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Greatest Rap Albums Ever

Posted on June 29, 2006December 23, 2019 by Robbie Ettelson

I just got an email from a reader named Lily who commented:

i have only recently realized that hip hop (and soul and funk and jazz and so on) is the only thing worth listening to in this day and age. rock music is so fucking tired and i’ve been listening to it for too long. i’m really ignorant though. i don’t know anything about this music, but i’m 15 so i guess there’s still time for me to learn.

While I’m always glad to help, the question is: do I recommend what I consider to be the greatest rap albums ever, or try to consider what would provide the most well-rounded introduction to the hip-hop? Obviously, the first option is the only way to go. Save that well-rounded nonsense for the drive-through customers at Krisy Kreme. Note that I’ve only listed one album from each artist, even though a few of them have several classics under their belt.

Unkut.com’s Top Ten Rap LP’s:

1. Criminal Minded – Boogie Down Productions

Changed the sound of hip-hop forever. Every song is great.

2. Critical Beatdown – Ultramagnetic MC’s

So far ahead of it’s time that it still hasn’t been surpassed. State-of-the-art beats meet bugged-out lyrics for a the perfect mixture of originality and hardcore b-boy shit.

3. Long Live The Kane – Big Daddy Kane

Marley Marl‘s “project sound” at it’s best, combined with the one of the most gifted rappers to ever put it down.

4. Saturday Night – Schoolly D

If you don’t already, this LP will inspire to start smoking weed.

5. Wanted: Dead or Alive – Kool G Rap & DJ Polo

The best album from this tough-talking pioneer of street-level rap.

6. The Beatnuts (aka Street Level) – The Beatnuts

Lyrically hilarious and musically incredible.

7. Stunts. Blunts & Hip Hop – Diamond D

Forget De La Soul, this album broke the boundaries of what you could sample.

8. Return of the Funky Man – Lord Finesse

Talking shit has never sounded this good.

9. Mecca & The Soul Brother – Pete Rock & CL Smooth

To this day, the most sophisticated example of the fine of art of sampling ever released.

10. The Low End Theory – A Tribe Called Quest

A perfectly stripped down return to the basics.

Plus here’s another thirty essential albums:

Act A Fool – King Tee
Vagina Diner – Akinyele
It Takes A Nation of Millions To Hold Us Back – Public Enemy
Breaking Atoms – Main Source
Illmatic – Nas
Ready To Die – Notorious B.I.G.
Follow The Leader – Eric B. & Rakim
Together Forever:Greatest Hits – Run-DMC
Step Into the Arena – Gangstarr
Operation: Doomsday – MF Doom
Paper Chase – Krown Rulers
Original Stylin’ – Three Times Dope
Strictly Business – EPMD
A Constipated Monkey – Kurious
Radio – LL Cool J
Only Built For Cuban Linx – Raekwon
Liquid Sword – GZA
The Infamous – Mobb Deep
Ride The Rhythm – Chill Rob G
Runaway Slave – Showbiz & AG
Straight Outta Compton – NWA
Geto Boys – Geto Boys
Goin’ Off – Biz Markie
The Convicts – The Convicts
Controversy – Willie Dee
All For One – Brand Nubian
Lifestyles Ov Da Poor & Dangerous – Big L
Kool & Deadly – Just-Ice
It’s A Compton Thang – Compton’s Most Wanted
Put Ya Boots On – Double XX Posse

While you can still pick-up a lot of these albums, if you have trouble finding any of them you could ask at our new message board.

Here’s a little something to listen to:

Ultramagnetic MC’s – Bait (full version)

Lastly, I’ve started a new blog over at Vox which covers stuff not necessarily related to music. They have a “Question of the Day” thing which is vaguely entertaining. I might get sick of it in a few weeks, but in the meantime:

Opinions Are Like Beer Cans

Note: The templates over there all have pictures that look like they belong on Lego boxes. The choice of “rolling hills”, robots or a “Blocko” city was a tough one.

