The 25 Most Important Albums Of The Decade So Far

    The album is the still the magnum opus of anyone’s career. It’s a stop in time, a signpost along a dirt road of art or the paper chase or whatever reason you’re in the game. It is your moment in the Hip Hop sun; the moment you finally get to have the floor in the rumbling, jubilant mess hall of your genre. Create something great, and the people will love you for it, usually. Make something not so great and you may get skewered to high heaven, especially if your art is considered derivative or nonsensical.

    The ‘10s have been an amazing time in Hip Hop and rap music. The youth culture has gotten both more commercial and more private as virtual communities fill in the gaps between Internet culture and real life ones, and the music has followed suit, becoming both more personal and more sprawling and more referential.

    So whether it’s Beyonce dropping an album completely out of the blue or Jay Z selling a million records before his album officially spilled out into the streets, the music business has changed almost as dramatically as the artists making the tunes. And while some albums are culturally important, others are artistically and entrepreneurially so. Still, others changed the shape of the genre’s entire sound.

    *This list is in no particular order.

     

    Kendrick Lamar – To Pimp A Butterfly

    Release Date: March 15, 2015 | DX Rating: 5.0

    There was lots of anticipation and questions for Kendrick Lamar’s follow-up to his groundbreaking sophomore album good kid, m.A.A.d city. Was the TDE star going to go commercial or be affected by his controversial Grammy loss? Then there was the polarizing single “i,” released at the end of 2014. Even artists as big as Pharrell with knowledge of K. Dot’s future release called bits and pieces “unapologetically black.” Of course, the lead up to what would be called To Pimp A Butterfly would only add to the hype starting with the extremely aggressive “The Blacker The Berry,” reveal of the now iconic cover art of his homies in front of the White House and tracklist. By the time the release date was surprisingly moved up to a Sunday night in late March, all Hip Hop could do was stand and watch. The end result was an album that mixed Black Nationalist themes with production damn near scoping the entire history of urban music. Like DX Editor-in-Chief Justin Hunte said, “To Pimp A Butterfly” is ambitious in its attempt to inspire a generation to change the world for the better and poignant enough to actually do so.”

    Kanye West – My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy

    Release Date: November 22, 2010 | DX Rating: 4.5

    The Taylor Swift incident stained the mercurial Mr. West in a wet suit of shame as artists and pundits decreed him the worst human in the history of humans for his interruption of Swift at the MTV Music Awards. In his defense, the Henny (and maybe Amber Rose) made him do it. Well, that and the idea that he actually takes awards seriously, which in itself is bizarre. After a few forced non-apologies and months of laying low the emcee

    emerged with an album that was an artistic achievement. So much went into the making of this record (the famous Hawaiian studio sessions, the flying out of classic and up-and-coming artists and producers to the island etc.) but it was the mythos he created around himself that pushes this album into the rap canon. Once again he switched his entire aesthetic, crafting a back handed apology in “Runaway” and skewering SNL for poking fun at the artist on “Power” during his time away. Every other song was a careful exposition of pop/rap sensibilities (the dominant form of rap during the 2000s) and it culminated in an overly serious rehash of “Who Will Survive In America.” The answer was Mr. West.

    Drake – Take Care

    Release Date: November 15, 2011 | DX Rating: 3.5

    2010 saw the release of Drake’s YMCMB debut Thank Me Later. For many, the project was seen as a total disappointment considering the hype built around it. Regardless, the Toronto native managed to go platinum his first go-around. For his follow-up release a year later, Drizzy devised an album in Take Care that proved exactly why he’s one of Hip Hop’s greatest. Alongside huge radio hits like “Headlines” and “HYFR,” the 19-track album was an artistic statement full of pure emotion. Doing something that would later become a late-career trademark, there are some early star turning guest appearances from Kendrick Lamar and The Weeknd. It was Drake cohesively embracing his status, demons and aspirations while then spitting (or singing) some of the best bars of his career. Take Care was his most personal, honest.

