+1, also unrivaled by all except MF DOOM in the sheer number of quotables. Feels like every song has at least one but so many have more than that (e.g. Get Out of the Car)
I just more recently got into him but I'm completely blown away. Andre 3000 is my favorite rapper of all time and i think like the perfect example of a guy who is like top 5 in every aspect of rap even if not number 1. Kendrick is like my second favorite rapper as lyrically from a story tell and message stand point he is unmatched. Though Aesop is easily making it into my top as he just so smart and quirky in the best way. Like his rhyming ability is just crazy, and like his flow is also very good. Also catalog wise aesop definitely make it into that position but even if your not a fan he just to talent and clearly skilled to be in this range. Honestly mount might be Andre 3000, Kendrick, Aesop rock, MF Doom. (Though might change as still alot of classic rap I need to get more familiar with.)
@robert.halpern Andre 3000 I also think can be in the quoteables or at least outkast as a whole as I feel like big boi and Andre made sure every song has one or a few kinda by there nature and style kinda fair to count them. Also with Andre 3000 he is not trying the same way Aesop or Doom kinda are to make these quoteables as there styles just means you get so many. I totally agree as there's like unmatched in this. Like Solo reprise is an example were basically every line is like a Quoteable or has that power lol.
Nas is my GOAT. But I'm not sure there's room for him on my Rushmore. When I think Rushmore, I think influence, who helped shape and inspire the most. Rakim is an absolute lock for raising the bar of lyricism and flow, the amount of all time greats standing on that giant's shoulder is beyond refute. NWA as well for pioneering the lyrical subject matter that would dominate rap for 40 years. I'd put Pac up there as a hearts and mind pick as he probably inspired more kids to pick up a mic than anyone else. Don't know who my final slot goes to, but I'm not sure it'd be Nas. Also worth saying I don't know enough about the history of production in hip hop, so I've only really considered the rappers themselves.
My top four is Nas, Andre 3K, Kendrick and Black Thought. But I don't think any of those make my Rushmore, because to me "a Rushmore" of anything should be based on a different criteria than simply greatness or personal taste. For me, Rushmore should be reserved for the most influential and gamechanging, the true architects and pioneers of their field. Rakim is an absolute lock. Isaac Newton once said on scientific progress "If I have seen further it is by standing on the shoulders of giants". Nas, Andre, Biggie, Jay-Z, Black Thought, Em, and countless others, if you've ever praised a rapper for their lyricism or flow, it's very likely because they're standing on Rakim's shoulders. NWA have a similarly strong shout. They pioneered the lyrical subject matter that would dominate rap for the better part of 40 years. Just like Rakim, they have a murderers row of all time greats standing on their shoulders. Third name that comes to mind instantly is 2Pac, your favourite rapper's favourite rapper. He didn't influence the music or soundscape nearly as much as Rakim or NWA, but he's more a pick for hearts and minds. Between his early focus on conscious hip hop, his social commentary, and massive mainstream media presence, Pac was able to penetrate the cultural zeitgeist more than any other rapper did before or has since and I'd wager nobody inspired more kids to pick up a mic than him because of it. Beyond that I'm a bit stumped for a fourth name. I know less of hip hop before Rakim, and know even less about the art of production so nobody else stands out as much as Rakim, NWA or Pac. If I were to throw out some names, I'd say Run-DMC for shifting the instrumental focus away from disco/funk and into literally any genre the artist wanted, GMF for creating entirely new DJ techniques, Slick Rick for elevating and popularising storytelling, Kanye for reminding the industry that production can be just as expressionate as lyrics, or Em for massively popularising rap within the white populace.
@@TocinosWhat are both of you guys even saying? Are you referring to Logic the rapper being on your Mount Rushmore? If so what is your follow up comment about? Are you talking about his album because you said “I” and “my” and what the hell is a “peter griffin metric”
I feel like some of these people are just listing their top four. No disrespect to Aesop Rock for example but how is he Mount Rushmore? Do we not all agree that the "Mount Rushmore" of something is a fun way of saying four of the most important/influential? It's a tough question though. Maybe Kool Moe Dee, Rakim, Nas, 2Pac?
Mount Rushmore is just a way of saying top four, always has been. If it's about influence alone, then you have to put Em up there, and ehhh I really don't wanna do that. Influence isn't always positive.
