30 Revolutionary Rap Albums That Turn 30 In 2024

Photo: So So Def/Ruffhouse Records/Columbia Records

It's been 30 years since Nas debuted his classic hit "It Ain't Hard To Tell," and it still hits harder than ever. The Queensbridge native and Large Professor actually made the original version of the song, which samples Michael Jackson's "Human Nature," three years earlier in 1991. In 1992, Nas was furious when he heard SWV sample the same track on their hit "Right Here."

"When the SWV record came out, I was pissed," he said according to Genius. "because if I was to have a record for the radio, that was the perfect one. And when SWV took the shine, it was like, “Oh no!” Of course, it was my first album.'"

"It Ain't Hard To Tell" served as the lead single for his debut album Illmatic, which finally dropped on April 19, 1994. Nas' breakthrough single remains one of several iconic records that made the 10-track LP one of the greatest rap albums of all time. The 50-year-old's first album comes with other groundbreaking tracks like "Life's a B*tch" with AZ, "NY State of Mind," "Represent" and more.

Nas' first LP arrived the same year as other revered debut rap albums like Outkast's Southernplayalisticadillacmuzik, Da Brat's Funkdafied and Bone Thugs-N-Harmony's first-ever project Creepin' on ah Come Up. Their albums went on to establish the foundation of their iconic careers and influence generations of MC's.

Take a trip down memory lane and relive other classic albums that turn 30 in 2024 below.

Fugees, Blunted on Reality (Feb. 1)

Photo: Ruffhouse Records/Columbia Records

MC Hammer, The Funky Headhunter (Mar. 1)

Photo: Giant Records

Gang Starr, Hard to Earn (Mar. 8)

Photo: Virgin Records

Kool G Rap, Killer Kuts (Mar. 29)

Photo: Cold Chillin' Records

The Roots, From the Ground Up (Apr. 5)

Photo: Geffen Records

M.O.P., To The Death (Apr. 5)

Photo: Select Street Records

Nas, Illmatic (Apr. 19)

Photo: Columbia Records

Outkast, Southernplayalisticadillacmuzik (Apr. 26)

Photo: Arista Records

8Ball & MJG, On the Outside Looking In (May 24)

Photo: Suave House Records/Relativity Records.

Heavy D & the Boyz, Nuttin' but Love (May 24)

Photo: MCA Records

Master P, The Ghettos Tryin' to Kill Me! (May 24)

Photo: No Limit Records

Beastie Boys, Ill Communication (May 31)

Photo: Grand Royal/Capitol Records

Warren G, Regulate... G Funk Era (Jun. 7)

Photo: Violator Records

Arrested Development, Zingalamaduni (Jun. 14)

Photo: Chrysalis Records

The Beatnuts, Street Level (Jun. 21)

Photo: Violator/Relativity Records

Bone Thugs-N-Harmony, Creepin' on ah Come Up (Jun. 21)

Photo: Ruthless Records

Da Brat, Funkdafied (Jun. 28)

Coolio, It Takes a Thief (July 29)

Photo: Warner Bros. Records.

Public Enemy, Muse Sick-n-Hour Mess Age (Aug. 23)

Photo: Def Jam Recordings

UGK, Super Tight (Aug. 30)

Photo: Jive Records

The Notorious B.I.G., Ready To Die (Sept. 13)

Photo: Bad Boy Records

Rappin' 4-Tay, Don't Fight the Feelin' (Sept. 13)

Photo: Chrysalis Records/Rag Top Records

Craig Mack, Project: Funk da World (Sept. 20)

Photo: Bad Boy Records

Keith Murray, The Most Beautifullest Thing in This World (Sept. 20)

Photo: Jive Records

Common Sense, Resurrection (Oct. 4)

Photo: Relativity Records

Death Row Records, Murder Was The Case (Oct. 18)

Photo: Death Row Records

Twista, Resurrection (Oct. 18)

Photo: Atlantic Records

Scarface, The Diary (Oct. 18)

Photo: Rap-A-Lot Records

Method Man, Tical (Nov. 15)

Photo: Def Jam Recordings

Three 6 Mafia, Smoked Out, Loced Out (Nov. 25)

Photo: Three 6 Mafia


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