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Started Off Good, Ended-Up Great – Rap’s Most Improved

Posted on August 10, 2009December 24, 2019 by Robbie Ettelson

It’s one thing to shit on all these over-the-hill MC’s that need to put down the mic, but what about the flipside of the equation? The fact is, there are a rare breed of rapper dudes who didn’t peak on their debut and have actually developed into better lyricists over the years. Crazy talk, right? Not at all….

Rap’s Most Improved:

Sean Price – P was solid in his Heltah Skeltah days when he was just Ruck, but let’s be honest – he didn’t really stand-out amongst the crowded Boot Camp Click roster back then compared to the way that Jesus Price demands your attention ever since he returned as a show-stealing soloist.

Edo G. – As much as ‘I Got Ta Have It’ is a certified classic, Edo has evolved throughout his long career from a promising freshman into a seasoned veteran without missing a step, and has continued to prove that he’s currently capable of recording far superior verses to his early output.

Phife – The 5 Footer was fuckin’ awful on the first Tribe record, apparently due to the fact that he spent too much time running around in the streets while Tip was hard at work in the studio. I guess he realized that his rhyme game was lacking when he listened to People’s Instinctive Travels and hit the pen and pad hard in an attempt to get his verbal weight up. Low End Theory is proof that he stepped up to the plate and knocked it out the cot-damn park.

Masta Ace – His first album with Marley Marl was pretty good, but when he dropped Slaughterhouse he managed to combine parody with lyrics of fury to produce something that’s virtually impossible – a rap concept album that actually knocks! He also laid down the blueprint for some guy called Marshall Mathers to develop his flow technique.

Jay-Z – Went from tongue-twisting nonsense to the most influential of our time. Some say he’s lost his focus but BP3 will decide that.

Kanye West – I do my best to ignore this character, but word on the internets is that he’ll murder you on your own shit if you let him do a guest spot. I’ll admit that he sounds slightly less retarded than he used to though.

Cormega – From a slightly awkward delivery in his early days, Mega now commands your ear whenever he steps into the booth with a mixture of brutal honesty, impressive vocabulary and an air of QB nonchalance.

Ghostface – As great as Ironman is, something happened between then and Supreme Clientele that elevated Starks from Raekwon‘s partner in crime to certified genius, as evidenced on ‘Nutmeg’ and ‘Mighty Healthy’.

Who did I miss?

78 thoughts on “Started Off Good, Ended-Up Great – Rap’s Most Improved”

  1. nation says:
    August 10, 2009 at

    Sean Price >

  2. Jay says:
    August 10, 2009 at

    Big Pooh has improved since “The Listening”

  3. AaronM says:
    August 10, 2009 at

    Solid list, Robbie.
    I think Lil Fame and Danze (Fame especially) improved a lot as emcees in the time between “To The Death” and “Warriorz”. They got a little better at rapping each album.
    In terms of newer emcees, Black Milk was a much better emcee by the time he put out “Tronic.

  4. R says:
    August 10, 2009 at

    P!

    kimbo price mixtape,
    mic tyson album 2010 !

    P!

  5. spotrusherz says:
    August 10, 2009 at

    good post. kanye is still not the top notch rapper people make him out to be, but he has shown progress. kurupt got much iller over the years. havoc got better though he’s been slackin lately. fat joe is funny cause he got better in the late 90s and then spiraled down way lower after loyalty. styles p was dope in the bad boy days and got crazy dope on the solo tip but again, hardly any hot verses in the last 2 or 3 years. it’s like he forgot how to spit, his delivery supersloppy right now.

  6. Soufjerzz says:
    August 10, 2009 at

    Freeway – He defintely got 100x better.

  7. Mike says:
    August 10, 2009 at

    Lil Wayne? From the 90’s till now he’s changed his style, everything.

  8. 456 says:
    August 10, 2009 at

    hate him or love him: lil wayne

  9. villz says:
    August 10, 2009 at

    Terrible post, i can tell ur not a real hip hop fan.

  10. Eastern_Digital says:
    August 10, 2009 at

    I know this isnt the blog to say this, but Rick Ross improved a lot from Port Of Miami over Trilla to Deeper Than Rap.