51 thoughts on “Greatest Rap Albums Ever”

  1. Double R says:
    June 30, 2006 at

    it’s a good list, but I wouldn’t recommend a lot of that stuff to a person who is new to hiphop. I think the best albums to start with would be Gangstarr LP:s, Pete & CL, Beatnuts, ATCQ, basically the 2nd half of the top ten… plus of course wu-tang LPs from 93-97. In my opinion albums like Critical Beatdown, By all means necessary, Criminal Minded etc. have a sound that’s too raw and stripped down for a new fan to truly appreciate, until they’ve studied the music a bit more… I might be wrong though. Also, I would highly recommend ORGANIZED KONFUSION, my fav. hiphop group of all time! I cant see it in your list, you sure KURIOUS or CONVICTS are more essential purchases, Robbie?

  2. Robbie says:
    June 30, 2006 at

    It would have taken forever for me to figure out the best LP’s to start out on, so I just listed shit I like. But I completely forgot Organized…their first two albums were ill. Equinox had it’s moments as well.

  3. daWB says:
    June 30, 2006 at

    Jungle Brothers – Straight Out The Jungle

    This is a classic, right? Their only good album perhaps.

  4. The Funkologist says:
    June 30, 2006 at

    I would choose ‘Music II Drive By’ over ‘It’s A Compton Thang’ and ‘Moment Of Truth’ over ‘Step In The Arena’, but overal your list is pretty much on point. Good lookin’, 1.

  5. Wes says:
    June 30, 2006 at

    No Jay-Z albums? C’mon, who the f**k are The Convicts????

  6. Robbie says:
    June 30, 2006 at

    Jay-Z’s dope, but I’ve never liked any of his albums all the the way through – including “Reasonable Doubt”.

    RE: The Convicts

    http://www.unkut.com/2005/06/classic-ignorance-convicts/

  7. Drlrockwell says:
    June 30, 2006 at

    Thanks for the MP3 version of bait. I got a copy of it on wax from Red Alert’s 1st comp album but it faded out in the end. Also, your list is pretty soild but I have to agree with daWB, the JBs – Straight out the Jungle was a classic that should have been included.

  8. Wes says:
    June 30, 2006 at

    You need to revist The Blueprint.

  9. BR says:
    June 30, 2006 at

    yikes, this dude really hasn’t heard any rap outside of new york!

  10. White Girl Lust says:
    June 30, 2006 at

    “Jungle Brothers – Straight Out The Jungle

    This is a classic, right? Their only good album perhaps.”

    Only good album? No way! “Done by the Forces…” is GREAT. Hell, even the next one (Remedy something) had fly beats. Anyone recall that QTip Remix from that album.

  11. P-Matik says:
    June 30, 2006 at

    HAHA!! You said Willie D “Controversy”. Man, I think that’s still overall the worst album made even in today’s standards.

  12. Robbie says:
    June 30, 2006 at

    “Controversy” is one of the finest “ignorant” albums ever made. I’ll explain why in one of my next posts.

  13. Horsechoker says:
    June 30, 2006 at

    I’m not trying to undermine your listm, Robbie. I love Hip-Hop. I love all music in general and I’d like to recommend some recent Rock releases that maybe Lily won’t find “fucking tired.”

    Bang Bang Rock & Roll – Art Brut
    Pearl Jam – Pearl Jam
    Broken Boy Soldiers – The Raconteurs
    Rather Ripped – Sonic Youth
    Show Your Bones – Yeah Yeah Yeahs

    If anything, I’d say that good Hip-Hop is on the decline recently and a lot of great new Rock bands have been emerging.

  14. Horsechoker says:
    June 30, 2006 at

    Oh yeah,I almost forgot, Powder Burns by The Twilight Singers is one of the best Rock albums I’ve heard in a long time. Cop that!

  15. djeff says:
    June 30, 2006 at

    looking at your list, it looks like you stopped listening to hiphop since 95. And there’s no wutang, which hurts me since I began listening to rap with the 100+ wu and wufam albums I bought. Put something that’s good and that would appeal to a 15 year old boy. Iron flag. I dont know.

  16. farnsq says:
    June 30, 2006 at

    What about Digital Underground’s’Sex Packets’ and Cube’s ‘Amerikkkas Most Wanted’?

  17. farnsq says:
    June 30, 2006 at

    Yo – who fed Tuff Crew some e’s?
    http://youtube.com/watch?v=TaHXKuhSGmQ&mode=related&search=

  18. Dave Mack says:
    June 30, 2006 at

    A very solid list, no doubt.