    Macklemore & Ryan Lewis – The Heist

    Release Date: October 9, 2012 | DX Rating: 4.0

    One of the most controversial rap albums of the decade, The Heist turned Macklemore & Ryan Lewis from niche independent Hip Hop mainstays to pop superstars. For better or worse, the album bucked trends most didn’t like about mainstream rap anyway. The “poppin tags” montra felt played out after “Thrift Shop” and blatant homophobia came off as honestly lame after “Same Love.” Then there was the anthemic “Can’t Hold Us” that became the theme song to every rom-com and commercial of the past few years. Yes, The Heist swiping the 2014 Grammys away from Kendrick Lamar’s superior Good Kid Maad City was an atrocity but, taking away from how good The Heist isn’t exactly fair either.

    Big K.R.I.T. – Cadillactica

    Release Date: November 10, 2014 | DX Rating: 4.5

    For some, Big K.R.I.T.’s Live From The Underground lacked the country bounce that made his mixtapes ranging from K.R.I.T. Wuz Here to 4eva Na Day some of the best mixtapes of the modern era. The biggest issue came in the form of sample clearances that nearly crippled his Def Jam debut. For his follow-up Cadillactica, Krizzle made two important moves: allowed outside producers to help mold several tracks and doubled down on the southern introspection. The soulfulness is more evident on the Raphael Saadiq assisted “Soul Food” and “Angle.” That doesn’t mean that Cadillactica lacked any trunk rattling bangers however thanks to like tracks “My Sub Pt.3 (Big Bang)” and “Mo Better Cool” featuring Devin The Dude, Big Sant and Bun B. There was a time where many started to doubt K.R.I.T.’s proclamation of “King of The South.” Cadillactica was just the album needed to further his claim.

    Jay Z – Magna Carta…Holy Grail

    Release Date: July 4, 2013 | DX Rating: 4.0

    Regardless of how Hip Hop fans felt about the actual body of work itself, Magna Carta…Holy Grail was Jay Z pulling the most daring business move of his career. Well, that was before Tidal but that’s not the point here ladies and gentlemen. Magna Carta…Holy Grail started Hov’s #newrules plan of changing the industry by making a lucrative deal with Samsung which ended with the project going platinum before the album’s physical release. Not only did King Roc Nation manage to convince the RIAA to change their rules in album sales calculation but, influenced a new way of distributing music in a time where music listeners weren’t buying much music anymore. On its own merit, Magna Carta…Holy Grail isn’t Hov’s best album but thankfully never reaches the lows of Kingdom Come.

    Ab-Soul – Control System

    Release Dates: May 11, 2012 | DX Rating: 4.5

    Control System was a voice from the underground. Ab played Ellison’s Invisible Man surrounded by shame, light and the terrors of living. Arguably TDE’s most talented emcee, Control System was Soulo striking out on his own, cutting ties with any previously contrived sound. As such, he created a third-eyed template for those too alone and too hyper-aware. Making a lane for a sound no one even realized was there. Then there was “Book Of Soul,” which is arguably the best rap love song of all time: “Stick to the plan / I’ll meet you at our spot / If reincarnation is true and we don’t get too lost / Even if you forget me and everything you left behind I never lied / I love you in a place where there’s no space and time.”

    The Roots – Undun

    Release Date: December 2, 2011 | DX Rating: 5.0

    Many were skeptical when The Roots signed over to Def Jam during The Carter Administration. Those fears were put to bed by the time Game Theory, Rising Down and How I Got Over made it to shelves. For the most daring album of the group’s nearly two decade long career, Undun was a conceptual album centered on fictional character Redford Stevens, a man whose tragic story is told vividly in under 40 minutes. There are moments of sheer brilliance from the hopeless thump of “The OtherSide” featuring Bilal and associate of The Roots Greg Porn along with musical drum vs. piano epic “Will To Power (3rd Movement).” Undun was further proof that major label acceptance didn’t mean artistic compromise, even for veterans.