  11. Who Dat says:
    August 10, 2009 at

    Lil Wayne improved his ability to pick ghostwriters a lot….so yeah you missed Lil Wayne

  12. Mobeezy says:
    August 10, 2009 at

    i dont think Cormega’s improved to me he sounds more repetitive then ever….remember when

    “ayo guns and roses, sons and soldiers drug game cocaine ac’s and range rovers snakes plan a way to set they own man up for grams when they bag up cristal white at night pistols might lift you like heat seeking missles”

    Nah man dont get it twisted now every rhyme out is mouth is “Illest, Realness, Feel This” etc.. I’m tired of that shit man. Back in the 90’s he was killin it I had the bootleg, and his new shit is good im not sayin he’s wack, but he’s gotten more repetitive then anything else, and the basketball player comparisons been goin on for years he need to come up with a concept album or something

  13. Mobeezy says:
    August 10, 2009 at

    and you make Jay Z sound wack back in the day….Reasonable Doubt is his best album, nothing he’s done since can compete, although he’s still got it he dont do it justice these days, he knows he’s better, but he writes clever to get more cheddar…thats that bullshit rhyme

    i fuck wit jay a little bit but knowing he’s better then what he’s spitting and saying it in his rhymes is wack

    “Truthfully I wanna rhyme like Common sense, but I did 5 Mill, I aint been rhymin like Common since”

  14. RowanB says:
    August 10, 2009 at

    I fully agree with Sean P but kanye is not a nice mc and mega has always been nice in my opinion :)

  15. nessnice says:
    August 10, 2009 at

    2pac..

  16. MaPa says:
    August 10, 2009 at

    Common….can i borrow a dollar he was talking nonsense

  17. Bastid says:
    August 10, 2009 at

    Andre 3000 – whether you start with the TLC “What About Your Friends” remix, or Southernplayalisticadillacmuzik, he went from good to one of the best out there.

    I agree with Lil’ Fame. Sounded a lot like a Kool G Rap biter until Firing Squad and then kept getting better.

  18. WallySean says:
    August 10, 2009 at

    young chris has really stepped up his game since state prop existed.

    to a degree, so has u-god. “dopium” was actually listenable. his imrovement probably isn’t enough to warrant a spot on this list, butit’s still considerable

  19. dockevoc says:
    August 10, 2009 at

    12 O’clock from Brooklyn ZU

  20. R.E.D. Inc. says:
    August 10, 2009 at

    T.I. – I’m Serious – Paper Trail-Crazy

    Bun B – Sideline to Pimp C – Rap legend

    Busta Rhymes

  21. Context says:
    August 10, 2009 at

    I would say Busta Rhymes and Pharoahe Monch. They both came out lyrically dope but have impressed over time.

    Also, Eminem and M.F. Doom have made some astonishing comebacks after inventing an alter ego.

  22. haze3 says:
    August 10, 2009 at

    Big L was getting better by leaps and bounds before he died. My friend and I used to talk about how wicked he was getting and then RIP. The whole style that Lord Finesse and him were coming with back then was butter, straight butter…Like if Premo did rhymes instead of beats thats the vibe Finesse had on the mic. Sorry for the OT but yeah L went from good to grrrrreat! and it was awesome!

  23. HIGH SNOB says:
    August 10, 2009 at

    ED O G???? WHAT?? What song has he even put out since the early 90’s?? Jesus.

    I’d have to say Jeezy. From those early mixtapes to now he’s grown by leaps and bounds. The early tapes were all about his adlibs and now, while he still uses the adlibs, he doesn’t hide behind them and he has a lot more shit to say.

    Wayne needs mentioning as well. Also Gucci is becoming much better.

  24. Steez says:
    August 10, 2009 at

    What? Kanye was at his best on College Dropout, his first record. If anything, he is on a decline. And Reasonable Doubt is easily Jay’s best record. That “tongue-twisting nonsense” contained his best verses lyrically.. Guess you’re part of the audience he decided to dumb it down for.

  25. con says:
    August 10, 2009 at

    I think kweli has actually tightened up alot since his rawkus days. Writing isnt much different, but his flow definitely seems less rushed and he stopped the 20 syllable lines

  26. chronwell says:
    August 10, 2009 at

    Rick Ross. Dude sounds like ’96 Nas is his ghostwiter.After he single hadedly destroyed G Unit in a weeklong war of wordz, he is a feared man on the M-I-C! Check one of his mixtapes , he can go outside of the coke aisle too.