It's can be top 4 in terms if favorite or best but also like have top but kinda each bring there own thing to the table. For example with Aesop rock when it comes to wordplay, vocabulary, lyrical ability very few touch him.
Pretty basic Mount Rushmore for me but: Tupac Nas Biggie Eminem I feel like these are just the 4 most complete mcs we’ve ever had, discography, rhyming, flow, storytelling, everything
To me is Kendrick, Eminem, Nas and Andre 3K. Honorable Mentions: MF DOOM, Mos Def, Aesop Rock, Ghostface Killah, Biggie and 2Pac. And if we talk about Hip Hop artistry, then Kanye and Dr. Dre would be up there too.
@thialhoinj1971 edit: Tl,dr: I can accept Kendrick (he’d definitely make my top 10, maybe even top 5 depending on the day), but Em and Ye are too uneven. you could talk me into putting Kendrick in DMX’s place, but Kanye and Eminem have had too many flops in my opinion. Kanye has been kinda downhill post-808’s and Eminem has been 50/50 at best for the last 20 years. Yes, Kanye’s College trilogy and Eminem’s SSLP and MMLP are legendary, but they kinda lost their edge. Sure, Ye and Donda were good, but not “best of the best” good. Outkast stayed on a high note from beginning to end and Nas is still making bangers to this day.
@thialhoinj1971 I don’t think all of Kanye’s albums are classics. Yeezus was alright, Jesus is King was an interesting trial, and Watch the Throne wasn’t as good as it should’ve been. Eminem has an amazing three album run, but he’s never recaptured that magic for more than a song at a time in the last 20 years. If you’d put them on your list, I absolutely respect that and, depending on the day, I may even get behind it, but I personally think that there are better, more consistently good artists. If we were just talking highest highs, then they’d absolutely have a shot at the top 4.
@@JayKayEllEmm I was just pointing out that talking about Kanye's discography without MBDTF is senseless since it is the best piece of work in his discography
I will just say Nas, Jay-Z, Kendrick & Biggie... Tupac not being there because I had to pick Biggie over him and Rakim not being there because Jay just had the much better career and more creative output. Lil Wayne doesn't have the consistent ALBUM Discography to be on there, much like Eminem doesn't have that. I know some of you lot would now question my Nas pick, but honestly I just truly believe Nas is as unique as it gets for being a true Poet on the mic. He has way too much skill for him to be disrespected and he has arguably made the best Album of the Genre of all time. That's why that would be my personal Rushmore. But I can understand people might have different tastes...
In terms of founding fathers: Rakim KRS one Tupac Kanye. Rakim in terms of flow and lyrics. KRS in terms of pure rapping. Pac for passion. And Kanye for production. Rap wouldn’t be the same without these giants.
Aight, ima look way to deep into this here. Get ready. So, we’re prioritising two main things for this, quality and importance to the genre, their impact and influence. But that isnt the only thing I think needs taken into account, I think those who perfect a style that they didnt create should also get representation, such as Nas, who is my first pick. Definitely a lock for me. Imo he is the greatest rapper of all time, bringing Rakim’s revolutionary use of rhyme schemes and literary devices even further and changing the game forever, with arguably the best rap album ever made, he is one of the greatest in my eyes for this. I could go on more about nas, but itd go on for a while and I think my second pick would be the one who I just mentioned, Rakim. He was the first to really push how rhyme schemes, flows, etc to a fully impressive level, he has classic albums and revolutionised the genre as a whole. You could switch him for other names like Big Daddy Kane or KRS-One or even Kurtis Blow, but I think Rakim done it best and most skilfully. I would include the other names i mentioned for doing very similar things, but I want to bring in some representation for other eras rather than exclusively the founders, which is why my next pick would be Kanye. While not the greatest rapper, he is a phenomenal producer who has blended, changed and created some of the most interesting sounds in hiphop to fit his humourous style while tackling some deep and introspective concepts. I also think he has one of the greatest discographies in rap, and his influence is undeniable. Of course his production alone isnt what gets him here, he wouldnt even be my go to for a producer exclusive rushmore, Id have J Dilla, Madlib, and Dre above him, theres an argument to be had for the fourth spot there tho, anyways im getting sidetracked waffling on here. Lastly, with most of the greatest influences being covered, I think it comes down to quality mostly for the last pick, while still holding a great influence and importance. You could go for Kendrick as a more modern answer, maybe JayZ, Biggie, Lil Wayne, DOOM, maybe even Eminem, but ultimately I choose Andre 3000, him and big boi put Atlanta on the map while rap was dominated entirely by NY and LA, and he has one of the greatest hiphop discographies with outkast, amazing lyricism, versatility, unique flows, and paved the way for Atlanta to flourish in the coming decades. His influence extents out of ATL tho, with his way of forming flows being replicated by many. So, in conclusion: Nas, Rakim, Kanye West, Andre 3000 I would definitely not be opposed to names like Big Daddy Kane, Tupac, DOOM, Kendrick, JayZ, KRS-One, Lil Wayne, Biggie or Ice Cube making an appearance either
