Right, this was shortly discussed in another thread. The meaning of the thread is to make a list of classic/great hip hop albums, both mainstream and underground so don't be afraid to suggest anything. It's here to help hip hop lovers find the gems of the genre. This isn't something that I can do alone, though. I hope there are other people here who are willing to help out and add albums. I listen mainly to east coast artists so help is definitely needed heh.
I'll start with this list I found on wikipedia, it's a real good list for anyone that wants to hear some of the very best hip hop has to offer.
Okay, that's a start. Now on to more albums.
Albums released in the 80s
Eric B. & Rakim: Follow The Leader
Gang Starr: No More Mr. Nice Guy
Kool G Rap & DJ Polo: Road To The Riches
Albums released in the 90s
2pac: All Eyez On Me
Big L: Lifestylez Ov Da Poor & Dangerous
Black Sheep: A Wolf In Sheep's Clothing
Black Sheep: Non-Fiction
Black Star: Mos Def & Talib Kweli Are Black Star
Crooklyn Dodgers, The: Crooklyn
Crooklyn Dodgers '95: Return Of The Crooklyn Dodgers
Diamond And The Psychotic Neurotics: Stunts, Blunts, & Hip Hop
Eric B. & Rakim: Let The Rhythm Hit Em
Eric B. & Rakim: Don't Sweat The Technique
Gang Starr: Daily Operation
Gang Starr: Hard To Earn
Gang Starr: Moment Of Truth
Gang Starr: Full Clip: A Decade Of Gang Starr (Compilation of earlier albums and one new track)
Gang Starr: The Ownerz
GZA: Liquid Swords
Heltah Skeltah: Nocturnal
Jeru The Damaja: The Sun Rises In The East
Jeru The Damaja: Wrath Of The Math
Kool G Rap & DJ Polo: Wanted Dead Or Alive
KRS-One: Return Of The Boom Bap
KRS-One: KRS ONE
Lord Finesse: Return Of The Funky Man
Lord Finesse: The Awekening
Lords Of The Underground: Here Come The Lords
O.C.: Word...Life
O.C.: Jewelz
Pete Rock & C.L. Smooth: Mecca And The Soul Brother
Showbiz & A.G.: Runaway Slave
Smif-N-Wessun: Dah Shinin
Albums released in 2000 and onward
Bumpy Knuckles: Industry Shakedown (Bumpy Knuckles is an alias for the artist Freddie Foxxx)
Looptroop: Modern City Symphony
I'll add more later if this takes off.
I'll start with this list I found on wikipedia, it's a real good list for anyone that wants to hear some of the very best hip hop has to offer.
1984
* Run-D.M.C.: Run-D.M.C. (Profile, 1984) Containing the early singles that saw off the old school, this is considered a superior rap album to any that preceded it.
1985
* LL Cool J: Radio (Def Jam, 1985) Hard, minimalist, self-assertive, and funky, this was a new school blueprint.
1986
* Run-D.M.C.: Raising Hell (Profile, 1986) Crossover hits like "Walk This Way" co-exist with the quintessential hip hop of tracks like "Peter Piper", "Perfection", "It's Tricky" and "My Adidas".
* Beastie Boys: Licensed to Ill (Def Jam, 1986) Licensed to Ill was responsible, along with Run D.M.C.'s Raising Hell, for establishing the hip hop album as a fixture of the mainstream.
1987
* Boogie Down Productions: Criminal Minded (B-Boy, 1987) Minimalist and tribalist, this album contains the material that won The Bridge Wars.
* Eric B & Rakim: Paid in Full (4th & B'way, 1987) Paid in Full is minimalist hip hop, with DJ tracks complimenting the precise, logical and influential style of Rakim's raps.
1988
* Biz Markie: Goin' Off (Cold Chillin', 1988) Biz Markie, in singular comedic style, beatboxes, holds forth on the topic of "Picking Boogers", and describes a certain kind of fair-weather friend phenomenon on "The Vapors". Production is by Marley Marl.
* The Great Adventures of Slick Rick (Def Jam, 1988) Slick Rick's roguish tales are noted early narratives in hip hop.
* EPMD: Strictly Business (Fresh, 1988) The slow-moving funk of Strictly Business, with its loud bass and laid-back rapping, was a new sound in hip hop.
* Big Daddy Kane: Long Live the Kane (Cold Chillin', 1988) Kane's exemplary boasting is backed by Marley Marl's excellent production.
* Public Enemy: It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back (Def Jam, 1988) Droning feedback, occasional shards of rock guitar, and James Brown horn samples distorted into discordant shrieks back the political rhetoric of lead rapper Chuck D and the surreality of Flavor Flav.
* N.W.A: Straight Outta Compton (Ruthless, 1988) Powerful and uncompromising, both lyrically and sonically, Straight Outta Compton's first-hand representations of Compton, California life would set the tone for much of future hip hop.
