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Here's the Classic Review of The Score by The Fugees for the month February! Submitted by Adam Hicken and voted on by you the patrons. 

Files

The Fugees - The Score | Classic Album Review MAR

This is "The Fugees - The Score | Classic Album Review MAR" by Dead End Hip Hop on Vimeo, the home for high quality videos and the people who love them.

Comments

Anonymous

Nah man, The disrespect to Wyclef on this one was strong, he had a far better pen game than Pras and was actually very good on this album. Feel like Lauryn was the only one spoken about when talking about what makes this album so great.

deadendhiphop

I gave Wyclef big props for his production on this album. His pen was ok but Hill was clearly the superior MC on this album. - Beezy430

Anonymous

No love for Zealots? I thought that sample flip was 🔥

Anonymous (edited)

Comment edits

2023-04-13 02:50:12 Loved both videos! Feels really good to get 2 videos based on my picks on the same day. So to clarify my 5-10 years comment, what I was mainly referring to was the amount of Hip-Hop and R&amp;B crossovers that we started getting in the 2000s. Obviously Fugees didn't invent this, but they were one of the first groups that got big where this sound was at their core. The Black Eyes Peas are the most obvious influence, but they definitely weren't alone. Plus there was the rise of Neo-Soul happening in the Midwest and East Coast with acts like The Roots, D'Angelo, and Erykah Badhu, that may not have been directly influenced by Fugees but definitely got a bump in popularity thanks to The Score being as big as it was.
2023-04-11 23:33:11 Loved both videos! Feels really good to get 2 videos based on my picks on the same day. So to clarify my 5-10 years comment, what I was mainly referring to was the amount of Hip-Hop and R&B crossovers that we started getting in the 2000s. Obviously Fugees didn't invent this, but they were one of the first groups that got big where this sound was at their core. The Black Eyes Peas are the most obvious influence, but they definitely weren't alone. Plus there was the rise of Neo-Soul happening in the Midwest and East Coast with acts like The Roots, D'Angelo, and Erykah Badhu, that may not have been directly influenced by Fugees but definitely got a bump in popularity thanks to The Score being as big as it was.

Loved both videos! Feels really good to get 2 videos based on my picks on the same day. So to clarify my 5-10 years comment, what I was mainly referring to was the amount of Hip-Hop and R&B crossovers that we started getting in the 2000s. Obviously Fugees didn't invent this, but they were one of the first groups that got big where this sound was at their core. The Black Eyes Peas are the most obvious influence, but they definitely weren't alone. Plus there was the rise of Neo-Soul happening in the Midwest and East Coast with acts like The Roots, D'Angelo, and Erykah Badhu, that may not have been directly influenced by Fugees but definitely got a bump in popularity thanks to The Score being as big as it was.

Anonymous

Also, there’s a great video about Getto Superstar from a YouTuber named Todd in the Shadows, who talks about the careers of One Hit Wonders. It’s hilarious and actually one of the things that got me into Fugees to begin with.