  27. Foshiggadale says:
    August 10, 2009 at

    can’t believe no one mentioned Fat Joe, the improvement from Flow Joe to now is crazy

  28. hook says:
    August 10, 2009 at

    At the risk of incurring your scorn and hatred, the most obvious example is Lil Wayne. Hate him or love him you have to admit he’s evolved incredibly since his “wobbly wobbly” days.

    Also T.I. Gets better with every album.

    And E-40. Say what you will about his recent albums, but lyrically he gets better with every passing year. And when he first came out he was on some pretty corny shit. Now he sounds as hungry as any freshman out there, and he’s really picked his punchline game up.

  29. Patrick says:
    August 10, 2009 at

    Royce gets my vote. He has always been nice but in recent years has really stepped it up. That ‘blackout flow’ that he does on the Bar Exam mixtapes is incredible, one of the best flows out there now I think.

  30. HipHopHistorian says:
    August 10, 2009 at

    Yeah, Edo and Ace are the ones I have been saying this about for years. I can’t wait for their A & E album, it’s going to be a classic.

  31. Frank says:
    August 10, 2009 at

    I think you hit the nail on the head with Tony Starks. His verses on Enter the 36 are sort of so, so. Think about that record, he doesn’t really stand out… then Ironman was pretty good (maybe great?) and Supreme Clientele is really pretty great.

    Anyway. I agree.

  32. D-DAY says:
    August 10, 2009 at

    i would have to completely disagree with Sean Price and Ghostface. if you didn’t know that he was ridiculous with it back before he changed his name you have no clue. only thing he does differently now is say “P!” so it’s like he has his own little trademark thing like jadakiss’ corny baby cry/laugh thing he does.
    and ghost? you like his ravioli-ziti-nutriment-strawberry-kiwi nonsense lines better than his OB4CL raps????????? you serious????
    Prodigy sucked in Juvenile Hell then turned into a rap god and has regressed since.
    kanye has always been good but he has improved.
    fat joe was the worst ever on his first album (although the beats were crazy) and he improved a lot but whether it was a result of his own pen has obviously been debated.

  33. Trakball says:
    August 10, 2009 at

    I don’t know if this list extends to west coast new schoolers, but I’d put Thes One from People Under the Stairs on my “most improved” list. He’s been nice for a while, but the incredible leap he made from their first album to their sophomore one was just amazing. Oh and by the way, much love to the Extra P but Thes hooked up that loop from “Queens Lounge” on their joint “Earth Travellers” waaaaay better than Large Pro did.

  34. haroon says:
    August 10, 2009 at

    “Kanye West – I do my best to ignore this character, but word on the internets is that his ghostwriters will murder you on your own shit if you let him do a guest spot. I’ll admit that he still sounds afflicted by down syndrome.”

    Fixed that for you.

  35. BIGSPICE says:
    August 10, 2009 at

    Rick Ross fucking sucks. Always has, always will. I will agree overall Jay-Z has gotten better over the years, just by changing his delivery. Fat Joe had sharpened his shit from flow joe to don cartagena, but I don’t know about recently. I also think that Black Thought made that leap from good to great. But Rick Ross still sucks.

  36. gstatty says:
    August 10, 2009 at

    mf doom got better than his KMD days, i like tame-one better than when he was in the artifacts, not many have gotten better than they used to be and i agree with your list robbie aside from jay-z, who kinda peaked 4 or 5 years back imo

  37. E-Squared says:
    August 10, 2009 at

    Devin the Dude went from “that guy that does hooks” to one of the most individual rappers out there. Jay went straight from “Big Pimpin” to The Blueprint, so he deserves it, even if he’s not coming back.

  38. Sam says:
    August 10, 2009 at

    Elzhi: Seriously carved his own niche and stepped outside of the shadow of SV. I didn’t anticipate him reaching these heights when if first heard him on Trinity.

    Hell Razah: Another dude who’s come from a group setting and made a name for himself.

  39. Jordan says:
    August 10, 2009 at

    MJG: On Comin’ Out Hard he was pretty much 8ball’s sidekick, by In Our Lifetime Vol. 1 he was clearly the better half of the duo.