* MC Lyte: Lyte as a Rock (First Priority, 1988) The treatments Lyte gives rap competitors and ex-boyfriends in tracks like "10% Dis", "I Cram to Understand U" and "Paper Thin" make this debut one of the best albums of the era.
* Ultramagnetic MC's: Critical Beatdown (Next Plateau, 1988) Critical Beatdown's abstract rhymes in strange syncopations laid on top of sampling experiments proved widely influential, from Public Enemy to gangsta rap to several generations of underground hip hop artists.
* Jungle Brothers: Straight out the Jungle (Idlers, 1988) This debut was an original album containing fluid grooves and nods towards sexual and political egalitarianism.
1989
* De La Soul: 3 Feet High & Rising (Tommy Boy, 1989) An eclectic yet inclusive collage of samples, a benevolent sensibility and an enormous sense of fun made this record a hip hop landmark.
* Beastie Boys: Paul's Boutique (Capitol, 1989) " ... one of the high watermarks of the sampling era".
* Queen Latifah: All Hail the Queen (Tommy Boy, 1989) Latifah's Afrocentric, charismatic, regal mien projected a new and original persona onto the world of hip hop.
* Jungle Brothers: Done by the Forces of Nature (Warner Bros. Records, 1989) The second album by the Jungle Brothers is an inclusive outing: "the most all-embracing hip-hop ever made".
1990
* Public Enemy: Fear of a Black Planet (Def Jam, 1990) Fear of a Black Planet, containing the singles "Fight the Power" and "Welcome to the Terrordome", was the similarly incendiary follow-up to It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back.
* A Tribe Called Quest: People's Instinctive Travels and the Paths of Rhythm (Jive, 1990) Rich and infectious, this debut wore the worthy intent of its morality plays, allegories and explorations of ambiguity lightly.
* X-Clan: To the East, Blackwards (4th & B'Way, 1990) X-Clan mixed a brand of Egyptology with their Islamic teachings, creating catchphrases still resonant in hip hop today in the process.
* Ice Cube: AmeriKKKa's Most Wanted (Priority, 1990) The music keeps pace with the raps on Ice Cube's album of alienation and rage.
* Poor Righteous Teachers: Holy Intellect (Profile, 1990) Mystic Islam offshoot The Nation of Gods and Earths had a strong presence in hip hop at this time; Holy Intellect had bouncing funk and ragga influences to sugar the pill of the messages.
* Brand Nubian: One for All (Elektra, 1990) As above, this was another Five Percenter album that was an impressive work of sound.
1991
* Gang Starr: Step in the Arena (Chrysalis, 1991) Gang Starr are one of the most consistent groups in hip hop, and one of the greatest. DJ Premier's production here was a leap forward in hip hop techniques.
* De La Soul: De La Soul Is Dead (Tommy Boy, 1991) Following the success of their debut, De La Soul killed off their hippy image, producing this sometimes frustrated, sometimes uplifting album with rich grooves in both moods.
* Main Source: Breaking Atoms (Wild Pitch, 1991) Breaking Atoms is noted for introducing both Nas and Akinyele, for its clever production (by Large Professor) and for its sophisticated storytelling in tracks like "Peace Is Not the Word to Play" and the metaphor for racism that was "Just a Friendly Game of Baseball".
* Cypress Hill: Cypress Hill (Ruffhouse/Columbia, 1991) Sardonic and menacing, marijuana-toking Cypress Hill's debut had B-Real's unmistakable nasal-whine delivery and extraordinary beats on this commercially successful record.
* A Tribe Called Quest: The Low End Theory (Jive, 1991) "The album demonstrated that hip-hop was an aesthetic every bit as deep, serious and worth cherishing as any in a century-plus of African-American music".
* Scarface: Mr. Scarface is Back (Rap-A-Lot, 1991) Scarface's skillful rapping about the thug and hustler lifestyles includes reflecting on their consequences.
1992
* Redman: Whut? Thee Album (Def Jam, 1992) Zapp and P-funk form the basis of beats that are tough, raucous fun, much like Redman's raps.
* The Pharcyde: Bizarre Ride II the Pharcyde (Delicious Vinyl, 1992) L.A.'s The Pharcyde made an album that was a carnival of fun and inventiveness that still made time for some disarmingly honest introspection.
* Dr. Dre: The Chronic (Death Row, 1992) The era of wide-scale sampling would draw to a close in the wake of this hugely successful and hugely influential record, which used live band "interpolations" to create a slow, laid-back music which formed the background to raps of chilling violence.
1993
* Souls of Mischief: 93 'til Infinity (Jive, 1993) There were hazy jazz samples, a bohemian air and a torrent of rhymes on the classic debut record from Souls of Mischief of East Oakland, California.
* Wu-Tang Clan: Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers) (Loud, 1993) One of hip hop's true landmarks, this ferocious, startling album rescued New York hip hop in a time dominated by the relaxed sounds of the West Coast.
