The traditional idea of the major label rap album seems on the decline — though that didn’t stop Nicki Minaj, Future and YG from making great ones — as fans of hip-hop, a genre in its 41st year, are more and more driven by the Internet, bringing worldwide attention to local talent from Washington, D.C. (Shy Glizzy) to Santiago, Chile (Ana Tijox) to Atlanta (too many to name). Though this often means SoundCloud singles (the lo-fi hits of I Love Makonnen, Dej Loaf, Bobby Shmurda and OT Genesis are giving modern rap radio its most independent feel since the Eighties), there’s no shortage of great mixtapes, free drops and, in the case of Run the Jewels, high-quality 320kbps self-drops of an album headed to record stores. Here are 40 of the best.
40
Shy Glizzy, ‘Young Jefe’
Shy Glizzy has climbed to the top ranks of a conspicuously competitive D.C. scene, thanks in part to the national success of his hit record “Awwsome.” His delivery shows a slight debt to Lil Wayne, yet where a rapper like Young Thug pushes his experimentalism further, Glizzy introduces restraint, tightening his voice into a consistent, piercing tone. His formulation of street rap is straightforward, even workmanlike, but at its most emotive — as on Percy Keith feature “Ungrateful” — it goes for the gut. D.D.
39
E-40, ‘Sharp On All 4 Corners: Corner 1’ and ‘Sharp On All 4 Corners: Corner 2’
The 21st and 22nd albums from E-40 continue the pattern he’s adopted since leaving Warner Bros. in 2009: Flood the streets with product. It is great and it is overlong, and its 28 songs shouldn’t be consumed in one setting. Generous to a fault, he makes room for both Dej Loaf, who delivers a killer verse on “Baddest in the Building,” and T-Pain, who croons out an Auto-Tune chorus for “Red Cup.” 40 raps effectively on “Programmin'” about coming up in Vallejo’s streets (“cutting the grass, no time to play with toys”); but just as often he’ll crank up the slaps and bug out on “Straight Mobbin'” and “Bass Rocks.” There are the stabbing funk keyboards of “707,” and an odd but heartfelt interpolation of Chic’s disco chestnut “I Want Your Love” for “Give Me Love.” He’s an O.G., the “Same Since 88,” but “Choices (Yup)” proves he can be just as innovative as any New Bay upstart. In short, Sharp on All Corners is E-40 with no filters, and it shouldn’t be any other way. M.R.
38
Open Mike Eagle, ‘Dark Comedy’
Open Mike Eagle is a smart-alecky associate of the indie label/crew Hellfyre Club, and an inheritor of a West Coast tradition for jabberwocky-styled experimental rap. On his fourth album, he refines his talent for witty punch lines into satire and existential crisis. “I’m bad at sarcasm, so I work at absurdity,” he admits over the mopey indie-pop of “Dark Comedy Morning Show.” Puncturing and massaging his ego over glitches from vets like Jeremiah Jae, Kenny Segal and Dibia$e, Mike models himself as an outsider too smart and conflicted for rap and its tradition of clichés — which is probably why he’s been running in alternative comedy circles and getting Hannibal Buress to spit on his record. M.R.
37
PRhyme, ‘PRhyme’
Together, Royce Da 5’9″ and DJ Premier are responsible for some great lyrical rap music: From 2002’s “Boom” to 2004’s “Hip-Hop” to 2008’s “Shake This,” the duo often bring out the best in each other. But they’ve never done a full project together until now, and while PRhyme is not apt to do as much damage as it would have a decade earlier, it’s nonetheless one of 2014’s most electrifying rap full-lengths. At only nine tracks, it moves in, hits hard, and leaves you wanting more. Premo’s beats are Nineties hip-hop head comfort food, but Royce approaches his writing and rapping with the hunger of a 20-year-old aiming for his first blog post. Although its target demo is now on the other side of 30, the saturated ranks of younger stars makes an album like this stand out, one where a Jay Electronica verse moves with more force than the slate of 2014 rookies getting quadruple the attention. D.D.