  40. Robbie says:
    August 10, 2009 at

    I meant pre-RD Jay obviously.
    Agreed about Royce, Talib and Common (who improved but later fell off).

  41. Da Gooch says:
    August 10, 2009 at

    Fat Joe. His lyrics in the Flow Joe- era to now. Even thought now I wouldnt call him NICE. He is a lot better

  42. verge says:
    August 10, 2009 at

    RIP, but anyways, Scientifik- His first album he was okay for the times. But by the time he dropped ‘Lawtown’ off the ‘Criminal’ album, he had his own off and on flow down. Damn shame how he went out. If you ever heard ‘Lawtown 96’, you’d see he tightened up even more with the style and was ready to drop a classic, IMO.

  43. cenzi says:
    August 10, 2009 at

    “Prodigy sucked in Juvenile Hell then turned into a rap god and has regressed since.”

    whoah there cowboy… rap god?

    Posdnous sounds more amazing with each album.
    AZ comes better each time.
    Spice 1 went from talented to fuckin talented.
    Wise Intelligent was dope from day one, now he’s pure bolivian.

  44. cenzi says:
    August 10, 2009 at

    I missed Busta… who got MUCH better with time, just like Wine. But then he vinegar’ed and now sucks worse than ever.

  45. David D. says:
    August 10, 2009 at

    Jeezy. The Recession was super dope.
    Rick Ross. From his first album to now, he’s been really good.
    and Big Boi was slightly hit or miss early. Now he’s batting 100

  46. Silo says:
    August 11, 2009 at

    I agree with Andre 3000, Common, T.I.

  47. Doc Samson says:
    August 11, 2009 at

    Kool Keith! When he was with ultra, he was pretty good, but he really took it to another level 10 years later with Dr. Octagon and Dr. Dooom.

  48. Krisch says:
    August 11, 2009 at

    rapwise Fat Joe, unfortunately his beat selection suffered since “Jealous Ones Envy”…

  49. CENZI says:
    August 11, 2009 at

    U God! he went from sucking horribly to just sucking!

    And RZA went from awkward to dope flow with amazing lyrics.

  50. Dave says:
    August 11, 2009 at

    Tech N9NE – gets no respect but a fantastic rapper.

    Juicy J and DJ Paul – they used to SUCK but now are listenable.

    Devin the Dude

  51. Legend says:
    August 11, 2009 at

    i would def have to say T.I.

    notable mention: The Alchemist

  52. keatso says:
    August 11, 2009 at

    Kweli got better then got worse.

  53. C says:
    August 11, 2009 at

    For all the heads that don’t recognize, the reference to Jay-Z’s “tounge-twisting nonsense” were the verses he dropped pre-Reasonable Doubt. Go dig up some Mic Gerinomo or some Big Daddy Kane or Jaz LPs and u will understand what he’s talking about. Jay-Z has been around a long time before Reasonable.

  54. Brock says:
    August 11, 2009 at

    I’d have to add Royce the 5’9!!! He went from being Eminem’s hypeman who I never took too seriously to one of my all time favorites!!! ‘Malcom’ is when I started to notice that he was in no way a mediocre emcee … and he’s just improved with age like fine wine!

  55. RowanB says:
    August 12, 2009 at

    i was bumping some heltah skeltah a while ago and i dont think sean p actually got much nicer lyrics/flow wise i just think his voice sounds a lot nicer now hes older.

  56. swordfish says:
    August 12, 2009 at

    nice topic n good list.
    i go for rugged man. r.a.’s ‘new and improved’
    flow is insane.his delivery and live appearance
    is outta this world.and tall sean is killin it.

  57. kO sTyLe says:
    August 12, 2009 at

    Black Thought from the Roots. First album he was a little out of control. But by their third album Thought stepped up his rap game and kills it on BOOM!where he spits some ol’ Daddy Kane, Kool G rap flow.

  58. dialect says:
    August 12, 2009 at

    are you forgetting ghost’s opening verse on enter the wu tang…that is classic…the mere fact its ingrained in ya memory means its classic…and can it all be so simple-hes always been smashing it…he just went more abstract and did story telling-but hes always been ill just switched up styles…

    possibly frukwan…smashed it with stet but really shone on gravediggaz…beatnuts kept improving lyrically every release too i reckon.