    Run The Jewels – Run The Jewels 2

    Release Date: June 26, 2013 | DX Rating: 4.0

    Before Run The Jewels, both Killer Mike and El-P collaborated for something that would become a breakout moment for two artists at crossroads within their careers, R.A.P. Music. The a-ha moment the following year came in fashioning themselves an actual group in the form of Run The Jewels. El-P’s production grew even more evolved while Killer Mike’s rhyming became even more chaotic and accurate. There’s a reason why the album received 2013’s Album Of The Year. Most importantly, the album set the stage for their eventual move to Nas headed Mass Appeal brand and the Run The Jewels 2. Managing to eclipse the greatness of its predecessor, the album became the moment where El-P and Killer Mike became important figures within Hip Hop past their minor backgrounds. El P’s production was chaotic as ever. Meanwhile, Killer Mike transitioned from street preacher to civil rights spokesperson.

    Watch The Throne – Watch The Throne

    Release Date: August 8, 2011 | DX Rating: 4.0

    There wasn’t a collaborative album more hyped than Watch The Throne in 2011. By that time, Kanye West created his magnum opus My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy the previous year and Jay Z was comfortable being the corporate statesman of Hip Hop. Together, both created a luxury rap album with pro-black undertones. Yes, two of the most powerful figures within the culture linked together Voltron style to provide the world with modern classics such as “Otis” and “Niggas In Paris.” Watch The Throne was a nuclear bomb of an event and all everyone could do is marvel at the spectacle.

    Kendrick Lamar – good kid, m.A.A.d city

    Release Date: October 22, 2012 | DX Rating: 4.5

    If To Pimp A Butterfly was Kendrick Lamar at his current artistic peek, then good kid, m.A.A.d city played an important role in establishing the Compton native as Hip Hop’s perceived savior. So much so, in fact, that many compared it to one particular debut from a young Nas. A narrative relating to a day in the life of Lamar, good kid, m.A.A.d city articulated the ideologies of a man growing up around chaos while attempting to maintain sanity and morality. That means dealing with peer pressure (“Art Of Peer Pressure”), alcohol abuse (“Swimming Pools”), gang violence (“Sing About Me/ Dying Of Thirst) and good old aspirational spitting (“Backseat Freestyle”). Providing a phenomenal backing soundtrack included producers ranging from Hit-Boi to Pharrell; each setting the perfect mood for whatever was in the TDE emcee’s head. In an era where radio singles and southern bounce ruled rap’s commercial viability, Lamar (with some assistance from Dr. Dre) helps formulate a major label release that touched mainstream and core Hip Hop heads alike. Most importantly, he did it without alienating either side.

    Nicki Minaj – Pink Friday

    Release Date: November 19, 2010 | DX Rating: 3.5

    Lil Wayne took a large gamble with signing Nicki Minaj to YMCMB, and that risk paid off in spades. Yes, “Massive Attack” featuring Sean Garrett was a total flop, but the lucky leak of “Your Love” saved the Queens’ native and spearheaded one of the biggest debuts for a female MC in over a decade. Pink Friday couldn’t have come at a better time in Hip Hop as mainstream representation of women were more than lacking. Then her first crossover hit, “Superbass,” solidified her as the reigning Queen of Hip Hop; something that has yet to be topped despite a few threats. The 8x platinum single would set a tone for even more pop leaning moments on her follow-up Pink Friday: Roman Reloaded.

    YG – My Krazy Life

    Release Date: March 18, 2014 | DX Rating: 3.0

    good kid, m.A.A.d city was Kendrick Lamar’s album based on the hard choices that comes with living in the impoverished community of Compton. YG managed to provide a suitable alternative through My Krazy Life or, trails of a bad kid in an even worse city. Socio-economic context be damned, well, on the surface. Mainly backed by DJ Mustard’s production, the album felt like a throwback to old West Coast gangster rap tropes with unique contemporary twists. Then there are the numerous amounts of catchy club hits from “My Nigga” to “Who Do You Love” featuring Drake. In the era of “ratchet,” My Krazy Life stood above the rest by having heart.

