30 Hip Hop & R&B Albums That Still Aren’t On Streaming Services

    Today’s industry is wholly reliant on streaming and algorithms, which is in some ways kind of amazing. For one, having instant access to back catalogs means that one can explore the timeline of the genre on a whim.

    In short, having your music on all the various DSPs is — without a doubt — an absolute necessity. But, what if you aren’t able to make it available?

    Here at HipHopDX, we’ve compiled a list of must-listen albums that for various reasons, ranging from master ownership to sample clearances and licensing, aren’t available on platforms — sadly making them not exist to a grand portion of the population.

    Drag-On – Opposite of H2O

    Drag’s forgotten Ruff Ryders/Interscope debut — following the success of his single “Down Bottom” and features on DMX’s first three solo LPs — peaked at number five on the Billboard’s Hot 200 and was certified gold by RIAA a year after it’s release.

    Released: 2000
    Notable Songs: “Here We Go” f. Eve, “Niggas Die 4 Me” f. DMX, “Ready for War” f. LOX

    Beatnuts – “Stone Crazy”

    Almost certainly a victim of licensing issues, the duo’s sophomore LP, which included the mainstream hit “Off The Books” featuring Big Pun and Cuban Link, stands as the highest-charting body of work from their catalog.

    Released: 1997
    Notable Songs: “Off The Books,” “Do You Believe,” “Give Me The Ass”

    Westside Gunn – Flygod

    For those unable to afford the resale price tag for the rare physical copies, YouTube is the only place to hear Flygod’s seminal, sample-heavy classic.

    Released: 2016
    Notable Songs: “Dunks,” “Gustavo,” “Mr. T”

    Freddie Foxxx – Crazy Like A Foxx

    Bumpy Knuckle’s sophomore LP was meant to be his first as a part of Queen Latifah’s Flavor Unit but was ultimately shelved only to see the light over two decades later courtesy of Fat Beats Records.

    Released: 1994
    Notable Songs: “So Tough,” “Can’t Break Away”

    Rawkus Records – Rawkus Presents Soundbombing II

    1999 was a stellar year for Rawkus Records, and — aside from debuts by Mos Def and Pharoahe Monch — Soundbombing II is possibly the best full-bodied encapsulation of the era.

    Released: 1999
    Notable Songs: “1999” by Common and Sadat X, “Any Man” by Eminem, “Next Universe” Mos Def, “B-Boy Document ’99” by The High & Mighty, Mos Def and Skillz

    Defari – Focused Daily

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xzw1jdvJFos

    There is a lot to love about the Likwit MC’s Tommy Boy Records debut; Aside from the top-tier bars, there’s a massive amount of production by Evidence (eight tracks worth), as well three joints by Alchemist among others. Also, some fire vintage Xzibit bars.

    Released: 1998
    Notable Songs: “Focused Daily” f. Evidence, “Likwit Connection,” “Bionic”

    Marley Marl – In Control, Volume 

    The saddest part about this album’s exclusion from streaming services is the history it holds in the genre — standing as the only true Juice Crew album, and housing one of the greatest posse cuts in Hip Hop history, “The Symphony.”

    Released: 1988
    Notable Songs: “Duck Alert” f. Craig G, “The Symphony” f. Big Daddy Kane, Kool G Rap, Craig G and Masta Ace

    Kool G Rap – The Giancana Story

    Meant to be his debut on the storied Rawkus Records — only to be all but shelved and later (finally) released via Koch — this underrated, filler-less gem of an album was universally praised by critics.

    Released: 2002
    Notable Songs: “Where You At” f. Prodigy, “My Life Remix” f. Capone-N-Noreaga

    Jungle Brothers – Raw Deluxe

    When the Native Tongue crew was “reinstated” in 1996, the JBs’ fourth album offered an updated, maturely polished production sound compared to their bouncy, eclectic sample loops, playful rhyme cadences and Afrocentric aesthetic of the late 1980s and early 1990s.

    Released: 1997
    Notable songs: “True Blue,” “How Ya Want It” f. De La Soul and Q-Tip,” and “Brain.”