@@fin183 if you want, he just isnt as important as the ones I named. The most he done was bring rap to a white and suburban audience, which was revolutionary dont get me wrong, but I feel like impacting the actually internal genre is whats more important for this conversation, to which he hasnt done an extraordinary amount
in my mount rushmore of all time would be 'Pac, Cube, Rakim and DMX in my mount rushmore of lyricists would be Crooked I, Eminem, Black Thought and Royce da 59
Jay-z, Andre 3k, tupac, Kanye (the most popular and influential artists i can think of from different regions so like east coast, south, west coast, midwest)
If I'm trying to be objective: Kanye, Pac, Kendrick, Jay. Transcended the genre, big cultural impact, commercial appeal but still plenty of cred for the music nerds.
Aesop Rock MF DOOM Black Thought André 3000 & Watsky is a great rapper and has amazing wordplay but he’s not really that much of a pioneer of anything, just incredibly skilled at his craft.
The aesop rock love is amazing. When it comes to lyrically complexity nobody beats Aesop. Now he truly be Aesop rock.
+1, also unrivaled by all except MF DOOM in the sheer number of quotables. Feels like every song has at least one but so many have more than that (e.g. Get Out of the Car)
I just finished listening to this guy. I had to listen to all his records at least 3 times. It's just bar after bar.
I just more recently got into him but I'm completely blown away. Andre 3000 is my favorite rapper of all time and i think like the perfect example of a guy who is like top 5 in every aspect of rap even if not number 1. Kendrick is like my second favorite rapper as lyrically from a story tell and message stand point he is unmatched. Though Aesop is easily making it into my top as he just so smart and quirky in the best way. Like his rhyming ability is just crazy, and like his flow is also very good. Also catalog wise aesop definitely make it into that position but even if your not a fan he just to talent and clearly skilled to be in this range. Honestly mount might be Andre 3000, Kendrick, Aesop rock, MF Doom. (Though might change as still alot of classic rap I need to get more familiar with.)
@robert.halpern Andre 3000 I also think can be in the quoteables or at least outkast as a whole as I feel like big boi and Andre made sure every song has one or a few kinda by there nature and style kinda fair to count them. Also with Andre 3000 he is not trying the same way Aesop or Doom kinda are to make these quoteables as there styles just means you get so many. I totally agree as there's like unmatched in this. Like Solo reprise is an example were basically every line is like a Quoteable or has that power lol.
@Quinnsula5 Damn are you Suavis ? Also GKMC or TPAB ? And why
“I’ve been ignored for longer than you’ve been interested.” - Aesop Rock
Glad he’s getting love
Rakim & Nas absolutely have to be there in my opinion. There are quite a few solid options for the other two slots.
Kanye et Kendrick imo
Biggie and Em
Nas is my GOAT. But I'm not sure there's room for him on my Rushmore. When I think Rushmore, I think influence, who helped shape and inspire the most. Rakim is an absolute lock for raising the bar of lyricism and flow, the amount of all time greats standing on that giant's shoulder is beyond refute. NWA as well for pioneering the lyrical subject matter that would dominate rap for 40 years. I'd put Pac up there as a hearts and mind pick as he probably inspired more kids to pick up a mic than anyone else. Don't know who my final slot goes to, but I'm not sure it'd be Nas.
Also worth saying I don't know enough about the history of production in hip hop, so I've only really considered the rappers themselves.
The lady from Blondie and Thom Yorke on "A Wolf At The Door" for the other two slots
@@MNightTomalan what is bro yapping about
My top four is Nas, Andre 3K, Kendrick and Black Thought. But I don't think any of those make my Rushmore, because to me "a Rushmore" of anything should be based on a different criteria than simply greatness or personal taste. For me, Rushmore should be reserved for the most influential and gamechanging, the true architects and pioneers of their field.