    Ghostface Killah & Adrian Younge – Twelve Reasons To Die

    Release Date: April 16, 2013 | DX Rating: 4.0

    The idea for future albums wrapped in this premise was unveiled here. Adrian Younge would compose some magical score, and then an emcee of Ghostface’ caliber would wrap his mind around it. The thing has gone on to create sultry collabo’s a few times now. Killah’s done it two more times since, and then there was last years PRhyme, which took to the nectar and poured itself a DJ Premiere and Royce Da 5’9 sized glass.

    Nipsey Hussle – Crenshaw

    Release Date: October 8, 2013 | DX Rating: N/A

    The mixtape game has evolved enough for independent artists to depend on them tremendously at this point. Between that and streaming, music consumption has turned into delivering free music. Taking a different route, West Coast emcee Nipsey Hussle made a bold move by making his mixtape/album Crenshaw a purchasable product at the staggering price of $100 bucks. Sure, it was available for free. However, it inspired Jay Z enough to buy 100 copies of the project that also came with concert tickets among other things. On its own merit, it delivered exactly what Nipsey fans expect from the Fatburger franchise owner.

    Joey Bada$$ – B4 Da A$$

    Release Date: January 20, 2015 | DX Rating: 4.0

    Barely 20 years old, Joey Bada$$ is the voice of post new New York. He harkens back without looking backward, and in an era where Tupac Shakur is clearly the thought whisperer of this rap generation, Joey channels B.I.G enough to balance out the rap scales. B4 Da $$ was also just very good, and Joey’s proven that surrounding himself with a (some would say) now defunct old NY sound may not be such a bad thing after all.

    Frank Ocean – Channel Orange

    Release Date: July 10, 2012 | DX Rating: 4.0

    Forget the fever dream of a single in “Pyramids” wherein he compares strip clubs to the quenching of our capitalistic lust by takeover, wanton labor and death. Forget “Thinkin Bout You,” which is saccharine sweet and delicious. Forget the peaches and the mangos that you can sell for him. Channel Orange was a dreary walk through income inequality, misogyny, and survivors malaise all on one alt-R&B album. It defines the genre for good or ill in a way that cannot be undone.

    D’Angelo – Black Messiah

    Release Date: December 15, 2014 | DX Rating: 4.5

    There were those who thought Black Messiah had been made already by Bilal, maybe, or by some other veteran of the Soulquarian movement? They were terribly mistaken. When D’Angelo let loose on the world this masterpiece damn near 15 years on from his previous dive into R&B dark water Voodoo, no one quite knew what to make of it. What was this voice barely brought above a whisper? What was this album, so unapologetically black you could hear the flour pop and the grease sizzle? Let’s not call it an album; let’s call it a solar return after the full eclipse that R&B had been as of late.

    Kanye West – Yeezus

    Release Date: June 18, 2013 | DX Rating: 4.5

    Love it or hate it, Ye´ dropped an electro-rap album that lived in negative space. It was freakazoid and unnecessary in almost every way and it will never be done again. Some say thankfully. Others say that Death Grips do it all the time, but none of that matters. This was the greatest star of our time deciding to do something he himself described as “not musical.” Say what you want about Kanye West, but courage is not something he lacks, and in the process he created a one off that will never be duplicated.

    7 Days Of Funk (Snoopzilla & Dam Funk) – 7 Days Of Funk

    Release Date: December 10, 2013 | DX Rating: 4.5

    The union of Dam Funk and Snoop Dogg couldn’t have come at a better time. Gemini Twin himself essentially created a lane for vintage G-funk since joining the Stones Throw family. Snoop, on the other hand, was still feeling the effects of that horrible Reincarnated reggae album with Diplo. Together, both created some good old throwback West Coast Hip Hop. Good enough to have tracks like “Faden Away” and “Do My Thang” almost feel like they would fit perfectly around the early-mid 90s. And is it any coincidence that after this album’s warm reception funk found its way back into the West Coast Hip Hop lexicon?