  59. don king says:
    August 12, 2009 at

    For the guy getting upset about the perceived dis towards Jigga re: the “tongue twisting shit” This is the pre-Reasonable Doubt Jay-Z, whose whole style was like Das EFX on speed and although he was good at it Reasonable Doubt is the point where he stepped it up and became a notable emcee…

  60. DOUGHBOY says:
    August 13, 2009 at

    I’d like to put forward the case for Mobb Deep on this one here. Juvenile hell >>>steaming turd of an album, The Infamous>>> certified classic.

  61. RowanB says:
    August 13, 2009 at

    You heard the new sean joint on the honda album? easily the best joint on there… :)

  62. alphascrewomega says:
    August 13, 2009 at

    Freeway by a lot … i never cared much for him, Free At Last album was top 3 of 07/08 …just raw hugry rhymes

  63. ceedub says:
    August 14, 2009 at

    Lil’ Dap. He had to chance to have Primo to produce all of the first Group Home album but the rhymes were elementary. Now I dont’ know ’bout Melachi but Dap improved a lot on the mic after that.

  64. undressingHER says:
    August 14, 2009 at

    Jay-Z most definitely. Kanye has been good throughout his entire career and album wise, I prefer his older material.

  65. J. Pitts says:
    August 14, 2009 at

    Gotta go with Royce, Brock, and Patrick and say Royce. The guy goes to jail and when he comes out he sounds straight SADISTIC!

  66. The Ajay Ram Project says:
    August 15, 2009 at

    Hmmm… Joe Budden comes to mind. T.I. and Big Pooh also improved greatly.

  67. wrighty says:
    August 16, 2009 at

    Yeah Sean P and Ace were the first 2 that came to mind for me.

  68. Praverb says:
    August 16, 2009 at

    Royce
    Reks
    Evidence
    Phonte
    Elzhi
    Buff1
    Kam Moye (aka Supastition)
    One Be Lo
    Joe Budden
    Lil Wayne (I hate to admit it but it is true)
    Copywrite
    Black Milk
    Geologic (from Blue Scholars)
    Knonam
    and many more…

    are artists who have evolved over the years…

  69. Supreme Neck Protector says:
    August 21, 2009 at

    T.I. has never been wack but he keeps getting better.

    Dres of Black Sheep has always been great but he’s even better now than he used to be.

    I used to find Royce Da 5’9″ almost unlistenable, now he’s one of the kings.

    Elzhi was all right in Slum Village, then went solo and started crushing everybody.

    P!

  70. AK says:
    August 21, 2009 at

    Kanye? Are you fucking kidding me? On the College Dropout he was technically unskilled, but at least had something to say and a decent had with a rhyme. He’s gone steadily downhill. He’s only able to murder anyone on their own shit because he seems to keep jumping on songs where nobody else involved is bringing any heat whatsoever. Mostly he just raps about his poop and makes horrible jokes that aren’t funny. “This is bad, real bad, Michael Jackson” Abject fucking failure. I cannot understand how anyone who knows anything about rap can think he’s anything but shit at this point – he doesn’t even bring it behind the boards any more, going by “Run This Town.”

    808s and Heartbreak has some of the most uniformly embarrassing lyrics in the history of rap.

    And calling Jay-Z’s verses on Reasonable Doubt “tongue-twisting nonsense” is goddamn ignorant.

    The definite winner in the most-improved category is Weezy, going from basically insignificant Cash Money gremlin to free-associating madman on Da Drought 3.

  71. t-bone says:
    August 23, 2009 at

    Supastition!

  72. digglahhh says:
    August 23, 2009 at

    Although, I don’t know if he can ever top Revolutionary Vol. 2 on an album level, Immortal Technique has consistently developed in terms of the component skills of a rapper.

    I think Royce actually took a step backward before taking a step forward. Most of Detroit Rock City and his work in that era was inferior to his early shit with Em, IMO. Since that, he’s gotten really good again though.

  73. Stylez says:
    August 25, 2009 at

    A.G.

  74. philthy says:
    August 27, 2009 at

    how can you all not get it, except for don king. he is talking about jay-z stepping his rap game up so he was great on RD.