Rakim is an absolute lock. Isaac Newton once said on scientific progress "If I have seen further it is by standing on the shoulders of giants". Nas, Andre, Biggie, Jay-Z, Black Thought, Em, and countless others, if you've ever praised a rapper for their lyricism or flow, it's very likely because they're standing on Rakim's shoulders.
NWA have a similarly strong shout. They pioneered the lyrical subject matter that would dominate rap for the better part of 40 years. Just like Rakim, they have a murderers row of all time greats standing on their shoulders.
Third name that comes to mind instantly is 2Pac, your favourite rapper's favourite rapper. He didn't influence the music or soundscape nearly as much as Rakim or NWA, but he's more a pick for hearts and minds. Between his early focus on conscious hip hop, his social commentary, and massive mainstream media presence, Pac was able to penetrate the cultural zeitgeist more than any other rapper did before or has since and I'd wager nobody inspired more kids to pick up a mic than him because of it.
Beyond that I'm a bit stumped for a fourth name. I know less of hip hop before Rakim, and know even less about the art of production so nobody else stands out as much as Rakim, NWA or Pac. If I were to throw out some names, I'd say Run-DMC for shifting the instrumental focus away from disco/funk and into literally any genre the artist wanted, GMF for creating entirely new DJ techniques, Slick Rick for elevating and popularising storytelling, Kanye for reminding the industry that production can be just as expressionate as lyrics, or Em for massively popularising rap within the white populace.
Rap is like a mountain. Logic is right in the middle. 🏔️
Idk man I'd say he's 3/4 of the way to the top if we're using the Peter Griffin metric.
@@middaymeds I didn't talk about my race on the whole first album but black versus white bullshit was still the outcome
@@TocinosWhat are both of you guys even saying? Are you referring to Logic the rapper being on your Mount Rushmore? If so what is your follow up comment about? Are you talking about his album because you said “I” and “my” and what the hell is a “peter griffin metric”
@@abyssyt2256Your confusion caused me immense laughter 😂
@@roxlife8173 3 weeks later and I’m still just as confused lol💀
Eminem, Tupac, Biggie, Kendrick
i like em but nas is better. even em would agree w that
@@baggedbread but op doesn't. This is his preference
MF DOOM
Nas
André 3000
Jay Z
In terms of rapping ability, discography, artistry etc
Amazing picks, but kendrick needs to be up there
I'd replace jay z with kenny tbh
@@unreloaded4264replace Andre, he doesn't have a solo catalog and isn't really much without OutKast
@@KingGrippy yeah jay z is top three so you cant replace him
@@jcoletypebeats-j1r He also did a lot more for hip hop than Andre. Removing Jay z is like eating fries without sauce. It just doesn't make sense.
Kendrick Lamar, MF DOOM, A Tribe Called Quest, and Nas.
Best fucking take ever keep living bro
1. Aquafina 🥵🥵🥵
2. Skittles 🌈🍬
3. Kay XY ➡️↘️
4. ALAP Zuma ⏰
5. Anita max wynn 🔥🥶
I feel like some of these people are just listing their top four. No disrespect to Aesop Rock for example but how is he Mount Rushmore? Do we not all agree that the "Mount Rushmore" of something is a fun way of saying four of the most important/influential?
It's a tough question though. Maybe Kool Moe Dee, Rakim, Nas, 2Pac?
HE'S NOT ONE OF THOSE MUMBLE CRAPPERS LIKE mf doom
Mount Rushmore is just a way of saying top four, always has been. If it's about influence alone, then you have to put Em up there, and ehhh I really don't wanna do that. Influence isn't always positive.
@@Tocinosyou don't have ears
It's can be top 4 in terms if favorite or best but also like have top but kinda each bring there own thing to the table. For example with Aesop rock when it comes to wordplay, vocabulary, lyrical ability very few touch him.
Aesop is the best abstract rapper
Q-Tip, Phife Dawg, Ali Shaheed Muhammad, Jarobi White
W tribe listener
KRs 1, big daddy Kane, mf Grimm, and immortal technique I suppose. Undeniable talent
0:49 I knew it
Everybody is sleeping on Wyatt James New Level
Check out Flawless Imperfections
FINALLY SOMEONE SAYS GURU
TWICE
For me Rakim, Nas, Biggie and in the future maybe kendrick could enter that conversation, but rn I would say one of the Wu Tang members
Pretty basic Mount Rushmore for me but:
Tupac
Nas
Biggie
Eminem
I feel like these are just the 4 most complete mcs we’ve ever had, discography, rhyming, flow, storytelling, everything
To me is Kendrick, Eminem, Nas and Andre 3K.