    But in her letter she also mentioned, funk, soul & jazz, so it might be nice to list some albums or hip hop style mixes which have leanings towards those genres. Off the top of my head:

    Mixes
    DJ Shadow & Cut Chemist – Brainfreeze
    Paul Nice – Soul on the Grill
    Kenny Dope – 80s Roller Boogie
    Double Dee & Steinski – The Ultimate Lessons

    Albums
    Ugly Duckling – Fresh Mode
    Crown City Rockers – Earthtones
    Madlib & MF Doom – Madvilliany
    Ghostface Killah – Supreme Cliental
    People Under The stairs – OST
    Pharcyde – Bizzare Ride II

    peace

  19. 33jones says:
    June 30, 2006 at

    I know there’s nothing like “Put it in your mouth” on Vagina Diner but I still had to laugh at suggesting it to 15 year old Lily. Anyways…a few more that I would add:

    Dr. Dre – The Chronic
    Special Ed – Legal
    Lords of the Underground – Here come the lords
    Leaders of the New School – Future without a Past
    Eminem – Slim Shady LP (I have a feeling you won’t agree with this pick though)

  20. Robbie says:
    June 30, 2006 at

    There are close to 100 albums that I could’ve listed, but that would’ve taken forever.

    As far as newer stuff, I just find that most albums from the last ten years just aren’t that great as complete packages, even though they might have some dope songs. Some more recent LP’s worth getting include:

    “The War Report” – Capone-N-Noreaga
    “UN Or U Out” The UN
    “Supreme Clientele” – Ghostface Killah
    “Experience & Education” – Sadat X
    “Y2k” – Screwball
    “Clear Blue Skies” – The Juggaknots

  21. bedouin says:
    June 30, 2006 at

    X Clan “To the East Blackwards”

    Where the fuck is De La Soul “3 Feet High and Rising?”

    Slick Rick “The Great Adventures of . . . ”
    3rd Bass “The Cactus LP” (first, perhaps only tight white rappers)
    A Tribe Called Quest “People’s Instinctive Travels & the Paths of Rhythm”
    Black Moon “Enta da Stage”
    KMD “Mr Hood”
    O.C. “Word, Life”
    Souls of Mischief “93 ’till Infinity”
    DJ Jazzy Jeff and the Fresh Prince “He’s the DJ I’m the Rapper” (doesn’t matter what Will Smith is now); I played and attempted to imitate Live at Union Square at least one week for about two years.

    I second the vote for Straight out the Jungle. EPMD never gets mentioned in the “Greatest Hip-Hop LP” lists. It’s always the same tired Criminal Minded and Nation of Millions. Yeah they were tight LPs but move on. Do you really think Criminal Minded is greater than By Any Means Necessary?

    NWA “Niggaz4Life”
    Common Sense “Resurrection”
    Smif N’ Wessun “Da Shinin”
    Dark Sun Riders

    Fuck Willie D; you need Scarface “Mr. Scarface is Back;” there hasn’t been a harder LP since then.

    Was Double X Posse really worth checking for? I agree with most things . . . about time someone included “Strictly Business.”

  22. Robbie says:
    June 30, 2006 at

    “you need Scarface “Mr. Scarface is Back;” there hasn’t been a harder LP since then”

    True. How could I forget Face!

  23. Dave Mack says:
    June 30, 2006 at

    We just have to face facts and realise that its just too hard to list ALL of the good ones.

  24. biscuits says:
    June 30, 2006 at

    De La Soul Is Dead..A great cd all the way through.

    Pharcyde “labcabincalifornia”, every track stands on its own musically.

    Jungle Brothers “done by the forces of nature”, minus maybe 2 or 3 tracks and this is incrdible.

    “Raising Hell” or “Tougher than Leather” are better choices than “best of”. “best of”‘s are for those Krispy Kreme people.

  25. swordfish says:
    July 1, 2006 at

    nice selection. but i miss some bootcamp.
    smif n wessuns first is classic for me.
    group homes first is dope.
    redman anyone? jamal -last chance-undarated
    grand daddy i u -smooth assassin-is da shit
    above the law-livin like hustlers-
    ganksta nip? ahh theres too much..

    are there more than 2 chill rob albums?
    anyway fanx robbie.