    Company Flow – Funcrusher Plus

    Two decades before Run The Jewels was an independent rap marketing juggernaut, the trio’s resident producer/rapper El-P burgeoned his “independent as fuck” career ethos with former cohorts Big Jus and DJ Mr. Len for their sole album that became a cornerstone for the late 90s New York City underground rap scene and their fledgling boutique label Rawkus Records.

    Released: 1997
    Notable songs: “The Fire In Which You Burn” f. J Treds and Breeze Brewin, “Vital Nerve,” “Lune TNS,” “Krazy Kings” and “Last Good Sleep”

    Masta Ace – Take A Look Around

    The Brownsville, Brooklyn MC was the first to be heard on Marley Marl’s epochal “The Symphony” and began his solo career with influential rhyme patterns, humor, acerbic battle rap prowess, and political awareness in rap’s most popularly conscious era.

    Released: 1990
    Notable songs: “Me And The Biz,” “Music Man,” “Four Minus Three,” and “Take A Look Around.”

    De La Soul’s 1st 6 Albums

    The fight continues for this legendary trio versus its original label Tommy Boy Records to have for fans enjoy the legally forbidden fruits of their labor from the first half of De La’s 30-year career including its 1989 landmark debut 3 Feet High & Rising, De La Is Dead (1991), Buhloone Mindstate (1993), Stakes Is High (1996), Art Official Intelligence: Mosaic Thump (2000), AOI: Bionix (2001).

    Lā The Darkman – Heist Of The Century

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e-btUGmUm6s

    One of the youngest and lone midwestern Wu-Tang Clan affiliate released his debut solo album near the tail end 90s heyday with his incisive storytelling with a balance of aggressive, punchy beats and bluesy, melodic production from 4th Disciple, Cypress Hill’s DJ Muggs, RZA, Mobb Deep’s Havoc and Six July.

    Released: 1998
    Notable songs: “Heist of the Century,” “Spring Water” f. Raekwon, “4 Souls” feat. Shotti Screwface,” “Polluted Wisdom,” and “Gun Rule.”

    Organized Konfusion – Organized Konfusion & Stress: The Extinction Agenda

    Pharoahe Monch and Prince Poetry were the seminal Queens, New York duo who helped planted the seeds for fast rapping MCs and conceptual songwriting in their pivotal debut and sophomore albums in 1991 and 1994, respectively, that legendary acts such as Nas, Outkast, Eminem, and Kendrick Lamar co-opted and eventually became commercially palatable.

    Released: 1991 & 1994
    Notable songs: “Fudge Pudge” f. O.C., “Releasing Hypnotical Gases,” “Wrong Side Of Town” and “Roosevelt Franklin” from Organized Konfusion; “Stress,” “Bring It On,” “Why?” and “Stray Bullet” from Stress: The Extinction Agenda.

    Timbaland – Tim’s Bio: Life From Da Bassment

    Two decades before DJ Khaled’s reign, Virginia native Timbaland was Hip Hop’s most sought-after studio producer. Taking Quincy Jones’ concept from his Grammy award-winning album Back On The Block (which billed the studio producer as headlining artist over his clientele), he fused an all-star lineup including Missy Elliott, JAY-Z, Nas, Ludacris, Twista and the late Aaliyah for his debut solo album.

    Released: 1998
    Notable songs: “Lobster & Shrimp” f. JAY-Z, “To My” f. Nas and Skillz, “John Blaze” f. Aaliyah and Missy Elliott

    Eminem – Infinite

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T8eA7SRTb7Y&list=PLyGPriD8SGxtSLbIUSwPam0hAGaWt1h43

    Dismal album sales of the Detroit rap god’s debut album Infinite doesn’t translate to the quality of Eminem’s pre-Slim Shady days before he stormed back with a vengeance on the music industry and pop culture at large in the early 2000s.

    Released: 1996
    Notable songs: “It’s OK,” “Open Mic” and “Never Too Far.”

    MC Lyte – Eyes On This

    The original femme fatale turned heads and reloaded her arsenal on her sophomore album with a sharp wit, thick-as-molasses funky production and inspired a generation of female rappers including her fellow Brooklynites Lil Kim, Foxy Brown, and contemporaries such as Nicki Minaj and Rapsody.

    Released: 1989
    Notable songs: “Cha Cha Cha,” “Cappucino” and “Stop, Look and Listen.”

