10 Rappers We Need To Show More Appreciation

    Big Boi Of Outkast Performs In Sydney

    “My big brother was B.I.G.’s brother/So here’s a few words from ya kid brother/If you admire somebody you should go on ‘head tell ‘em/People never get the flowers while they can still smell ‘em/An idol in my eyes, god of the game…”—Kanye West, “Big Brother.”

    As if the past few days didn’t contextualize his legacy, Phife Dawg was a central component in A Tribe Called Quest, his jocular, irreverent and playful rhymes a vital balance to Q-Tip’s abstract, brainy Afrocentric lyricism. In fact, without Phife, Tribe would not have been the game-changing force they were.

    Yet, on the flipside, it’s possible that we perhaps didn’t praise him, and what he brought to the equation, enough while he was still with us. While we all love endlessly debating our Top 5 MCs of All-Time, those discussions usually draw from a fairly narrow pool of talent, a constant rotation of the genre’s supreme twenty or thirty MCs who dominate Hip Hop’s history books. Beyond them, however, there are literally hundreds of unappreciated and overlooked rappers who’ve all left their own unmistakeable footprint on the Hip Hop landscape, but very rarely get their due credit—either commercially or critically.

    So, with Phife Dawg still very much at the forefront of our thoughts this week, and Kanye’s lines above also in mind, here’s a warm celebration of 10 ferociously talented rappers who, for various reasons, deserve a little bit more recognition.

    MC Ren

    Last year’s N.W.A biopic Straight Outta Compton made a small handful of mistakes we were willing to let slide, but perhaps the most glaring error was the way in which MC Ren’s contribution to the group was downplayed. As the movie focused predominantly on the relationship between Dre, Eazy, Cube and Jerry Heller, Ren had just a handful of lines, his on-screen character coming over almost as a benchwarmer. Such a sidelining only confirmed how unappreciated Ren is as a rapper.

    In reality, he was already a formidable MC when N.W.A dropped their debut, but it was on 1991’s EFIL4ZAGGIN, their second full-length set, that his evolution was truly realized. Though last year’s movie barely mentioned it at all, let the record show that EFIL4ZAGGIN is a dark, violent apocalyptic record, brilliantly capturing both the crew’s internal turmoil and the wider upheaval all around them. Now widely considered a gangsta rap classic, it’s due in no small part to Ren’s lyrical pyrotechnics. He would later release a slew of solo material after N.W.A dissolved, the best of which are Kizz My Black Azz (1992) and Shock of the Hour (1993).

    AZ

    Best known for holding down the lone guest spot on Nas’ Illmatic, as well as his own solo breakout hit “Sugar Hill”–which soundtracked the ’95 summer–Brooklyn’s AZ has put out a string of solid albums over the past two decades, even though his profile has remained frustratingly lower than many of his lesser-talented rapping contemporaries.
    Something of a visionary, his hardcore rags-to-riches rhymes on “Sugar Hill” forecast the street-savvy-lyrics-meets-‘80s-R&B-loops template that would come to dominate mainstream Hip Hop towards the end of the ‘90s and into the new millennium. Yet AZ’s frontline street reportage frequently carried a broader perspective than his competitors-unfortunately, this never translated into mainstream success despite the irresistible soulful backdrop. Still, his catalog is stacked with heat, with gems like “Your World Don’t Stop,” “Once Again,” “Problems” and “The Come Up” displaying his impressive multi-syllabic flow that harkens on Kool G Rap in his prime.

    blaq poet pharrell williams dj premier

    Photo: Facebook/Blaq Poet

    Blaq Poet

    Somewhat fittingly, Blaq Poet–a purveyor of that rugged, roughcast, razor-sharp Hip Hop for which his Queensbridge home turf has become renowned—first emerged at the height of the infamous ‘Bridge Wars’ in the mid-‘80s, serving up a savage dis track toward KRS-One and the BDP crew in the form of “Beat You Down.” He then teamed up with the legendary DJ Hot Day as PHD (Poet & Hot Day), dropping the excellent 1991 album Without Warning and a stack of superb singles on the storied Tuff City label. Alongside Solo, KL and Hostyle, Blaq Poet then formed Screwball, who issued the East Coast underground street favorite Y2K, before enjoying a stellar solo run in the early-to-mid 2000s.