Honorable Mentions: MF DOOM, Mos Def, Aesop Rock, Ghostface Killah, Biggie and 2Pac.
And if we talk about Hip Hop artistry, then Kanye and Dr. Dre would be up there too.
Nas, Kanye, DOOM, and Biggie. Andre and Jay too maybe
Nas needs more credit the illimatic is the best rap album of all time only rivaled by to pimp a butterfly
Here’s mine:
Black Thought
Jay Z
Nas
Kendrick
Based
Gay z lol
@@2007NissanAltimashut up new gen
Gay Z is trash 🗑 Listen to Ether it will make your soul burn slow
MF DOOM, Kendrick, Jay-Z and idk who else
nas
Jay Z the greatest bitter of all time
JJ DOOM, DANGERDOOM, MADVILLAIN, MF DOOM
Nas, Kendrick, Andre, Black Thought
Kanye, Biggie, Dr. DRE, Kendrick
Andre 3k, Tupac, Nas, Ice Cube, MF doom, Lil Wayne could all prolly get up there too
Nas, DMX, and Outkast, if we’re talking personal favorites. If we’re talking social influence, then it’s Nas, Jay-Z, Tupac, and Biggie.
@thialhoinj1971 edit: Tl,dr: I can accept Kendrick (he’d definitely make my top 10, maybe even top 5 depending on the day), but Em and Ye are too uneven.
you could talk me into putting Kendrick in DMX’s place, but Kanye and Eminem have had too many flops in my opinion. Kanye has been kinda downhill post-808’s and Eminem has been 50/50 at best for the last 20 years. Yes, Kanye’s College trilogy and Eminem’s SSLP and MMLP are legendary, but they kinda lost their edge. Sure, Ye and Donda were good, but not “best of the best” good.
Outkast stayed on a high note from beginning to end and Nas is still making bangers to this day.
@thialhoinj1971 I don’t think all of Kanye’s albums are classics. Yeezus was alright, Jesus is King was an interesting trial, and Watch the Throne wasn’t as good as it should’ve been. Eminem has an amazing three album run, but he’s never recaptured that magic for more than a song at a time in the last 20 years.
If you’d put them on your list, I absolutely respect that and, depending on the day, I may even get behind it, but I personally think that there are better, more consistently good artists. If we were just talking highest highs, then they’d absolutely have a shot at the top 4.
My guy completely disregarded MBDTF. But yeah, Kanye ain't up there. I think Biggie, Nas and Rakim are 100% up there
@@nrenjenightmare5708 MBDTF is good, but again, not best of the best.
@@JayKayEllEmm I was just pointing out that talking about Kanye's discography without MBDTF is senseless since it is the best piece of work in his discography
Poor Em 😶
Nas, Big, Pac, Scarface
KRS-One
MF DOOM
Kendrick
Ye
Shows an evolution but also is rated by influence and relevance. These rappers can’t die.
I will just say Nas, Jay-Z, Kendrick & Biggie...
Tupac not being there because I had to pick Biggie over him and Rakim not being there because Jay just had the much better career and more creative output. Lil Wayne doesn't have the consistent ALBUM Discography to be on there, much like Eminem doesn't have that. I know some of you lot would now question my Nas pick, but honestly I just truly believe Nas is as unique as it gets for being a true Poet on the mic. He has way too much skill for him to be disrespected and he has arguably made the best Album of the Genre of all time. That's why that would be my personal Rushmore. But I can understand people might have different tastes...
I recognize Slick Rick and Black Thought in the last photo, but who are the other two?
Ghostface Killa on far left, Aesop Rock on far right.
Not sure for the first one but last one is Aesop rock.
@@TocinosThank you!
•Pac
•Nas
•Jay Z
•Wayne
These are the overall mount rushmore heads counting all the categories of Rap.
In terms of founding fathers:
Rakim
KRS one
Tupac
Kanye.
Rakim in terms of flow and lyrics. KRS in terms of pure rapping. Pac for passion. And Kanye for production.
Rap wouldn’t be the same without these giants.