* Snoop Doggy Dogg: Doggystyle (Death Row, 1993) The star of The Chronic, with his laid-back drawl, made the best-selling debut album ever.
1994
* Nas: Illmatic (Columbia, 1994) As writer Peter Shapiro frames it, Illmatic demonstrated a fitting of production to lyrics worthy of It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back, an analytical evocation of street life that matched the power of N.W.A., and a command of the microphone not heard since Rakim.
* Organized Konfusion: Stress: The Extinction Agenda (Hollywood BASIC, 1994) Challenging but occasionally joyful music that demonstrates virtuosity even at its most difficult, this is noted not least for a gruesome narrative told from the perspective of a titular "Stray Bullet".
* Notorious B.I.G.: Ready to Die (Bad Boy, 1994) This album's platinum sales, rap skills, and bleak vision mitigated by humor and funk, completed the revitalization of New York hip hop begun with the success of the Wu-Tang's debut a year before.
* Common Sense: Resurrection (Relativity, 1994) "I Used To Love H.E.R." is an extended metaphor for hip hop that attracted much attention, while on tracks like "Resurrection" and "Watermelon" Common's style is warm and witty, the tracks full of wordplay and assured jazzy production.
1995
* Mobb Deep: The Infamous (Loud, 1995) " ... a bone-chilling classic of Rotten Apple hardcore".
* Raekwon: Only Built 4 Cuban Linx... (Loud, 1995) Raekwon's grim street tales made for one of the best Wu-Tang solo records.
1996
* The Fugees: The Score (Ruffhouse/Columbia, 1996) Massive singles aside, this was a dark, downtempo album; it sold over 18 million copies worldwide and was widely respected.
* Jay-Z: Reasonable Doubt (Roc-A-Fella, 1996) Jay-Z combined elements of the New York underground with a mainstream sensibility on his debut, proving himself a strong presence on the mic in the process.
1998
* Lauryn Hill: The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill (Ruffhouse/Columbia, 1998) Soaring music and Hill's voice, rapping or singing, made this among the most successful crossover albums of the hip hop era.
* Outkast: Aquemini (LaFace, 1998) Critical, analytical and emotionally intelligent, Aquemini was ambitious and successful both musically and lyrically.
1999
* Eminem: The Slim Shady LP (Aftermath/Interscope, 1999) This contains some Dr. Dre productions and Eminem's deliberately offensive wordplay; the huge single "My Name Is" is an example of both.
2001
* Jay-Z: The Blueprint (Roc-A-Fella, 2001) Jay-Z was at the height of his talents here, over production by Kanye West, Just Blaze and others.
* Eminem: The Marshall Mathers LP (Shady/Aftermath, 2001) The album became the fastest selling hip-hop album of all time. Today, it is considered a groundbreaking album, and consiered Eminem's best.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_hip_hop_albums
Okay, that's a start. Now on to more albums.
Albums released in the 80s
Eric B. & Rakim: Follow The Leader
Gang Starr: No More Mr. Nice Guy
Kool G Rap & DJ Polo: Road To The Riches
Albums released in the 90s
2pac: All Eyez On Me
Big L: Lifestylez Ov Da Poor & Dangerous
Black Sheep: A Wolf In Sheep's Clothing
Black Sheep: Non-Fiction
Black Star: Mos Def & Talib Kweli Are Black Star
Crooklyn Dodgers, The: Crooklyn
Crooklyn Dodgers '95: Return Of The Crooklyn Dodgers
Diamond And The Psychotic Neurotics: Stunts, Blunts, & Hip Hop
Eric B. & Rakim: Let The Rhythm Hit Em
Eric B. & Rakim: Don't Sweat The Technique
Gang Starr: Daily Operation
Gang Starr: Hard To Earn
Gang Starr: Moment Of Truth
Gang Starr: Full Clip: A Decade Of Gang Starr (Compilation of earlier albums and one new track)
Gang Starr: The Ownerz
GZA: Liquid Swords
Heltah Skeltah: Nocturnal
Jeru The Damaja: The Sun Rises In The East
Jeru The Damaja: Wrath Of The Math
Kool G Rap & DJ Polo: Wanted Dead Or Alive
KRS-One: Return Of The Boom Bap
KRS-One: KRS ONE
Lord Finesse: Return Of The Funky Man
Lord Finesse: The Awekening
Lords Of The Underground: Here Come The Lords
O.C.: Word...Life
O.C.: Jewelz
Pete Rock & C.L. Smooth: Mecca And The Soul Brother
Showbiz & A.G.: Runaway Slave
Smif-N-Wessun: Dah Shinin
Albums released in 2000 and onward
Bumpy Knuckles: Industry Shakedown (Bumpy Knuckles is an alias for the artist Freddie Foxxx)
Looptroop: Modern City Symphony
I'll add more later if this takes off.