  75. BIN GRIM says:
    September 3, 2009 at

    Elzi took it higher. Prince po shined on his own. Price and the two Ghosts carved their own thing out. I think Roc Marciano can do the same. Everlast never fell out of grace with me personally…diamond is dope.

  76. Johnny Hardcore says:
    October 28, 2009 at

    Well here`s my list:
    Del
    Ghostface
    Method Man
    M.F Doom
    Tribe
    Beatnuts
    Sage
    Eminem
    Ice Cube…I`m sure theres lots of others but thats all I got right now…

  77. Praverb says:
    February 20, 2010 at

    definitely Sean Price…now some names left off the list that have evolved Royce, Kam Moye, Hell Razah, Wordsworth, Elzhi, Ro Spit (formerly Octane), Big Pooh, Rick Ross, Lil Wayne, and more

  78. young_ says:
    October 17, 2010 at

    Ghost had much better rhymes and tracks on Ironman than Supreme Clientele… not even close. Ghost went too far to the left on Supreme and even admitted that some of his lines were pretty much meaningless jibberish that he used to see how far he could push the envelope. He has better verses and tracks on Bulletproof Wallets and Fishscale too.

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  • Big Noyd – The Unkut Interview
  • Lushlife – The Unkut Interview
  • Timeless Truth – The Unkut Interview
  • DJ Stitches – The Unkut Interview
  • Diamond D – The Unkut Interview
  • Spencer Bellamy [East Flatbush Project] – The Unkut Interview
  • Sir Ibu – The Unkut Interview
  • Joe Mansfield – The Unkut Interview
  • 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
  • Jonathan Shecter aka Shecky Green – The Unkut Interview, Part 2
  • Jonathan Shecter aka Shecky Green – The Unkut Interview, Part 1
  • MF Grimm – The Unkut Interview, Part 2
  • MF Grimm – The Unkut Interview, Part 1
  • Kool Kim of the UMC’s – The Unkut Interview
  • MC Shan – The Unkut Interview
  • Geechie Dan – The Unkut Interview, Part 2
  • Kool G Rap – The Unkut Interview, Part 2
  • 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
  • M.O.P. – The Unkut Interview
  • Keyboard Money Mike – The Unkut Interview
  • J-1 From Hardknocks – The Unkut Interview
  • 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
  • Kyron aka Solo (Screwball) – The Unkut Interview
  • Prodigy Rates His Top 40 GOAT MC’s
  • 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
  • LL Cool J – The Unkut Interview
  • The Rap Bandit – The Unkut Interview
  • Masta Ace – The Unkut Interview
  • 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
  • Keith Shocklee – The Unkut Interview, Part 2
  • 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]
  • Manipulated Jacksons – The Are Interview
  • Brother J Interview/X-Clan Vs BDP
  • Joell Ortiz Interview
  • Percee P – The Unkut Interview
  • Krylon, Crayon, Pen or Pencil – Kwest Tha Madd Ladd Interview
  • Showbiz – The Unkut Interview
  • Breeze Brewin from Juggaknots Interview
  • Keith Murray – Verbal Aggression
  • Lord Ali Ba-Ski – The Unkut Interview
  • The Skinny Boys – The Unkut Interview
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  • T-Ray – The Unkut Interview, Part 3
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  • T-Ray – The Unkut Interview, Part 1
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  • Smoke ‘Em If You Got ‘Em – Marco Polo Interview
  • KRS-One – The Unkut Interview
  • Hydra Special – Mike Heron Interview
  • Hydra Special – Jerry Famolari Interview
  • Swigga aka L-Swift Interview (Natural Elements)
  • Feelin’ It – TR Love Interview
  • Tony Bones Interview
  • Respect Mine – Kevon Glickman Interview
  • Finsta Interview
  • Jersey Has Breaks! K-Def Interview
  • Joe Fatal – The Unkut Interview, Part 2
  • Joe Fatal – The Unkut Interview, Part 1
  • Chill Rob G Interview – Part 2
  • Chill Rob G Interview – Part 1
  • Hold It Down – Sadat X Interview
  • Mikey D – The Unkut Interview
  • Not For Sale – NYOIL Interview
  • Kenny Parker – The Unkut Interview, Part 3
  • Kenny Parker – The Unkut Interview, Part 2
  • 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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