    Frank Ocean – Nostalgia, Ultra

    Before the often elusive Frank Ocean sealed his place in music with the seminal Channel Orange, his Nostalgia, Ultra mixtape (which included the smash “Novacane”) put him on the map — catching the attention of Kanye West, who gave the singer a spot on Watch The Throne. He’s essentially been a superstar ever since.

    Released: 2010
    Notable songs: “Novacane,” “Swim Good”

    Mos Def – The Ecstatic

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nx1_yzq9cX4

    Arguably the artist formerly known as Mos Def’s second-best solo album, after his classic 1999 debut Black On Both Sides, the title’s multidimensional meaning was inspired by a 2002 novel of the same title. In a recent interview with Vibe, he touched on why the album is no longer streamable: “The ownership of that album has come out of the hands of the corporation that owned it, previously … that’s why it’s not there anymore.”

    Released: 2009
    Notable songs: “Auditorium” f. Slick Rick, “Priority,” and “History” f. Talib Kweli

    Prodigy – H.N.I.C., H.N.I.C. Pt. 2 and H.N.I.C. 3

    In Y2K, Bandana P took a brief hiatus from Mobb Deep to craft his widely acclaimed, gold-selling debut solo release, featuring production from Rockwilder, Just Blaze, The Alchemist (obviously), Havoc, EZ Elpee and more. He followed up the LP with two sequels.

    Released: 2000
    Notable Songs: “Keep It Thoro,” “Y.B.E,” “H.N.I.C.”

    Aaliyah – One In A Million & Aaliyah

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wL_mhe1pDsQ&list=PLA9E0DD4CD446F7EF

    At this point, not being able to freely explore the catalog of such an enduring legacy artist is silly; One In A Million was not only a breakthrough for the singer but a massive milestone for both Timbaland and Missy who wrote and produced a large portion of the LP. Her follow-up, the self-titled Aaliyah was released five years later — a month before she was killed in a plane crash.

    Notable Songs: “Hot Like Fire,” “One In A Million,” “4 Page Letter,” “Rock The Boat”

    Honorable Mention: Big Sean – “Control” f.  Kendrick Lamar & Jay Electronica

    It was the shot heard around the (Hip Hop) world. Kendrick Lamar’s verse on “Control” was one of the most triggering assembly of bars over the past decade. It was originally set to appear on Big Sean’s sophomore LP Hall of Fame but was removed at the last minute amid sample clearance issues.

    24 thoughts on “30 Hip Hop & R&B Albums That Still Aren’t On Streaming Services

    1. Two of Little Brother’s first three albums aren’t on Tidal, and it drives me nuts not being able to hear “Extra Hard” or “Dreams” whenever I want. Also Fantastic Damage by El-P, The Weatherman by Evidence, and Del’s album for Def Jux are all missing, but some of them might be on Spotify.

    2. Missing on Spotify: Cappadonna The Pillage, Gravediggaz Six Feet Deep, Reflection Eternal Train of Thought, Camp Lo Uptown Saturday Night, Keith Murray Enigma, EPMD Business Never Personal, Akrobatik Balance, Talib Kweli Quality and many many more. Funcrusher Plus disappeared lately, same as many others that come and go. I don’t get it. They just uploaded Heavy Mental reissue from Killah Priest and few days later it’s gone. Oh well. It is what it is. Prodigy’s HNIC is on Spotify btw.

      1. A lot of those albums you listed are available on Tidal. EPMD, Gravediggaz, Reflection Eternal, and Camp Lo. Thanks for reminding me why I ditched Spotify a couple years back.

      2. Train of thought is on Spotify. I listened to it yesterday after so many years. It’s under Reflection Eternal not Talib Kweli oddly enough

    3. Black Moon “Enta Da Stage” not being able to stream this has been driving me crazy for years. I only had it on cassette, been trying to replace it since 1999!

    4. Yeh it’s a mystery y aaliyas best stuff isn’t online. Also I want Kirk Franklins best album, the one with “911” – it’s missing everywhere but his less gud albums r all available. I asked tidal about both these artists using their request form but they never respond.

    5. Is this a regional thing? I’m from Norway and can easily find 3-4 albums on this list on Spotify. With that said the artist-label-bullshit drama or whatever the reason might be for not releasing classic shit to the fans need to stop. I ain’t sayin it no mo!

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