    Tyler, The Creator – Goblin

    Release Date: August 15, 2011 | DX Rating: 4.0

    OFWGKTA took the world by storm at the beginning of the decade. We thought what would occur is this panacea of hyper self-aware kids making art in any which way they chose. We should have known better. Still, Goblin was a stab at making the Hip Hop version of Kids, and while it didn’t quite do that, the look into the teen mind was raw, incandescent and unfiltered. It’s affects also lingered over into the rest of the decade. See OVO, the Weeknd, Travi$ Scott and many, many more.

    Beyonce – Beyonce

    Release Date: December 9, 2014 | DX Rating: 4.0

    Beyonce changed the game. Not only for pop, which it did with a sledgehammer to the face of every other so-called star out there, but for its pure IDGAF. It dropped out of nowhere. The first to do it on that scale and it has changed everything since. It proved release dates were essentially obsolete. It made albums get moved from being released on Tuesdays to Fridays. It proved Bey had cajones. She could have called up all the superstar songwriters and producers and crafted something shiny but plastic-y, and instead she recruited on the periphery, living and improving upon the tunes of music geeks like Boots. Bold isn’t the word.

    J. Cole – 2014 Forest Hills Drive

    Release Date: December 9, 2014 | DX Rating: 4.0

    Cole’s been a long time coming. So has 2014 Forest Hills Drive. After two albums that didn’t do much to live up to his enormous potential, he released his third and most recent project at the tail end of what A$AP Yams called one of the disappointing years in rap history. We do not agree with that notion, and Cole may have saved that day. His personal foray into the trials and tribulations of growing up talented and black and then actually making it has wafts of “ To Be Young, Gifted and Black.” And he took that responsibility seriously. The response was also enormous, proving J. Cole may be the centerpiece of one of rap’s most talented generations.

    Flying Lotus – Cosmogramma

    Release Date: May 3, 2010 | DX Rating: 4.0

    In an interview last year, Flylo dropped some knowledge on where some of the most soothing sounds on Cosmogramma came from. Apparently, it came from the gentle breathing machines at his mother’s hospital bed. And as macabre as that is, it’s also a testament to his genius. Cosmogramma is Fly Lo’s most ambitious undertaking, and it took him from underground impresario to mainstream sensation. It also proved that the effects of L.A.’s Low End Theory soundscapes would be long felt. More of a test case than anything else at the time, Hip Hop has finally caught up. And just why wasn’t he included in the making of Yeezus? The world may never know.

    Eminem – Recovery

    Release Date: June 18, 2010 | DX Rating: 4.0

    Eminem said it himself on Recovery track “Talkin 2 Myself” that Encore was the Detroit emcee on drugs and Relapse meant flushing them out. Past years of drugs and personal turmoil, it was safe to say that Recovery was the true comeback album many wanted. The hyperlyrical asswhole was more than present in “Won’t Back Down” featuring Pink and Rihanna’s assistance on “Love The Way You Lie” was pure pop gold. Recovery even had moments of maturity thanks to “Going Through Changes.” Simply put, Slim Shady proved why he remains one of Hip Hop’s reigning kings to this day. It’s rare artists within Hip Hop can impact popular culture during their later years but Em’ easily disproved the notion.

    Andre Grant is an NYC native turned L.A. transplant that has contributed to a few different properties on the web and is now the Features Editor for HipHopDX. He’s also trying to live it to the limit and love it a lot. Follow him on Twitter @drejones.

    Ural Garrett is an Los Angeles-based journalist and HipHopDX’s Senior Features Writer. When not covering music, video games, films and the community at large, he’s in the kitchen baking like Anita. Follow him on Twitter @Uralg.

    116 thoughts on “The 25 Most Important Albums Of The Decade So Far

    1. KILLER MIKE – R.A.P. MUSIC is much better than many of the albums here, and is easily my favorite hip hop record of the past decade.