    Still not convinced? Peep the blistering verse from his 2003 DJ Premier-produced solo single “Poet Has Come,” which summarizes his hardcore rep perfectly: “Fuck the radio play/I don’t need it anyway/Remember back in the day in L.A., N.W.A?/That’s the type of shit that I’m on/Gotta get my muthafuckin’ shine on/Murderin’ every beat I rhyme on…”

    ka rapper

    Photo: Facebook/Ka

    Ka

    Sure, Kendrick Lamar may have issued 2015’s definitive rap album with To Pimp a Butterfly, but it was Dr. Yen Lo–the pairing of rapper Ka and DJ/producer Preservation (who crafted last year’s true slept-on Hip Hop masterpiece in Days With Dr. Yen Lo). Very much a late bloomer, the Brownsville-based MC (and sometime firefighter) actually surfaced way back in the 1990s as part of the Natural Elements crew. He largely disappeared from view for several years, only later showing up on GZA’s Pro Tools album in ’08. Heading back to the lab to hone his craft, Ka re-emerged in 2012 with the stunning Grief Pedigree and, proving it was no fluke, swiftly followed up with equally brilliant The Night’s Gambit (2013). Both albums–as well as the aforementioned Dr. Yen Lo project–display Ka’s compelling brand of gritty, gutter-level street commentary that comes sprayed with a cold, brooding, atmospheric haze, his raps delving into the tense psychology that informs New York’s dark underbelly. Crime noir rap at its absolute finest.

    His remarkable Instagram page, which is solely dedicated to pre-Hip Hop era NYC culture, barely scratches 1,000 followers and puts his inclusion on the list into proper perspective.

    Jean Grae

    Jean Grae first got heads open way back in the midst of the fevered independent Hip Hop boom of the late 90s as part of Natural Resource, going by the MC name What? What? Switching to her current moniker, she unveiled her superb debut album Attack Of The Attacking Things in 2002, the first of more than half a dozen releases that displayed an intricate flow that was underpinned with her unique brand of sarcastic, biting humor and witty observations.

    Sadly, the bullshit-filled music industry has always found her considerable talent too hot to handle, and despite widespread critical acclaim, Jeanie Jean’s music–which ranges from the hilarious (“How to Break Up with Your Girlfriend”) to the haunting (“Taco Day”)–never crossed over to a broader audience. Still, she’s continued to release work in her own uncompromising style, more recently recording a self-produced R&B album, #5, in 2013. Consider Jean Grae a veritable Hip Hop national treasure.

    Posdnous

    You may be wondering just what the fuck a member of the beloved De La Soul is doing on a list of unappreciated MCs. The group is revered Hip Hop royalty globally, one of the genre’s genuinely game-changing crews whose catalog is crammed with classics despite them constantly swimming against Hip Hop’s tide. But this is all about Posdnous as a rapper. Truly one of the best to ever pick up a mic, Pos still is too often absent from those endless ‘Top 5 Dead Or Alive’ debates, a baffling omission when you consider his expansive themes, lyrical pedigree and pure rapping ability. His final verse on 1996’s Stakes Is High served as a stark, prescient warning of the perilous direction in which rap was headed, and remains as relevant today as it was 20 years ago. It’s about time Pos was considered one of the G.O.A.T.s.

    Big Boi

    Similarly, Outkast–like De La Soul–are one of a select few groups who didn’t just record great rap music, but pushed the genre’s boundaries, breaking new ground in the process and reshaping the possibilities of how Hip Hop could sound. But while Andre 3000 is rightly lauded as one of the foremost lyricists of his generation, partner-in-rhyme Big Boi is still too often overlooked by many.

