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Alternative hip hop - The end of the 1990s |  | Alternative hip hop - The end of the 1990s: Encyclopedia II - Alternative hip hop - The end of the 1990s |  | In spite of neo soul and rapcore gaining mainstream acceptance, gangsta hip hop artists like Jay-Z (Reasonable Doubt, 1996) and DMX (...And Then There Was X, 1999) still dominated the charts as the end of the millennium neared. Critics and listeners regarded alternative hip hop as going through a lull, as even mainstays like A Tribe Called Quest (Beats, Rhymes and Life, 1996) released lackluster albums.
Many observers feel that Dr. Octagon's seminal 1996 album Dr. Octagonecologyst revitalized hip hop's unde ...
See also:Alternative hip hop, Alternative hip hop - The late 1980s, Alternative hip hop - Early 1990s, Alternative hip hop - The Underground Emerges, Alternative hip hop - Genres related to alternative hip hop, Alternative hip hop - Neo soul, Alternative hip hop - The end of the 1990s, Alternative hip hop - Post-2000 alternative hip hop, Alternative hip hop - Sound samples |  | | Alternative hip hop, Alternative hip hop - Early 1990s, Alternative hip hop - Genres related to alternative hip hop, Alternative hip hop - Neo soul, Alternative hip hop - Post-2000 alternative hip hop, Alternative hip hop - Sound samples, Alternative hip hop - The Underground Emerges, Alternative hip hop - The end of the 1990s, Alternative hip hop - The late 1980s, List of alternative hip hop musicians, Category:Alternative hip hop musicians |  | |
|  |  | Alternative hip hop: Encyclopedia II - Alternative hip hop - The end of the 1990s
Alternative hip hop - The end of the 1990s
In spite of neo soul and rapcore gaining mainstream acceptance, gangsta hip hop artists like Jay-Z (Reasonable Doubt, 1996) and DMX (...And Then There Was X, 1999) still dominated the charts as the end of the millennium neared. Critics and listeners regarded alternative hip hop as going through a lull, as even mainstays like A Tribe Called Quest (Beats, Rhymes and Life, 1996) released lackluster albums.
Many observers feel that Dr. Octagon's seminal 1996 album Dr. Octagonecologyst revitalized hip hop's underground; Company Flow's Funcrusher Plus is another album cited as redefining the genre. Alternative hip hop soon began to lose its recent stylings for a return to Native Tongues-style old school with hardcore and jazz elements mixed in. The hip-hop band, The Roots were among the leaders of the second alternative hip hop wave, dropping several critically acclaimed albums in the mid to late 90s, including Do You Want More?!!!??! (1995), Illadelph Halflife (1996), and the breakthrough, Things Fall Apart in 1999. Mos Def and Talib Kweli's 1998 Black Star also contributed greatly to this evolution, with its return to Native Tongues-style old school hip hop. Mos Def's solo debut, Black on Both Sides (1999), quickly established him as a darling of alternative media for its incendiary politics, while Kweli's solo career took some time to get off the ground; as he didn't appear until 2000's Reflection Eternal, with partner Hi-Tek. Pharaoh Monch's Internal Affairs, his 1999 solo debut after leaving Organized Konfusion, also added more gangsta and hardcore hip hop elements to the mix, while Jurassic 5 (Jurassic 5 EP), Blackalicious (Nia) and Dilated Peoples (The Platform) continued mixing hippie-ish psychedelia, funk and hip hop to critical acclaim and popular rejection.
Other related archives...And Then There Was X, 1960s, 1970s, 1988, 1988 in music, 1989, 1989 in music, 1990, 1990s, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 3 Feet High and Rising, 3 Years, 5 Months and 2 Days in the Life of..., A Tribe Called Quest, A2G, Aesop Rock, Alex Haley, Alicia Keys, All Hail the Queen, Alternative music, Arrested Development, Bad Boy Records, Baduizm, Beats, Rhymes and Life, Bizarre Ride II the Pharcyde, Black Star, Black on Both Sides, Blackalicious, Blazing Arrow, Blue Lines, Boyz II Men, Branford Marsalis, Brown Sugar, Busdriver, Busta Rhymes, Cannibal Ox, Category:Alternative hip hop musicians, Christian hip hop, Christianity, Common, Company Flow, Cooleyhighharmony, D'Angelo, DJ Kool Herc, DMX, Daddy Kev, De La Soul, De La Soul Is Dead, Def Jef, Del Tha Funkee Homosapien, Dilated Peoples, Disposable Heroes of Hiphoprisy, Donald Byrd, Done By the Forces of Nature, Doug E. Fresh, Dr. Dre, Dr. Octagon, Duke Ellington, EP, East Coast hip hop, Ed Norton, El-P, Electric Circus, Emcee Lynx, Erykah Badu, Esham, Etta James, Expansion Team, Freestyle Fellowship, French, French language, G-Funk, Gang Starr, Guru, Guy, Hi-Tek, Hip hop genres, Horace Tapscott, Hypocrisy Is the Greatest Luxury, Ill Bill, Illmatic, Image:AlphabetAerobics.ogg, Image:JurassFinishFirst.ogg, Image:LeBien, LeMal.ogg, Image:Mathematics.ogg, Image:OodlesofOs.ogg, Image:PoliceState.ogg, Image:Still.ogg, Image:TradeMoney.ogg, Image:What?.ogg, Insane Clown Posse, Internal Affairs, J-Kwon, Jay-Z, Jazzmatazz, Vol. 1, Jill Scott, Johnny Cash, Jungle Brothers, Jurassic 5, Jurassic 5 EP, Just a Poet With a Soul, Lauryn Hill, Leaders of the New School, Let's Get Free, List of alternative hip hop musicians, MC Solaar, Macy Gray, Mary J. Blige, Massive Attack, Master P, Michael Jackson, Mos Def, Nas, Native Tongues, Nia, No More Mr. Nice Guy, On How Life Is, Organized Konfusion, People's Instinctive Travels and the Paths of Rhythm, Pharaoh Monch, Phrenology, Power in Numbers, Prince, Puff Daddy, Quality, Quality Control, Queen Latifah, R&B, Ralph Kramden, Reasonable Doubt, Reflection Eternal, Ron Carter, Roots, Roy Ayers, Senegalese, September 11, 2001 attacks, Snoop Doggy Dogg, Songs in A Minor, Southern rap, Stetsasonic, Superman, Talib Kweli, The Brand New Heavies, The Chronic, The Coup, The Low End Theory, The Low-End Theory, The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill, The Pharcyde, The Platform, The Roots, The Turtles, Themselves, Tina Turner, To Whom It May Concern, Underground, War on Terror, West Coast, What's the 411?, Whitney Houston, World Trade Center, anarchist, cLOUDDEAD, commercial counterparts, dance, date rape, dead prez, doo wop, electronica, feminist, funk, gangsta rap, hardcore, hip hop, hip hop culture, hip hop music, hip hop soul, hippie, horrorcore, indie, jazz, jazz rap, musical genre, neo soul, old school, post-rock, psychedelia, rap feuds, sampling, socialist, soul, soul music, style, upright bassist
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "The end of the 1990s", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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