  26. that girl says:
    July 1, 2006 at

    i love how everyone is like “no you must include this, you must include that!” i don’t think there could ever be a solid consensus on ten greatest rap lp’s.

    your choices are solid but like another poster said, i don’t think i’d start people off with that kinda stuff. it’s way too raw, and a lot of people seem to find it dated. i’ll admit a lot of that stuff is before my time or when i was more interested in barbies than rap, so i like people to use the same approach as i did…put them onto newer stuff or groups like tribe/de la and then if they think it’s dope, they dig. cus sometimes people get too caught up in that whole “i need some illmatic cus it’s a classic” type thing and then they overlook a lot of other dope stuff.

    however your list is pretty well-rounded, that’s just my beef with these things in general.

  27. The Eyechild says:
    July 1, 2006 at

    Illmatic.

  28. Vik says:
    July 2, 2006 at

    great list. why? cause i learned somethin…i now got somethin to look for on the internets or the bargain bin at j and r.

    some albums off the top of my head:
    raekwon: ob4cl
    snoop: doggystyle
    kokane: funk upon
    goodie mob: soul food

    peace

  29. Vik says:
    July 2, 2006 at

    just noticed raekwon on your list….disregard that.

    add run-dmc-raisin hell
    doc – no one can do it better

  30. Byron says:
    July 2, 2006 at

    One glaring ommision is K Solo’s Tell The World My Name … very slept on but so many excellent concept tracks on there like The Fugitive, Speed Blocks, Tales From The Crackside, Everybody Knows Me, Your Moms In My Business, Spellbound, Rocking For My Hometown. Musically, this was a good album too with nice music by the EPMD stable.

  31. Byron says:
    July 2, 2006 at

    Oh and Ra’s second and third LP’s were pretty classic in my eyes too … !

  32. Big Articulate says:
    July 3, 2006 at

    How did you miss ‘Hard to Earn’ the tightest lp from Hip-Hop’s greatest group ever?

    Or ‘The Sun Rises in the East’. Pure Genius.

  33. nyps says:
    July 3, 2006 at

    A few that I’d have included:

    The D.O.C. – No One Can Do It Better
    De La Soul – Stakes Is High
    Digital Underground – Sex Packets
    Black Sheep – A Wolf In Sheep’s Clothing

  34. Planet says:
    July 3, 2006 at

    It’s kind of hard to recommend hiphop to a newbie. you never know how they’re going to take in such classics. Will they have the right mind to understand these gems? That’s a hard one. And I wouldn’t recommend starting someone off with a lot of that stuff. Especially when it appears that she’s a girl (no disrespect intended) so I don’t know if Vagina Diner or the Beatnuts selections would be the appropriate recomendations haha. I mean a song like “Eat The Pussy” may not work for a girl.

  35. Greenie1 says:
    July 4, 2006 at

    Am I black enough for you – Schooly D?

    What about Run DMC – Raising Hell, you can’t include a greatest hits, thats cheatin’

  36. taylor says:
    July 5, 2006 at

    He did say he’d just list his favourites… but yeah, if you wanted to ease her into it, do it with groups such as de la soul, pharcyde, jurassic 5, atcq, the roots, dilated peoples, mos def, etc. Sure, not the favourites of the purists, but more understandable to unfamiliar listeners.

  37. mordecai says:
    July 5, 2006 at

    “Iron Flag”? haha!

    re: Vagina Diner recommended for girls
    Some females get down to some raw stuff, so why not.

    good list especially with the more contemporary suggestions. (Juggaknots…thumbs up)

  38. Boston George says:
    July 6, 2006 at

    Jungle Brothers Done by the Forces of Nature is way better than Straight out the Jungle, which is a classic, don’t get me wrong I love that record, but that 2nd JB’s album is genius…and true, whoever said the ‘minus 2 tracks’ thing was right on point…I agree with an inclusion of Jay Z’s Blueprint….Controversy is a classic, much slept on, worth the price of admission for the album cover alone…

  39. Lethlal Leigh says:
    July 6, 2006 at

    How come nobody mentions Chino XL? One of the illest spitters out there!

