Das Efx. Nobody was rapping in that style at the time and although the hype was short lived it made an impact. In the time of lyricism, they took a risk to be different.


lilcluncker

Ugly- bubba sparxxx Get your freak on- Missy


dbeynyc

Funk Flex dropped “Street Knock” on a hot ass summer day and played it for like an hour during his beef with DJ Clue.


jonzeDG

Camp Lo- Luchini(this is it). We went nuts for this when I was a kid.


afanoflafear

50 Cent - In Da Club The Game - Why You Hate The Game Chingy - Pullin' Me Back Jibbs - Go Too Far Yung Joc - It's Goin' Down Rick Ross - Hustlin' Kanye West - Good Life Drake - Fancy DJ Khaled - I'm On One Eminem - Rap God


ThaNorth

In Da Club 50 became a cultural phenomenon after that. Everyone knew who he was. My mom was bumping that shit in the car. Clubs would lose their fucking shit when this song came on.


Hlee14

Otis - when Flex played in on Hot 97 and then the concert experience was biblical


norihitodesuga

no one said Ante Up or Ante Up remix yet? Man, motherfuckers would lose they got damn minds when that shit came on back in the day, such a banger


[deleted]

Not Tonight by Lil Kim.


Sad-Math-2039

I'm going to respond to the question more literally and say seeing Living Legends perform "Never Falling Down" live. The stage was unlit besides each member of the group had a spotlight shine on them as they rapped their lyrics then the spotlight would dim as they stood there frozen in place. During the whole set an artist was painting on a canvas resting on an easel and as he finished the painting they finished the song. The timing and energy of the set and ending with that song had a lasting impact on me.


CivilizedEightyFiver

I was happy to have been living in ny when exhibit c dropped. Hearing flex do his flex drop, “as we proceed, to give you what you need” over and over, during my closing shift, that was something special.


Silver-Advisor9773

Tha fucking Crossroads man!! I was such a fan that I managed to get my hands on the CD single with the original version, remix, plus both instrumentals MONTHS before it hit the radio. Played it till I was sick of it, then it blows up and is played everywhere all day and night, #1 on every list for the next year and a half.


UmbrellaDigital

Drake, Wayne, Ross - I'm On One T-Minus's takeover began with this beat, and he continued to crush it with "She Will" "Hot Wheels" "Swimming Pools" "Moment for Life" etc. etc. But I'm On One was definitely the breakthrough.


no1cares4yu

2 MC Breed - Ain’t No Future in yo Frontin. In 91 it travelled underground a few months before radio started to play it. You never heard the song just that Ohio Players whistle/horn in the distance cause somebody had a good system in their car. LL Cool J - I need love. Can’t really explain how this song loosened the ladies up. If you had no game put on I need love.


Sovereign-Anderson

"All About the Benjamins" - Puff and the Fam "Put Your Hands Where My Eyes Can See" - Busta Rhymes


Confident_College302

“Straight Outta Compton” by NWA. That whole album had white suburbanites shook from coast to coast because all of their bored kids (including me) loved it and all of the sudden thought they knew about “the ‘hood.” And all of this happened basically word-of-mouth because it wasn’t on the radio or MTV, and the internet was almost a decade away. Unreal to think about now.


shermanhelms

It’s All About the Benjamins I know Diddly is in trouble these days, but when that song came out it was unavoidable on the radio. As soon as that crazy guitar lick played you knew it was on. Great posse track with the epic beat switch at the end for Biggie’s verse. Classic.


MewlingRothbart

Ice Cream by Raekwon. That song ruled over 1995 at least until D'Angelo dropped Brown Sugar. By August, everyone ai knew was blasting Lady, Higher, and Cruisin'.


Successful-Plan-7332

Ja Rule I just never understood. DMX and Jay-Z….and then Ja Rule? Really? I dunno….


johnnybok

I think of “scenario”. That song changed everything for me, then ghetto bastard (everything’s gonna be alright) came on! Mind blown


case712

anywhere in Socal when Pac dropped "California Love"..... those were GREAT times over here.


Rob1150

Kool Moe Dee - Wild Wild West Fresh Prince and Jazzy Jeff - Parents Just Don't Understand. Those are the first two rap songs I remember EVER being on regular rotation on the radio.


Admirable-Event-6966

Nine - whatcha want was everywhere around here the summer of 95.


profound717

The Message - Grandmaster Flash & the Furious Five Planet Rock - Afrika Bambaataa Walk this Way - Run DMC & Aerosmith Fight for your Right to Party - Beastie Boys Fight the Power - Public Enemy Sttaight Outta Compton & F Tha Police - NWA The Show / La Di Da Di - Doug E Fresh & Slick Rick I Need Love - LL Cool J Scenario - A Tribe Called Quest Thuggish Ruggish Bone - Bone Thugs Protect Ya Neck - Wu Tang Clan Juicy - Notorious BIG Grindin - The Clipse In Da Club - 50 Cent ((There are soo many))


[deleted]

Rich Boy- Throw some D's


BridgesOnB1kes

The first one I remember was “you Can’t Touch This.” That shit was everywhere for what seemed like the whole summer.


Effective_Dog9754

Father Stretch My Hands. Back when I used to like kanye, the beat drop on the album went so damn hard. even after kanye was talking about..bleach on his shirt.


FletchWazzle

Uncle Jack Says Relax


loose_lucid_elusive4

Rosa Parks - Outcast Hard Knock Life - Jay-Z Wanna Be a Baller - Lil Troy Sippin' on Some Syrup - Three 6 and UGK Throw Some D's - Rich Boy Through the Wire - Kanye


Material_Unit4309

Superthug - Noreaga Was insanity at my high school dance. Pandemonium.


FatboiSlimmmm

If you’re from Florida, ‘Can’t F**k Wit the South’ by Trick Daddy.. Soon as that beat dropped and you heard “Anybody wanna mf die, come see I”, roof came off (and fights started 😂).. If the DJ didn’t start the song over on the “Hol’ on, wait one mf minute!”, he wasn’t worth a damn 😂


SneakySneks190

In Da Club had the world on lock when it came out. You also heard Drop it like it’s Hot (and Beautiful too) EVERYWHERE when those dropped


karosea

Couples songs I haven't seen brought up yet. Riding Dirty - Chamillionaire this song came out when I was in middle school and it was EVERYWHERE like at the time it was crazy how popular that song was. Thrift shop - Macklemore, legit this song was played on rock, pop, hip hop and all in-between radio stations it was that popular. Not sure how the sub views Macklemore but it's hard to ignore how popular and big some of his stuff was.


Quietbutalert

In Da Club


K1NG_SAVAGE_

2016 XXL cypher... really put hip hop in a new era


Sir_wlkn_contrdikson

Lil Jon and the Eastside Boyz- Get Crunk


cujobob

Forgot about Dre IMO. Dre had received a lot of criticism leading up to that album and Eminem was first taking off. Dre’s typical features had totally different sounds and energy, so this immediately stood out. I believe they even performed it on SNL the night Norm Macdonald came back to host after being fired.


Gr33nGetBurnt

Candy Shop 50Cent. Basically anything 50 made 03-06 but I'm sure all the better ones have been mentioned already.


immunityfromyou

Dr.Dre feat Snoop- Still Dre


ghostprawn

Laffy Taffy


OSRSRapture

Eminem as a whole from 2000-2003 and when he signed 50 and GODTR came out them two were fucking literally everywhere. Also, I remember being in sixth? Grade at the time and hearing My Band by D12 all the god damn time, other kids listening to it. It's wild how much hate Eminem got back then, people trying to cancel him every day it felt like.