36
Dej Loaf, ‘Sell Sole’
“Try Me,” the hypnotically deadpan single by this unknown Detroit native was as unlikely as it was striking. With an unforced, insinuating singjay flow, 23-year-old Deja Trimble became a staple on the radio by almost pityingly informing her foes that she was a “Nazi” with a “heart full of demons” who would go after your “whole motherfucking family,” among other things. It was startling, to say the least. On Sell Sole, Dej reveals a warmer, more playful voice, but her uniqueness is most apparent when she settles into a bluntly cold-eyed delivery — “Bird Call” almost rivals “Try Me” for vividly vicious threats and on the fiery yet melancholy “Blood” (featuring Young Thug), she thrillingly flashes her versatility while mourning the death of her father and other family members. Just as comfortable rapping or singing (especially on the R&B freaker “Easy Love”), Dej is still developing her persona, but she’s not to be trifled with. C.A.
35
Snootie Wild, ‘Go Mode EP’
On this crisp, compact six-song EP, this Memphis protégé of local star Yo Gotti is game to please, doing his Future Jr. thing in an Auto-Tune-y flow over butterfly hi-hat clicks, sharp snare shots and smeary synths swirls. “Made Me” sounds like purped out Steve Reich, while the hit single “Yayo” rides a hero’s march stomp and spins a dumb-but-infectious series of cocaine-as-food metaphors. J.D.
34
Ana Tijoux, ‘Vengo’
French-Chilean singer-MC Ana Tijoux exchanged samples for in-studio production on her luscious, impeccably paced fourth album. Tijoux aligns herself with Chile’s indigenous people through Andean panpipes and charango guitars, deplores urban overdevelopment and, in “Todo Lo Sólido Se Desvanece En El Aire” (All That Is Solid Melts Into Air), imagines a world without capital. An album informed equally by KRS-One and murdered nueva canción singer Victor Jara. R.G.
33
Vince Staples, ‘Hell Can Wait’ EP
The North Side of Long Beach as described by Vince Staples, a fatalist by 14, scarred by witnessing brutal police, rival gang sets, constant funeral services and his father selling methadone and heroin through the screen door. Hell Can Wait details the broiling summer between his freshman and sophomore years of high school. The beats thump with punishing low-end, ratcheting the tension in Staples’ tales of shootouts similar to the Wild West — or at least the ones immortalized by Snoop and Tha Dogg Pound. But don’t mistake this for West Coast gangsta rap revival. The 21-year old assassin interpolates everything from Goodie Mob to Mary J. Blige, and shouts out Black Panthers and the obscure corpses slain by cops that never incited a movement. For the final nail, Staples raps with the cockiness and surgical details of a young Pusha T. J.W.
32
2 Chainz, ‘Freebase’ EP
With his first free mixtape release since 2011’s breakthrough T.R.U. Realigion, the rapper born Taheed Epps sends his uniquely silly punchlines raining down from hip-hop’s penthouse — but he isn’t always satisfied with the view. “Crib in My Closet” celebrates the Dolce inside, but when Epps looks out he sees burdens, responsibilities and memories from a haunted past. “Freebase” explores the last of those as distorted voices swirl in the background, and on “Trap Back” he stays awake longing for the days when he lived at ground level, selling drugs rather than making music. Uneasy lies the neck that wears the chainz. N.M.
31
Ghostface Killah, ’36 Seasons’
On recent albums like last year’s Twelve Reasons to Die and this year’s 36 Seasons, the Wu-Tang Clan’s most consistent solo artist has refocused on concept albums that blend his love of Blaxploitation-style action and vintage Seventies cop funk. 36 Seasons is backed by the Revelations, a New York retro-soul unit that spin elongated grooves out of old soul standards like the Fuzz’s “I Love You For All Seasons.” As for the comic-book plot, it’s a thrilling tale straight out of Luke Cage: Hero for Hire. Tony Starks returns to Shaolin after a nine-year absence only to be betrayed by rapper AZ, who performs magnificently in a co-starring role as a crooked cop: “The link to the cartel…it’s that Denzel in Training Day shit.” M.R.