Favorite MT.Rushmore:
Eminem
MFDOOM
Andre 3000
Aesop Rock
For an objective one:
Jay-Z
2Pac
Biggie
Nas
No, the “objective one” is biased towards 90s rap, nothing from the 80s 2000s or 2010s
@@aquitetiredguy2158 Rakim and Kane are People I have in place a second mt Rushmore
Aight, ima look way to deep into this here. Get ready.
So, we’re prioritising two main things for this, quality and importance to the genre, their impact and influence. But that isnt the only thing I think needs taken into account, I think those who perfect a style that they didnt create should also get representation, such as Nas, who is my first pick. Definitely a lock for me. Imo he is the greatest rapper of all time, bringing Rakim’s revolutionary use of rhyme schemes and literary devices even further and changing the game forever, with arguably the best rap album ever made, he is one of the greatest in my eyes for this. I could go on more about nas, but itd go on for a while and I think my second pick would be the one who I just mentioned, Rakim. He was the first to really push how rhyme schemes, flows, etc to a fully impressive level, he has classic albums and revolutionised the genre as a whole. You could switch him for other names like Big Daddy Kane or KRS-One or even Kurtis Blow, but I think Rakim done it best and most skilfully. I would include the other names i mentioned for doing very similar things, but I want to bring in some representation for other eras rather than exclusively the founders, which is why my next pick would be Kanye. While not the greatest rapper, he is a phenomenal producer who has blended, changed and created some of the most interesting sounds in hiphop to fit his humourous style while tackling some deep and introspective concepts. I also think he has one of the greatest discographies in rap, and his influence is undeniable. Of course his production alone isnt what gets him here, he wouldnt even be my go to for a producer exclusive rushmore, Id have J Dilla, Madlib, and Dre above him, theres an argument to be had for the fourth spot there tho, anyways im getting sidetracked waffling on here. Lastly, with most of the greatest influences being covered, I think it comes down to quality mostly for the last pick, while still holding a great influence and importance. You could go for Kendrick as a more modern answer, maybe JayZ, Biggie, Lil Wayne, DOOM, maybe even Eminem, but ultimately I choose Andre 3000, him and big boi put Atlanta on the map while rap was dominated entirely by NY and LA, and he has one of the greatest hiphop discographies with outkast, amazing lyricism, versatility, unique flows, and paved the way for Atlanta to flourish in the coming decades. His influence extents out of ATL tho, with his way of forming flows being replicated by many. So, in conclusion:
Nas, Rakim, Kanye West, Andre 3000
I would definitely not be opposed to names like Big Daddy Kane, Tupac, DOOM, Kendrick, JayZ, KRS-One, Lil Wayne, Biggie or Ice Cube making an appearance either
Bro forgot eminem
@@fin183 if you want, he just isnt as important as the ones I named. The most he done was bring rap to a white and suburban audience, which was revolutionary dont get me wrong, but I feel like impacting the actually internal genre is whats more important for this conversation, to which he hasnt done an extraordinary amount
@@jaycyclondo but he is the best lyricist oat in my opinion so I think he deserves to be there solely based on his pen game
@@fin183 thats kinda subjective tho, id disagree. Nas, DOOM, Black Thought and maybe even Kendrick would be ahead of Em on pure, raw lyricism for me.
👏👏👏
Rakim, Chuck D, Andre and Nas
Kendrick, André, Tyler, El-P
Honourable mentions: Pusha, Big Boi, Mike
80s: Rakim
90s: Nas
2000s: Eminem
2010s: Lupe Fiasco
What about 2020's?
@@HeavenlyMashupsice spice
You do gotta do Guru twice
in my mount rushmore of all time would be 'Pac, Cube, Rakim and DMX
in my mount rushmore of lyricists would be Crooked I, Eminem, Black Thought and Royce da 59
in no order: Kendrick Lamar, MF Doom, Biggie Smalls, Tupac
Ja Rule, Chingy, Master P, Dr. Evil
Eminem, Tupac, Biggie, Jay Z
Jay-z, Andre 3k, tupac, Kanye
(the most popular and influential artists i can think of from different regions so like east coast, south, west coast, midwest)
Yooo shoutout Aesop!!
