A Hip-Hop Landmark: How “The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill” Created the Next Generation of Rap

 
 

by Sydney Fluker

It is an extremely cold take to say that The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill is one of the greatest hip-hop records of all time. From shattering previous records and making history with its release to the hold it has on hip-hop today, the release of Miseducation is a prominent black line on hip-hop’s historical timeline. 

Released on August 25, 1998 by Ruffhouse Records and Columbia Records, Miseducation was an instant hit. With Lauryn Hill already having fame from her previous group Fugees, Miseducation was the breakout solo album her fans were waiting for. The record was an instant hit, selling almost 425,000 copies in its first week and reaching No. 1 on the Billboard 200 chart. 

“[I wanted to] write songs that lyrically move me and have the integrity of reggae and the knock of hip-hop and the instrumentation of classic soul," she said in an interview with Rolling Stone in 1999. "[My engineer and I worked on] a sound that's raw. I like the rawness of you being able to hear the scratch in the vocals. I don't ever want that taken away."

The rawness has been received well. Since its release, Miseducation has sold 20 million copies worldwide according to Sony Music, making it one of the best-selling albums of all time. In 2021, it became a certified diamond record by the Recording Industry Association of America, earning Ms. Hill the Guinness World Record for being the first female rapper to reach diamond status. 

Miseducation is a glorious combination of neo soul, R&B, hip-hop and reggae. While the story of its creation plays out like a movie (check out this Rolling Stone interview for the full story), it's clear that this record is a Ms. Hill original through and through. Creating her own team after being effectively blacklisted by Fugees partner Wyclef Jean, Ms. Hill blazed her own path in her early twenties, using unknown producers and being pregnant while creating an industry-changing record. 

Her relationship with Rohan Marley, the father to her five children, led her to move to Jamaica for a part of the album’s production to find peace of mind. “Forgive Them Father” and “Lost Ones” were made at the Bob Marley Museum on 56 Hope Road, which Ms. Hill references on “Lost Ones.” Both feature singing in patois, the common dialect in Jamaica. 

One of the largest influences apparent in Miseducation is the influence of Christianity in her own life. Much of the song “Tell Him” is based on 1 Corinthians 13, while “To Zion” discusses her decision to carry her unborn son based on prayer. Perhaps the most obvious is “Forgive Them Father,” where she invokes Luke 23:34 and confirms her biblical references are intentional.

“Gospel music is music inspired by the gospels,” Hill said in the book “Lauryn Hill: She’s Got That Thing.” “In a huge respect, a lot of this music turned out to be just that. During this album, I turned to the Bible and wrote songs that I drew comfort from.” 

Even in “non-religious” tracks, the influence is felt. D’Angelo, whose feature on “Nothing Even Matters” was laid down in the course of an hour, noted the importance of that song in an interview with Rolling Stone magazine. 

“Churches were substituting God in the lyrics [for “Nothing Even Matters”],” D’Angelo said. “Whenever they make a gospel version from a secular song, that’s significant.”

Ms. Hill and Miseducation made history at the 41st GRAMMY Awards, being nominated for 10 GRAMMYs heading into the ceremony and walking out with four. “Doo Wop (That Thing)” won Best Female R&B Vocal Performance and Best R&B Song, and Miseducation took home Album of The Year and Best R&B Album. She herself won Best New Artist, making her the first female artist to ever win five or more awards at the GRAMMYs in one night. Miseducation was the first hip-hop album to win Album of The Year, making the world respect the art of hip-hop a little bit more. 

Ms. Hill has done more than inspire the next generation of music — she’s helped create it. The vulnerability presented on Miseducation opened the door for more emotional records. An unknown John Legend started his career by playing piano on “Everything is Everything” before eventually signing to Kanye West’s GOOD Music, another Ms. Hill inspiree. 

“Lauryn is innovative,” Janelle Monáe told British magazine NME. “She was hip-hop and R&B, but nobody had used [the combination] in the way she did. She created something that we had never tasted before. There was already a Lauryn Hill, there was already an Erykah Badu – but there was not a Janelle Monáe. They inspired me to create my own lane.”