  40. Brian Beck From Wisconsin says:
    July 6, 2006 at

    I hope you “receiving an email” from this young wench Lily doesn’t translate as “i was in msn chat hollarin’ at pre=teens and impressin’ ’em with my rap blog god status when one of them asked me what the best rap albums are..”, Robert.

    “Don’t sweat the technique” is actually the best Eric Barrier and William Griffin album.

    I’d defantely include “AmeriKKKa’s most wanted”, “black bastards”, the diary” and “ridin’ dirty”

    Also, “funky technician” is so much better than “return of the funkyman”

  41. Robbie says:
    July 7, 2006 at

    ^ You do that too? My user name used to be “Rob Da Rap Blog Gawd” but I changed to “Ron Bergundy”.

  42. SENSimon says:
    July 7, 2006 at

    Man I Agree with mostly all those albums mentioned I have 2 crates filled to the brink with all those classic’s and more………
    I know it’s oldschool but have you thought of introducing the young lady to some Melle Mel and how good is Beatstreet the movie for an overall introduction to the Hip Hop Culture,I know she was askin about Music though so far go, he some Albums that I can think of off the top of my head that weren’t mentioned……..
    The 7A3 -(coolin in cali) DJ Muggs 1st production
    Nice & Smooth -(self Titled)
    MC Shan -(Down by Law)
    Skinny Boys-(Can’t get enough)
    JVC Force -(Doin’Damage)
    Steady B -(Let the Hustlers Play)
    Cool C -(I got a Habit)
    MC Lyte -(light as a rock)
    Stetsasonic-(on Fire)and(talking all that Jazz)
    Ice T- (Rhyme Pays)
    Masters Of Ceremony -(Dynamite)Grand PuBa’s 1st crew..
    Queen Latifah- (All hail the Queen)
    K SOLO -(Tell the World My Name) and I can’t believe no one has added……
    The Doc -(No one can Do it Better) this album is jam packed with pure funky hip hop beats that Kick started DrDre’s production career man I’m more into oldschool but those street slangin Gansta Funk Flows are on piont thats a must have.
    Anyway like I said Before that list is All good!
    except Kool G Rap & DJ Polo’s 1st Record (Road to the Riches) smashes (wanted dead or alive)……
    Oh Oh Orh ar Oh Yeah I almost forgot Thanks for BAIT by Ultra I picked up Red Alert Gose Berserk in a 2nd hand record store called Jellies whilst traveling to Hawaii from DownUnder in the early 90’s and I didn’t know until now that there was a last verse missing That’s going straight on the MP3 player By the way about that song does anyone know if Ultra were paid any Royalities by GhostFace Because he use’s the same Loop Tune all through Daytona 500.
    Also Here’s some cool flick that this new jack producer is puttin out called MuskaBeats it features heaps on influential Rapper’s Biz KRS The Wu, Melle MeL ,MC Lyte, GURU,Prodigy,Flavor Flav… here’s the link

    http://www.muskabeatz.com/Featuring/Flavor/

    it’s not bad Alrightee Then I’m OUTA Here like Last Year ABCee Ya.

  43. ceedub says:
    July 9, 2006 at

    Take A Look Around
    Slaughta House
    Sittin’ On Chrome
    Disposable Artists
    Long Hot Summer

    pick one of the above and include it in list. Da Masta is the only Juice Crew alumni who still puts out dope shit.

  44. Billy Sunday says:
    July 22, 2006 at

    Robbie, you give props to Screwball. My folks produ2ed them cats.

  45. Robbie says:
    July 22, 2006 at

    ^ You mean Mike Heron & Ayatollah?

  46. master gee says:
    July 30, 2006 at

    I wouldn’t include “Lifestylez Ov…” on the list. Sure, L’s rhymes are, how you say, fresh, but the Devil’s Son got buttfucked by the selection of sleep-inducing wino-ass beats. With the exception of the opening 3 songs, “Danger Zone” and “Let ’em Have It L”, it seems like D.I.T.C. used all their good beats on “Jealous Ones Envy”. GODDAMNIT FAT JOE!

    How is it possible that Big L didn’t get at least one Large Professor beat? No Pete Rock? No DJ Premier? Hell, I’d even like to hear an Erick Sermon beat or two. Hadn’t they heard of him by then? At the time he was on the same label as Nas. OR…were the beats they gave him even shittier? Quite a mystery.