    2. I can agree for the most part. Don’t agree with everything but can see why they are on the list.

    3. I mean for real, who the f listen Nicki Minaj, she’s not good MC. Beyonce on this list? I thought we are talking Hip Hop. I agree on most of it, but there is missing few good albums. Which are more worthy to listen than Yezzus for example

    4. REAL DOCUMENTARY 2 TRACKLIST SMELLIS LIKE CLASSIC!!!!!!!!!! NO RYDA ON IT
      TURN UP!!!! FUCK 50 and 40 …Game Makes Classic With Billionares real go on this iz game

      Entertainment ONE US LP
      BLOOD MONEY ENTERTAINMENT
      Fifth Amendment ENT

      THE DOCUMENTARY 2
      ARITST: THE GAME – GENRE HIPHOP /RAP- Release Date: June 30th 2015
      EXECUTIVE PRODUCERS: THE GAME – Cash Wack Jones – Stat Quo
      PRODUCERS: DR. DRE – Kanye West -Cool n DRE- DJ Khalil – Scott
      Storch – Just Blaze – Timbaland – DJ Mustard- Sap- Boi Wonda – Vinylz- DJ
      Premire- Battle Cat – Polow Da Don

      1. Chapter 2 (intro)
      2. Is It Real?
      3. Back At it – (Chronic) feat: Kendrick Lamar and Dr. Dre
      4. What we Do – feat: lil Wayne
      5. Bad Decisions
      6. Changes – feat: Ed Sheeran
      7. The Aftermath – Feat: Kendrick Lamar
      8. Angel With Demons – Feat: Jhene Aiko
      9. Never Look Back
      10. Get To Know me – Feat: Kanye West and Ty Dolla $ign
      11. Beautiful – Feat: Drake and Trey Songz
      12. Blessings – Feat: Faith Evans
      13. Still Here
      14. Gold Daytonas- Feat: Erykah Badu
      15. Do it for us – Feat: Skeme and Ty Dolla $ign – ITUNES BONUS
      16. The Soundtrack – Feat: Meek Mill – DELUXE EDITION BONUS
      17. Bad Guy – DELUXE EDITION BONUS
      18. Would I Be Wrong – Feat: Akon – DELUXE EDITION BONUS

    5. just one drake album? right, like he hasnt dominated the last 5 years, driving backpackers crazy. magna carter is jay-z’s second worst album. even Nas’ last was much better. huge ghostface fan but that particular album sucked also. you got YG right and a few others but whats missing? Rich Forever – Rick Ross, Section 80 – Kendrick Lamar and both Drake’s Nothing was the Same and If You’re Reading This… will go down as the most influential albums of this era garunteed, as dude pretty much single-handly popularized the singy-songy flow ala Def Loaf, Rich Homie Quan, Fetty Wap, Future (And no Lil Wayne and Kanye cant be seriously be credited for that)

    6. damn they said the last decade that would be since 2005, how come not one of commons albums are on here.

    7. Sorry, but nicki minaj & beyoncé are NOT hip-hop! Why do you think people keep saying “hip-hop is dead”? Because other people think minaj & beyoncé are part of the game, but the AREN’T!!!

    8. You guys put Jay’s Magna Carta on here….lol/smh. Overall this list is awful. DX staff does it again.

    9. Horrible list.. no Wayne! You guys are crazy. Best selling album of 2008. How is it not on the list

      1. Do you know what decade mean? It means 2010 to 2020, hence 2008 not being part of this decade. Go back to first grade BRUH

      2. i thought he meant this decade as in the 2010s… if not then yeah C3 definitely need to be on there. I dont even like wayne and thats one of my favorite albums.

    10. wtf is this??? what a joke.. trash mainstream albums with weak rhymes and wak beats… gfk and the roots was about the only good shit there !?

    11. Beyonce and Minaj gotta go for sure off this list and prolly a few others. No love for Lupe,Nas,Doom,Black Milk,Common,etc. Didn’t common take an oscar? Didn’t lupe push a few records? Wasn’t Nas nominated for a few grammy’s?

    12. C’mon DX FIx the Fuck Up.. Nas -Life is Good is the top 5 of this decade so far man.. stop playing.

    13. yall got Goblin, Beyonce and Nicki Minaj album on there and left off the Roots – How I Got Over album? ha! fuck outta here! this list is dumb.