    Yet far from kicking back, getting comfortable and resting on his laurels after some 22 years in the game, Big Boi remains an active artist (and a prominent philanthropist), continually releasing new music which is willing to take risks–a rarity for many rappers at this point in their careers. His forward-thinking experimental streak still reaps rich sonic rewards. See 2015’s solid Big Grams project—a collaboration with electro-rock duo Phantogram–while his solo material is brimming with straight-up Hip Hop bangers (“Shutterbug”, “Gossip”) that reaffirm his legendary credentials.

    King Tee

    King Tee issued a handful of independent 12”s in 1987-the best of which is the superb “The Coolest” on the Techno Hop label–but it was the release of debut set Act a Fool a year later when the South Central L.A. rapper really came to prominence.

    While King Tee’s flow and cadence were always more akin to the formidable New York stars of the day, Act a Fool’s truly timeless opening line (“It’s Friday night on the streets of L.A….”) and its countless West Coast rap tropes made the album is undeniable Cali classic. He cemented his rep as a L.A. Hip Hop pioneer with the equally inspired follow-up, At Your Own Risk. He rolled out several more albums over the next few years, and was instrumental in the early success of his left coast protégés Tha Alkaholiks and their Likwit Crew. Long live the King.

    Sir Menelik, Godfather Don. Mic EL

    Pictured From L to R: Godfather Don, Sir Menelik/Scaramanga, Mic EL
    Photo: Sun Large Records

    Godfather Don

    Kicking mind-bending rhymes over rugged New York Hip Hop beats, Godfather Don specialized in the kind of skewed, abstract, uncompromising east coast Rap that traces its roots back to the super-scientifical flows of celebrated artists like Ultramagnetic MCs and, a few years earlier, T-La Rock (Don even paired up with Ultras’ Kool Keith for the Cenobites project in ’95).

    Though he dropped his debut album, 1991’s now highly sought-after Hazardous, on Select Records, he was long associated with the inimitable Hydra Entertainment imprint (which also brought us Blaq Poet’s crew Screwball). There, he issued a stack of landmark singles in the late 90s, including the sublime triple-shot “Styles By the Gram” / “World Premiere” / “Properties of Steel” and the David Bowie-sampling “Fame.” In recent years, reissue labels Diggers With Gratitude and Chopped Herring Records have continued to roll out previously-unreleased Godfather Don material in limited vinyl runs. Then, pulses were set racing on March 24 when, seemingly out of nowhere, a new clip of Godfather Don lounging with fellow 90s’ subterranean spitters Sir Menelik (a.k.a. Scaramanga) and Mic-EL appeared on Sun Large Records’ Facebook page announcing a new collaborative album.

    Kurupt

    Reflecting his Philly roots, Kurupt boasts an intricate flow that contrasted sharply with the laid-back drawls then typical of West Coast rap when he first emerged on Dr Dre’s The Chronic. Sterling guest appearances on Snoop Doggy Dogg’s Doggystyle enhanced his profile further, leading to the double-platinum Dogg Food in ’95 as one-half of Tha Dogg Pound with his homie Daz Dillinger. Never one to shy away from drama, Kurupt was part of the infamous “New York, New York” record; an inadvertent yet major flashpoint in Hip Hop’s ruinous East Coast/West Coast war. He also later fired his own shots on “Callin’ Out Names”–a fairly self-explanatory track which attacked an assortment of MCs, including drama-magnet, 50 Cent.

    He may have been overshadowed by Death Row’s marquee names–Tupac, Dre, and Snoop–at the height of the label’s success, but he could more than hold his own when it came to pure lyrical talent.

    40 thoughts on “10 Rappers We Need To Show More Appreciation

    1. How can you leave off Phonte (from Little Brother)? “Whoever heard of an act to blow and go global/ come back home and still be called local”

      1. If Black Thought is the GOAT then by definition he’s not underappreciated, and so should not be on a list of underappreciated rappers.

    2. Treach is so underrated n was ahead of his time lyrically. Twista, Lady Luck, NY Oil, Lord Have Mercy(of Flipmode), Ma$e doesn’t get his respect too

    3. What is the point of this article?

      That the aforementioned Emcees and many more in their category don’t regularly appear on the pages of Hip-Hop sites like yours doesn’t mean they are not appreciated. Step into any barber shop, street corner or non-mainstream Hip-Hop blogs and you will feel the love for real Emcees from true Hip-Hop heads.