  47. khalil says:
    November 23, 2006 at

    THANK YOU FOR PUTTING STUNTS BLUNTS AND HIP HOP, BECAUSE IT IS ONE OF THE GREATEST AND YET MOST OVERLOOKED ALBUMS OF ALL TIMES.

  48. J.Sax says:
    December 12, 2006 at

    Good list,but i miss Mantronix, T-la Rock, Just-Ice

  49. Anonymous says:
    June 28, 2007 at

    I meant to post this long ago…I had a New York tape (that’s what we called tapes people made of Friday & Saturday night WBLS & KISS) from the 80s that had a version of Ultra’s “Bait” that I have never heard since (my tape was stolen years ago). It must have been a rough, early version. Ced-Gee was in the break saying something like “Give ’em bait”. I wish I had that tape still. Has anybody else heard this version?

  50. ggg says:
    October 27, 2009 at

    NO EMINEM! WTF!

  51. C Style says:
    April 9, 2010 at

    To not have ” It takes a nation of Millions to hold us back” makes this whole list INVALID

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  • Mr. Muthafuckin’ eXquire – The Unkut Interview
  • DJ Skizz – The Unkut Interview
  • Positive K – The Unkut Interview
  • Willie The Kid – The Unkut Interview
  • MC Chill – The Unkut Interview, Part 2
  • MC Chill – The Unkut Interview, Part 1
  • B-1 – The Unkut Interview
  • DJ Too Tuff [Tuff Crew] – The Unkut Interview
  • TR Love [Ultramagnetic MC’s] – The Unkut Interview, Volume 2
  • DJ Moe Love [Ultramagnetic MC’s] – The Unkut Interview
  • Milano Constantine – The Unkut Interview
  • R.A. The Rugged Man – The Unkut Interview
  • Pudgee The Phat Bastard – The Unkut Interview, Part 2
  • Pudgee The Phat Bastard – The Unkut Interview, Part 1
  • Unsigned Skype: M. Will
  • DJ Chuck Chillout – The Unkut Interview
  • Lakim Shabazz – The Unkut Interview, Part 2
  • A-Trak – The Modern Fix Interview [2007]
  • Lakim Shabazz – The Unkut Interview, Part 1
  • Freshco – The Unkut Interview, Part 2
  • Freshco – The Unkut Interview, Part 1
  • Ron Delite [Priority One] – The Unkut Interview
  • Unsigned Skype: Cole James Cash
  • Cappadonna – The Unkut Mini Interview
  • MC Uptown Recalls Growing-Up With Biggie
  • Spyder-D – The Unkut Interview, Part 2
  • Spyder-D – The Unkut Interview, Part 1
  • Black Rob – The Unkut Mini Interview, Part One
  • Dante Ross Responds To The Uptown Interview
  • Uptown – The Unkut Interview
  • Snaggapuss – The Unkut Interview
  • Craig G – The Unkut Interview
  • Ralph McDaniels – The Unkut Interview, Part 2
  • Ralph McDaniels – The Unkut Interview, Part 1
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  • Jonathan Shecter aka Shecky Green – The Unkut Interview, Part 1
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  • MF Grimm – The Unkut Interview, Part 1
  • Kool Kim of the UMC’s – The Unkut Interview
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  • Kool G Rap – The Unkut Interview, Part 1
  • Sadat X – The Unkut Interview, Volume 2
  • The Doppelgangaz – The Unkut Interview
  • J. Force – The Unkut Interview
  • Prince Paul – The Unkut Interview
  • Vinnie Paz – The Unkut Interview
  • Shimrock [Point Blank MC’s] – The Unkut Interview
  • Neek The Exotic – The Unkut Interview
  • Non-Rapper Dudes Series – Peter Oasis Interview
  • Geechie Dan – The Unkut Interview, Part 1
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  • Ghostface Killah & Raekwon The Chef – The Lost Unkut Interview
  • Mario Rodriguez – The Unkut Interview, Part 2
  • Mario Rodriguez – The Unkut Interview, Part 1
  • Alexander Richter – The Unkut Interview
  • Tragedy Khadafi – The Unkut Interview, Part 2
  • Tragedy Khadafi – The Unkut Interview, Part 1
  • Internets Celebrities – Somebody Say Chea!
  • DJ Muggs & Ill Bill – The Unkut Mini Interview
  • Double J – The Unkut Interview
  • Chucky Smash From The Legion – The Unkut Interview