    14. DX is calling these the most important albums, which doesn’t mean they are the best. They put Forest Hills Drive on here, but less than a month later Lupe came out and bodied that album with Tetsuo and Youth. Last week DX was saying that Life is Good is better than Magna Carta, but they put that trash on the list only because of Hov’s marketing gimmick with Samsung. This is a really dumb list.

      1. True, they viewed Life is Good as the better album over MCHG, but Jay’s business savvy was the reason why his album outsold Nas’ work easily because of the Samsung deal he made. MCHG was platinum before its release. No hip-hop record has ever done anything like that. From a marketing standpoint, MCHG was huge.

      1. Totally agree that Nas-Life Is Good should be on this list.. by far and away my fave album of the decade (with Kendrick’s albums). A grown up rapper speaking on grown up topics, tight flow, killer beats and production. Totally underrated album.

      2. They couldn’t list Nas’ Life Is God because they had to save space for Crappy Garbaj’s “Pink Trashday.”

    15. What’s more absurd than this list is the commentary. Acting like the “Goblin” album influenced OVO and Weeknd is ridiculous. Speaking of Odd Future both “bastard” and earl sweatshirt’s first album were better than goblin which is largely viewed as a disappointment . Macklemore doesn’t belong on this list. Here is who does:
      Killer Mike R.A.P music,
      Rick Ross – Rich Forever,
      Drake – Nothing was the Same,
      Drake – If Your Still Reading this…
      Weeknd – House of baloons
      Kendrick Lamar – Section.80
      Earl Sweatshirt – Earl
      Chance the Rapper -Acid Rap
      Tyler the Creator – bastard

    16. Jay Z Holy grail is important because it got shipped on phones?

      GTFOH

      Digital albums were shipped on devices before, this was nothing new. The RIAA were going to change their rules regardless of what Jay did, giving credit to Jay for sale changes, is like crediting him as being a full owner of the Brooklyn Nets because he occasionally gets comp’d courtside tix. Plus, the album was no good, don’t know how guys rated it a 4.

    17. Yep, I already thought this has been the worst decade for hip-hop ever and the list confirms it.

    18. Not one Lupe project, smh. I admit he’s had some bumps in his career but damn, when he’s at his best he’s incredible. F&L and The Cool were brilliant and Tetsuo and Youth was nothing short of a masterpiece

    19. FOR THE RECORD I HATE BLACK FOLKS YOU ALL PISS ME OFF .. IF IT WASN’T FOR THE KING EMINEM I WOULDN’T EVEN LISTEN TO RAP MUSIC .DON’T NONE OF YOU BOTHER REPLYING TO MY POST ….AS I DON’T GIVE A FUCK WHAT ANY OF YOU DUMB BLACKS OR WHITE SYMPATHIZERS THINK !!!

    20. So much of un-needed albums. 🙁 There were some good picks, like the 12 Reasons To Die and so on, I give you that.

    21. Either Common album could have made the list – The Dreamer, The Believer and Nobody’s Smiling. Nas – Life Is Good! WTF is up with this list?!

    22. Some great picks though your list is kinda fanatical.it looks like u picked and analysed only music on your shelf

    23. As usual, Lupe gets no love. His album was released because of the hacker group Anonymous and is a f*king masterpiece. Hands down one of the greatest hip hop albums ever. Tetsuo & Youth should EASILY make this list.

    24. Recovery? Magna Carta? Pink Friday? Watch The Throne? Fuckin Beyoncé???? Damn I like KRIT but Cadillactica ain’t out long enough to judge.

      What an awful list, is this a list for a hiphop site or a list of pop albums 12 year olds liked (bar a few like Ghost and The Roots). EARL is far more important than Tyler. Life is good kicked Magna Cartas ass. Where the fuck is Roc Marciano? Someone who changed the sound of underground hiphop. Where’s ANY of the Apollo Brown produced albums? Clearly the most prolific producer of the last decade. Where’s Piñata? Clearly the album of last year. Shabazz Palaces?