      Mainstream outlets like HiphopDX should continue doing what they do and Us, real heads, will continue doing our thing. We know our people, so we don’t need BS articles like this claiming we aint appreciating those we show love to on the regular.

    4. Great list, they are all underated and should be talked about more, not in the sense of being a TOP5 MC but they for sure belong on this list, they left two off, no one ever talks about RUN when they make a list, he deserves to be mentioned when we talk about the all time greats, QTIP also!

    5. Brownsville Ka. I’m glad he’s getting some recognition. He and his homie Roc Marciano are two of the most lyrical cats in the game right now

      1. Their lyrics are very detailed with imagery, multis, introspect, and complicated rhyme schemes. That’s what shıt means

    6. not gonna lie, i’m still reflecting on the passing of phife dawn. i’m just a simple fan. i never met the man. can’t say i personally knew him. yet, tribe holds especial place in my skull as that one hip-hop group that was beloved without being firmly attached to that one category. sure it’d be easy to just tag the as rap-jazz. they pretty much defined that term. tribe was one of those rare groups whose sum was 10.000 times greater than its parts. and thats no disrespect. q-tip’s genius served not only his group, but was instrumental in launching careers such as busta’s, mobb deep (check the infamous’s credits) and even apache’s (that’s right, tribe produced gangsta bitch). but this editorial made a fine job at pointing out that with out phife, all that afrocentric abstract jazzy melting pot would have went way over peoples heads. phife was just that around the way short, not too pretty but determined, girl chasing, confident borderline cocky, fun loving, witty, you will like me but you will respect me type nigga that you find in never neighborhood, and that’s what helped made tribe so relatable. tribe was that group that made it cool to be you. don’t play no character. no pimp, playa, hustler if you are not one. just make dope music and show love. my only regret in hip-hop is that i never got to see that group perform live… rest i peace of real

    7. phife was by no means a top 10 or even top 20 mc but he was part of a top 5 group. mc ten, i used to love that nigga shit. widely underrated. az very underrated but not enough versatility. plug one always underrated but de la pretty much carved a niche for themselves that’s a little too deep for the game. big boy very underrated also. i always thought he was very dope but when you’re in a group with 3 stacks… king tee’s dopiness is limited to a certain pocket, but when biggie himself admits that you’re one of his influences… plus he brought the likwit crew on board. kurup is dope and got his props for it. anybody not recognizing that by now should be on medication or attached to a breathing machine somewhere. everybody else you named sucks dick :-0 :-0 :-0

    8. Best article I’ve ever read on this site. Good work, fellas. It always drives me crazy, everyone thinks we’re going to all come to a decision one day and decided one particular rapper is the Best Ever. Fuck that shit. Every rapper has their own something to talk about. There’s room for everyone, Pos, Big Boi, whoever the fuck Ka the Firefighter is…

      Thanks Again!

    9. Rapper Game needs more recognition too! He has a great body of work…and folks aint appeciative of mah mans works ethics LMAO

      1. Pos is definitely top 5, Phife too. But them aside, the top 20 under-appreciated MC’s are as follows:

        1 – Shaz Waitrose
        2 – Suede-hips
        3 – Konan Tha Bar-bear-ree-un
        4 – Sheriff Pahtay
        5 – Bonez Magoo
        6 – Funk’n’Wagnullz
        7 – Paws Malone
        8 – Gwappy Gandhi
        9 – Shaftesbury Bro
        10 – Snake Testiklz
        11 – Brapp Brapp Thuggee
        12 – Double-Chinz Chinpokemon
        13 – While-EE-Kai-Yo’Tee
        14 – Gentle Ben
        15 – Grinch Minority
        16 – Kenn Dodd
        17 – Bazil Fawltee
        18 – Persil Automatik
        19 – Daz
        20 – Bold Surf Comfort

    10. Too many people could have been here so I get there will be omissions. And it’s clearly a very personal process. I would have preferred getting the more obvious ones out of the way. Blackthought, Treach, Elzhi, but the parameters are so hard to define. I would put Royce on there cause until he’s listed with the super legends, he’s underrated.

