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The Fugees' blockbuster sophomore LP, The Score, is considered one of the greatest hip-hop albums of all time. And it paved the way for Lauryn Hill's solo stardom.
The Fugees never made another record after 1996's The Score, but maybe that's just because they knew they couldn't top it.
Lauryn Hill might have with her subsequent solo album The Miseducation Of Lauryn Hill, true, but that's a topic of discussion for another day. Right now we're talkin' The Score, and it's a pretty righteous piece of work in its own right. The soulful chemistry that bubbled up when Hill, Wyclef Jean and Pras Michel got together in the studio for The Score -- and, to a lesser extent, 1994's Blunted On Reality -- was utterly unique, and that magic was enough to lure the masses to a record that didn't sound like anything else in hip-hop at the time and didn't bother making concessions to mainstream pop tastes because it didn't have to: it was simply too good to ignore. The Score has sold more than 22 million copies worldwide over the past three decades, and the singles "Ready Or Not," "Fu-Gee-La" and "Killing Me Softly" (a bold cover that Fugees kinda own to this day) remain radio staples to this day. Not sure if they were planning to make their exit after this one, but it's a damn fine way to go out.
TRACKLISTING:
1. Red Intro
2. How Many Mics
3. Ready Or Not
4. Zealots
5. The Beast
6. Fu-Gee-La
7. Family Business
8. Killing Me Softly
9. The Score
10. The Mask
11. Cowboys
12. No Woman, No Cry
13. Manifest/Outro