      Bout time DX admitted it’s no longer a hiphop site just a general music site posting about the most popular music so they will get as many views as possible. Patethic

    25. Listen as a real musician how the hell did Kendrick Lamar get a 5.0 with To Pimp a Butterfly in J.Cole Forest Hill Drive got a 4.0 I love both artist but J.Cole album clearly deserve a 5.0 hands down my opinion my LiL Homie Kendrick 5.0 no more like a 3.5 his message is brilliant but overall as a project its could of been more solid.Clearly DX be on some BS with rating music.

      1. Forest Hills Drive is super overrated it sounds like an other bland generic J.Cole album just take the radio singles away. 4.0 is too high its really 2.5 or a 3.0. TPAB was better in everyway and is honestly the best Hip Hop I think since Undun

      2. Said it urself tpab passed the message, what we really need to hear. Forest hill good album but overrated in ma opinion.

      3. The realist comment .. thumbs up for you
        Forrest drive hills was way better than pimp a butterfly

    26. Its alot of albums on hear i see BS with higher rating then they should have clearly they don’t no music

    27. This is definitely a 10 year list max. I mean Im not even seeing Mobb deep the infamous, Ready to die, all eyez on me?? I mean a 25 year window includes the 90s. I dont think i saw a single ablgum that was 15 years old.

    28. read it wrong. Even then for 10 years this isn’t a strong list on important. However important would imply what the writer views is important. You would think there would be more albums from Hiphop dx year end reviews list.

    29. This is just a list of who sold a bunch of albums, what was important about any of them? I couldn’t find a single head that would say any of these moved him aside from K.R.I.T.

      Tribe moved people, Gang Starr moved people…this list created by TMZ.

    30. It said top 25 albums of the decades so far dummies not top 25 album of the last decade or top 25 albums ever in rap…..some of y’all just wanna write comments for the sake of it without even understatndjng the article

    31. GREAT LIST! The fact that you added Yeezus to this list was in itself bold and I commend you for that. Two albums that you left out however were Distant Relatives and Charity Starts at Home. Two groundbreaking albums that are equally if not more important than some of these albums (including Yeezus).

    32. Lecrae’s Gravity! It had a stellar feature from Big Krit. And it got him his first Grammy

    33. I understand by “most important ” Yall are taking into account how much cultural relevance the album had, not necessarily if it’s good or not. I mean, Yall gave some of these joints 3 or 3 1/2 ratings. Even Tyler said goblin blew, we all know recovery sucked, manga what? and I didn’t even listen to the Nikki album but we all know…… With that being said I think Life is good and Doris (where’s earl) shouldve made it because they where good culturally relevant album, and if your going to put ghost and that snoop albums on then I think Yall need to put one of black milks albums on here, no poison & hell below where both too hot. Love the fly lo love doe.

      1. They just really gave love to the mainstream albums/artists with relevant names. Doris should have made this list, but Lupe is just a disgrace, I can’t even take this list seriously.

    34. It’s missing Drake’s Nothing Was the Same and Eminem’s MMLP2… But other than that, it’s a solid list.

    35. Last decade well I think you should take Bey’s 4 off & replace it with B’Day which dropped in 06

    36. This list is MOST IMPORTANT (not the BEST) albums of the DECADE (2010-2019) SO FAR. Not of the past 10 years, those late 2000s albums fall into the (2000-2009) DECADE. I guess a lot of people don’t know what a decade is. Sheesh.

      1. Well, considering that they stayed between 2005 – 2015 They did stay within a decade. The question is; do you know what a decade is?

        1. You’re confused. Of the decade so far. 2010 to the present. How is it so hard for you to understand that? So instead you’re a dick to Adam.

    37. ayyy Death Grips’ The Money Store is the most essential hip hop album in the history of most essential albums of all time…

    38. Most this list aint even hip-hop in the form i know it to be this some dance r&b waterdown rap music shit no action bronson no asap rocky no apathy no demigodz no raekwon no wu tang no sob no czarface how could you miss these out this a child friendly list bullshit. 7 Days of Funk thats my shit tho.

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