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Scarface Scarface
Genre: Hip-Hop
Decades Active: 90s, 00s

Scarface quickly became the South's most admired rapper and remained so throughout the '90s after breaking away from the Geto Boys to launch his solo career in 1991. Even if he never scored any national hits or stormed up the Billboard charts with any of his numerous albums throughout the '90s, no one could question his clout throughout the... [+] Read More

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Eddie Meeks Eddie Meeks
Genre: Hip-Hop

The original Tennessean don dada” Eddie Meeks is a
true veteran of the music industry. Eddie Meeks who
makes up one-third of the Atlanta based super group
Prophetix has been releasing records for almost 10 years
and still going strong. Eddie Meeks who is originally from
Memphis, Tenn. got his start in the mid-90’s with... [+] Read More

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1 out of 1 people agree
2Pac 2Pac
Genre: Hip-Hop
Decades Active: 90s, 00s

2Pac became the unlikely martyr of gangsta rap, and a tragic symbol of the toll its lifestyle exacted on urban black America. At the outset of his career, it didn't appear that he would emerge as one of the definitive rappers of the '90s -- he started out as a second-string rapper and dancer for Digital Underground, joining only after they had... [+] Read More

Bushwick Bill
Genre: Hip-Hop
Decades Active: 80s, 90s, 00s

A onetime member of Houston's Geto Boys, Bushwick Bill created a stir with his 1992 release Little Big Man. It was an unvarnished, sometimes frightening release, with details about the shooting incident that cost him an eye, along with the customary sexism, violent imagery, and outlandish inner-city narratives that have long been the group's... [+] Read More

Dr. Dre Dr. Dre
Genre: Hip-Hop
Decades Active: 80s, 90s, 00s

More than any other rapper, Dr. Dre was responsible for moving away from the avant-noise and political stance of Public Enemy and Boogie Down Productions as well as the party vibes of old-school rap. Instead, Dre pioneered gangsta rap and his own variation of the sound, G-funk. BDP's early albums were hardcore but cautionary tales of the... [+] Read More

Ice-T Ice-T
Genre: Hip-Hop
Decades Active: 80s, 90s, 00s

Ice-T (born Tracy Morrow) has proven to be one of hip-hop's most articulate and intelligent stars, as well as one of its most frustrating. At his best, the rapper has written some of the best portraits of ghetto life and gangsters, as well as some of the best social commentary hip-hop has produced. Just as often, he can slip into sexism and... [+] Read More

N.W.A
Genre: Hip-Hop
Decades Active: 80s, 90s

N.W.A, the unapologetically violent and sexist pioneers of gangsta rap, are in many ways the most notorious group in the history of rap. Emerging in the late '80s, when Public Enemy had rewritten the rules of hardcore rap by proving that it could be intelligent, revolutionary, and socially aware, N.W.A capitalized on PE's sonic breakthroughs... [+] Read More

Public Enemy Public Enemy
Genre: Hip-Hop
Decades Active: 80s, 90s, 00s

Public Enemy rewrote the rules of hip-hop, becoming the most influential and controversial rap group of the late '80s and, for many, the definitive rap group of all time. Building from Run-D.M.C.'s street-oriented beats and Boogie Down Productions' proto-gangsta rhyming, Public Enemy pioneered a variation of hardcore rap that was musically and... [+] Read More

Run-D.M.C. Run-D.M.C.
Genre: Hip-Hop
Decades Active: 80s, 90s, 00s

More than any other hip-hop group, Run-D.M.C. are responsible for the sound and style of the music. As the first hardcore rap outfit, the trio set the sound and style for the next decade of rap. With their spare beats and excursions into heavy metal samples, the trio were tougher and more menacing than their predecessors Grandmaster Flash and... [+] Read More

Scarface Scarface
Genre: Hip-Hop
Decades Active: 90s, 00s

Scarface quickly became the South's most admired rapper and remained so throughout the '90s after breaking away from the Geto Boys to launch his solo career in 1991. Even if he never scored any national hits or stormed up the Billboard charts with any of his numerous albums throughout the '90s, no one could question his clout throughout the... [+] Read More

Snoop Dogg Snoop Dogg
Genre: Hip-Hop
Decades Active: 90s, 00s

As the embodiment of '90s gangsta rap, Snoop Dogg blurred the lines between reality and fiction. Introduced to the world through Dr. Dre's The Chronic, Snoop quickly became the most famous star in rap, partially because of his drawled, laconic rhyming and partially because the violence that his lyrics implied seemed real, especially after he was... [+] Read More

Spice 1 Spice 1
Genre: Hip-Hop
Decades Active: 80s, 90s, 00s

Too $hort discovered rapper Spice 1, who'd been born in Texas before moving to California. His self-titled debut was as vivid and fatalistic a gangsta album as possible, and his hard-edged, angry, and pessimistic rapping style and tone only added to the despair emanating from the disc. He followed it with an even more bitter and nihilistic... [+] Read More

The World Class Wreckin' Cru
Genre: Hip-Hop
Decades Active: 80s, 90s

The World Class Wreckin' Cru recorded some solid West Coast electro with Dr. Dre in the production chair, hitting the pop charts with a smooth love jam named "Turn Off the Lights" during 1988, the same year Dre's N.W.A. delivered the gangsta landmark Straight Outta Compton. The group was formed by Lonzo (Alonzo Williams), owner of the Compton... [+] Read More

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