My all time:
1. Nasir Jones
2. Biggie
3. Aesop Rock
4. Big L
This year:
1. Nasir Jones
2. Aesop Rock
3. J. Cole
4. Kenny Lamarison
Lil Dicky, Demondice, 6ix9ine and Tom Macdonald
Eminem, Tupac, Biggie, Wayne
Nas, jay z, Kendrick, kanye (i added kanye bc of what hes done for hip hop)
Nas, Kendrick, Black Thought, JID
MF DOOM
Black Thought
Nas
Andre 3000
Kendrick needs to be on there idc who else
MF DOOM, black thought, Kdot, Aesop rock
Mine is Nas, Lil Wayne, Eminem, and Kendrick
Mori calliope with 4 different expressions
Nas, Kendrick, Andre 3000, MF DOOM
On (my) Mount Rushmore...
1. Nas
2. KA
3. MF DOOM
4. billy woods
5. Ghostface Killah
Ghost love ❤
Nf is fire
JID, Kendrick Lamar, Travis Scott, j.cole
Tyler, MF DOOM, kendrick, kanye,and jid i'd say rn
K.Dot, M.F DOOM, Ye, Travis
Eminem, outkast, 2pac, and wutang
i got DOOM, westside gunn, kendrick, and 3 stacks
Eminem, Kendrick Lamar, mf doom, and snoop dogg
Kendrick, Peggy, MF DOOM, Nas
My Mount Rushmore
Nas
Em
Wayne
Kendrick
French montana
French montana
French montana
French montana
Chance The Rapper
Logic
Nav
Ronnie Radke
Kanye west, 2pac, Kendrick Lamar, and Tyler the creator
Ye, Kendrick, Jay-Z, Eminem
Debbie Harry's name doesn't even get a mention dude 💀
Aesop rock sneak 😭
Fym, Aesop is goated
The disrespect for Debbie Harry hurts my soul
Nas, Big, Pac, Jay-Z. Any other artists makes no sense, when you think of rappers those are the undisputed legends.
Vanilla Ice, Eminem, Riff Raff, Jack Harlow
No marky mark?
I feel like Jay Z and Kendrick need to be on there, and I would either put Biggie and Pac or Nas and MF DOOM
I would go Andre 3000, Kendrick, Lauryn Hill, Nas
Not enough output from Lauryn to be there, but I understand the impulse to put her there based on quality alone.
@@middaymeds not a ton of output sure but she’s far and away one of my favorites ever and her impact is insane, so I gotta put her up there.
Kendrick Lamar
Kanye West (pre-vultures)
MF DOOM
JID
kendrick, MF DOOM, biggie, and beastie boys
Nas, Kendrick, 2pac, biggie, jay-z
Eminem, Biggie, 2pac, and Jay-Z
Nf
Forrest frank
Kanye (vultures 2)
P. Diddy
😊😊😊
0:43 bro needs to get off the fentanyl😬
Half this comment section needs to reevaluate their entire lifes decisions...
🐐s: Nas, Andre 3k, Jay-Z, Kendrick
Rushmore: Rakim, Nas, 2pac, Kanye
(could maybe switch 2pac out for Jay-Z or Eminem)
MF DOOM
WU TANG (EVERYONE)
NAS
Kendrick Lamar
Mount rapmore.
kanye, kendrick, nas, DOOM
ight
1. kendrick
2. aesop rock
3. MF DOOM
4. andre 3k
If I'm trying to be objective: Kanye, Pac, Kendrick, Jay. Transcended the genre, big cultural impact, commercial appeal but still plenty of cred for the music nerds.
Easy mac, mac miller, larry lovestein
My rap Mount Rushomore is
Eminem,
MF DOOM,
Busta Rhymes,
Kendrick Lamar.
Aesop Rock
MF DOOM
Black Thought
André 3000
& Watsky is a great rapper and has amazing wordplay but he’s not really that much of a pioneer of anything, just incredibly skilled at his craft.
Nas
Kendrick Lamar
Kanye West
André 3000
Kanye, Kendrick, Dilla, Rakim
Kanye, Kendrick, Drake and J Cole are the right answer.
Four Kendrick voices
My mt Rushmore is Nas Ghost Tupac and Biggie yea ik it sounds generic but at least give me flowers for putting ghost in here
Heat me out:
Wayne
Tyler
Kendrick
Rocky
rakim, biggie, nas, kendrick
or instead of rakim, black thought
My list is,
MF DOOM
Viktor Vaughn
DANGERDOOM
King Geedorah
(Zev love X somewhere on there every Friday)