    11. MY ALBUM IS DONE, I REPEAT, MY ALBUM IS DONE! I COULD’VE DROPPED THIS SH*T BACK IN DECEMBER BUT MY MONEY WASN’T RIGHT. NOW I GOT A FEW DOLLARS TO WORK WITH. IF I DON’T BELIEVE IN MYSELF THEN WHO WILL, SO AS OF TODAY I’M LABELING MYSELF TOP 5 DEAD OR ALIVE BEST EMCEE IN DETROIT! I DON’T CARE ABOUT OUT OF TOWN RAPPERS STATS , I ONLY CARE ABOUT MY STATS IN MY CITY & I SAY THAT I’M TOP 5 DEAD OR ALIVE!

      WHO F**KING WITH MY CATALOG? I STILL DON’T HEAR NO RESPONSES, NOW I’M TALKING S**T BECAUSE I BEEN PLOTTING THIS S**T FOR 2 YEARS!

      ON SOME ONE ON ONE BATTLE S**T, I’LL EAT ANY RAPPER ALIVE, AND MY FREESTYLE AIN’T THAT BAD, DON’T SLEEP ON MY NO PEN OR PAD GAME. I TALK S**T BECAUSE I CAN BACK ALL OF THIS S**T UP, GET AT ME! I’m not mad, I’m just human like everybody else, my opinion counts too!!

      M.U. Tha Don is Ghost

      NEW ALBUM COMING SOON!

      HAHAHAHA!!!

      1. Pos is definitely top 5, Phife too. But them aside, the top 20 under-appreciated MC’s are as follows:

        1 – Shaz Waitrose
        2 – Suede-hips
        3 – Konan Tha Bar-bear-ree-un
        4 – Sheriff Pahtay
        5 – Bonez Magoo
        6 – Funk’n’Wagnullz
        7 – Paws Malone
        8 – Gwappy Gandhi
        9 – Shaftesbury Bro
        10 – Snake Testiklz
        11 – Brapp Brapp Thuggee
        12 – Double-Chinz Chinpokemon
        13 – While-EE-Kai-Yo’Tee
        14 – Gentle Ben
        15 – Grinch Minority
        16 – Kenn Dodd
        17 – Bazil Fawltee
        18 – Persil Automatik
        19 – Daz
        20 – Bold Surf Comfort

    12. Pos is definitely top 5, Phife too. But them aside, the top 20 under-appreciated MC’s are as follows:

      1 – Shaz Waitrose
      2 – Suede-hips
      3 – Konan Tha Bar-bear-ree-un
      4 – Sheriff Pahtay
      5 – Bonez Magoo
      6 – Funk’n’Wagnullz
      7 – Paws Malone
      8 – Gwappy Gandhi
      9 – Shaftesbury Bro
      10 – Snake Testiklz
      11 – Brapp Brapp Thuggee
      12 – Double-Chinz Chinpokemon
      13 – While-EE-Kai-Yo’Tee
      14 – Gentle Ben
      15 – Grinch Minority
      16 – Kenn Dodd
      17 – Bazil Fawltee
      18 – Persil Automatik
      19 – Daz
      20 – Bold Surf Comfort

      1. Lol naahhh hustle ain’t all it got to do with it. Some just ain’t get as much shine. Some don’t fuck wit the spotlight or mainstream like that.

    13. If Pos and Big Boi are on this list despite their group’s overall success, Black Thought of The Roots should receive the same respect. And what about Rapsody? Come the end of the year she is always lauded as one of the most unappreciated MCs.

      1. these jive ass hipster hopsters don’t know shit…..they did a piece about Inglewood and left out damani receiving the same accolade as biggie and eminem , no mention of warlock records smfh or sean deez independent commitment p.s you could’ve replaced kurupt with any member of freestyle fellowship or Ellay Khule, cormega Born and Raised/Mega Philosophy projects gets him the nod over a few on this list but motherfuckers hiring whoever got “swag” or is a “friend” over who’s well versed enough in this culture to be a journalist for it

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