Miseducation is a sample haven for all sorts of genres, but has mainly been used across hip-hop. Kanye West has been open about how Ms. Hill inspired him in his music, using her samples on multiple albums throughout his career and shouting her out in his 2007 song “Champion.” Drake’s chopped-up use of “Ex-Factor” for the chorus on “Nice For What” is one of the most notable samples, but his 2014 “Draft Day” sampled “Doo-Wop (That Thing)” is an equally impressive manner. From PnB Rock to Cardi B, “Ex-Factor” has been sampled over and over since its initial 1998 release. 

Fabolous’s “Summertime Shootout” featuring Jazzy samples “Lost Ones” and shouts out Ms. Hill’s time in Fugees with “Heard she in between dudes, just like Lauryn.” J. Cole’s “Can I Holla At Ya” uses Santana’s rift from “To Zion” to talk to his father figures, remixing a Ms. Hill original with an equally emotional track. Ms. Hill has even been shouted out by rappers from other countries, as up-and-coming Portuguese rapper Pete Mcee compares the power of his girl’s lips to the music of Lauryn Hill. 

“You use music as your vehicle to reach people you feel need to hear your message,” Monáe said. “That album gave me the fuel I needed to bring out the things that made me unique.”


Sydney Fluker is a staff writer.


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Doja Cat Gets Weird With Rico Nasty for Her New Single "Tia Tamera"

Doja Cat and Rico.jpg

Doja Cat is an eclectic figure. Her stake in the musical landscape is as diverse as it is fascinating. Her discography ranges anywhere from the slow spacey R&B vibe of her breakout hit “No Police” from 2014 to the totally absurd and unbelievably fun track “Mooo!” that dropped in the summer of last year that had everyone proud to say that they were a cow. Doja Cat is an artist who does not take herself too seriously. This adherence to her individualism and her persistent “Fuck you” attitude to the concept of being in any sort of box has reaffirmed itself yet again with her newest single “Tia Tamera” with a feature from one of rap’s baddest bitches: Rico Nasty.

Tia Tamera (feat. Rico Nasty), a song by Doja Cat, Rico Nasty on Spotify

A reference to the famed twins Tia and Tamera Mowry who starred in the 90s sitcom Sister, Sister, this Doja Cat and Rico Nasty collaboration has as much quirk and silliness as the song’s namesake. The duo rap over an obnoxious beat with a two note droning base melody that changes only in its pitch. This melody is the thread that guides the song instrumentally. It never changes, but is instead dropped out with the rest of the beat during specific alterations in both Doja Cat’s and Rico Nasty’s flows during their respective verses.

The structure of the track lyrically is heavily dependent on a build up-punchline style of delivery. Most of the lines set up a concept that is then given relief at the end of the lyric, such as “Cheese like pizzeria, have a seat bitch, please, Ikea/From the Westside like Maria, I'm hot like grits, Madea” in Doja's verse to “Ride-ridin' in a foreign, no Prius/He keep callin' my phone, Nokia” in Rico’s.

The flow from both Doja Cat and Rico Nasty follows a consistent vocal pattern, with both of their verses beginning with the motif of getting some sort of compliment and replying with “Thank you very much.” From there, each of them takes the verse in their own direction, with Doja Cat flexing her sex appeal and Rico Nasty bragging about her money and her readiness to step to anyone who tries her. Both women use their verses to talk about themselves in the most exaggerated way possible, the lyrics obviously corny and the delivery undeniably bratty.

But that is why I love this track. “Tia Tamera” is weird, silly, and utterly over the top. At first, I was not sold on the song. Something about Doja Cat’s repetitive flow, the cartoony video game esque beat, and the admittedly awkward lines that don’t always land did not attract me upon first listen. This is the type of track you have to let grow on you and in doing so allowing the song to be just what it is trying to be: pure fun. The track is not meant to be groundbreaking, it’s meant to get your energy up. It’s meant to make you feel both sexy and capable of getting into a fist fight. It’s meant to make you spend three minutes and thirty three seconds of your time to enjoy something simply because it is enjoyable. And that is what makes it so great.

“Tia Tamera” sees Doja Cat continuing to explore what she wants to do with music, which at this point seems to be anything she wants. She continues to interest and engage her audience while attracting new listeners to what she has to offer musically and aesthetically. With the cosign of Rico Nasty, one of the prominent newcomers in the rap game today, there is no way to know what is in store for Doja Cat’s future or what she will do next. If she continues to put out tracks on her own accord, full of authenticity and personality to match, then there is a good chance you’ll be seeing her name again soon.


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