  • Grand Daddy I.U. – The Unkut Interview
  • Keith Shocklee Discusses ‘It Takes A Nation Of Millions…’
  • Prince Po – The Unkut Interview
  • Supply And Demand – Scholarwise Interview
  • Roc Marciano – The Unkut Interview, Volume 2
  • Big Twins (Infamous Mobb) – The Unkut Interview
  • Counter Strike Spotlight – Thorotracks Interview
  • Markey Fresh – The Unkut Interview
  • Imam THUG – The Unkut Interview
  • DJ Phantom Discusses Killa Sha’s Career
  • eskay [NahRight] – The Unkut Interview, Part 2
  • eskay [NahRight] – The Unkut Interview, Part 1
  • Sid Roams – The Unkut Interview
  • Dallas Penn – The Unkut Interview
  • Cormega – The Unkut Interview
  • Killa Sha – The Unkut Interview
  • Combat Jack – The Unkut Interview, Part 2
  • Combat Jack – The Unkut Interview, Part 1
  • Peter Rosenberg – The Unkut Interview
  • Doo Wop – The Unkut Interview Pt. 2: The Bounce Squad
  • Doo Wop – The Unkut Interview Pt. 1: ’95 Live
  • Sha Money XL Talks About His Early Days With 50
  • V.I.C. Responds to T-Ray
  • The 90’s Files: The Mighty V.I.C.
  • The 90’s Files – Kool Kim of UMC’s
  • Dante Ross – The Unkut Interview Part 3: The SD-50’s
  • Dante Ross – The Unkut Interview Part 2: The Elektra Era
  • Dante Ross – The Unkut Interview Part 1: The Tommy Boy Era
  • The Unkut Guide To: Top Choice Clique
  • Large Professor – The Unkut Interview
  • B-Real Hearts Paintball
  • The 90’s Files – F.T. of Street Smartz
  • Eric B. – The Unkut Interview
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  • Funkmaster Wizard Wiz – The Unkut Interview
  • Silver Fox – The Unkut Interview
  • Freddie Foxxx – The Unkut Interview
  • P Brothers – The Unkut Interview
  • KET – The Unkut Interview
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  • Roc Marciano – The Unkut Interview
  • Searching For Siah
  • Dr. Butcher – The Unkut Interview, Part 3
  • Dr. Butcher – The Unkut Interview, Part 2
  • Dr. Butcher – The Unkut Interview, Part 1
  • T La Rock Interview Pt. 2 – The Lost Tapes
  • T La Rock Interview Pt. 1 – The Story of It’s Yours
  • DJ Vicious Lee (Def IV) – The Unkut Interview
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  • Keith Shocklee – The Unkut Interview, Part 1
  • DJ Johnny Juice and Son of Bazerk – The Unkut Interview
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  • Interview Mixed Grill [Termanology, Tame One, Lord Jamar, Esoteric, DJ Crucial and Wax Tailor]
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  • Percee P – The Unkut Interview
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  • Breeze Brewin from Juggaknots Interview
  • Keith Murray – Verbal Aggression
  • Lord Ali Ba-Ski – The Unkut Interview
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  • T-Ray – The Unkut Interview, Part 3
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  • Hydra Special – Jerry Famolari Interview
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  • Joe Fatal – The Unkut Interview, Part 2
  • Joe Fatal – The Unkut Interview, Part 1
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  • Chill Rob G Interview – Part 1
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  • Mikey D – The Unkut Interview
  • Not For Sale – NYOIL Interview
  • Kenny Parker – The Unkut Interview, Part 3
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  • Kenny Parker – The Unkut Interview, Part 1
  • The Best That Never Did It – Blaq Poet Interview
  • Dedicated – DJ Eclipse Interview
  • Anthony Cruz AKA A-Butta (Natural Elements) Interview
  • Holdin’ New Cards – Scaramanga Interview
  • Jedi Son of Spock Interview
  • AJ Woodson (AJ Rok from JVC Force) – The Unkut Interview
  • Years To Build – DJ Ivory of the P Brothers

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