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The 20 Best Hip-Hop Albums of 2024

From Kendrick Lamar to Tyler, the Creator and Cash Cobain, the year in hip-hop featured a variety of styles and sounds

Illustration of hip-hop artists

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The year in hip-hop was defined by an epic battle between two of the genre’s biggest stars, Kendrick Lamar and Drake. Kendrick’s decisive victory over Drizzy culminated in one of the year’s best rap albums, GNX, overshadowed only by Doechii, the latest talent to emerge from Lamar’s former label TDE. Still, if you looked beyond the headlines, the real story of rap in 2024 was the new generation of stars coming into place, artists like Cash Cobain and Chow Lee, who provided the culture with the raunchy raps it deserves. Or SahBabii, whose new album Saaheem firmly placed him among the leaders of the current generation of young rap talent.

Throughout the year, it seemed like we saw glimpses of where the genre is heading. While the biggest stars of the 2010s duked it out in one of the most memorable feuds in rap history, the next generation was hard at work building out the sounds that’ll shape the future. Acts like Tierra Whack, Chief Keef, and Denzel Curry released some of their most fully realized work to date, and newer names like BigXthaplug and Skaiwater introduced themselves with a bang. These were the rap albums that shaped 2024.

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From Rolling Stone US

5

Tyler, The Creator, ‘Chromakopia’

You could say Tyler, the Creator’s latest album, Chromakopia, is something like his version of Kendrick Lamar’s Mr. Morale & the Big Steppers, an album where Lamar unpacked the contradictions of his own life, which, up to then, had similarly played a central role in his music and fame. On Chromakopia’s emotional peak, “Like Him,” one of the founding myths of Tyler’s character, that his dad walked out on him, appears to have been more complicated than it seems. “It was my fault. Not him, ’cause he always wanted to be there for you,” we hear Tyler’s mother tell him at the song’s end. As with other superstars of his generation, faced with the shelf life of their own brands, the Tyler we hear on Chromakopia is making an effort to deconstruct some of his own narratives. For longtime fans, it’s an exciting proposition, one that opens up a new world of possibilities.  —J.I.

4

Mavi, ‘shadowbox’

Shadowbox offers a soulful reflection of Charlotte rapper Mavi’s current life and times. Standout track “Drunk Prayer” feels like the fulcrum of the album as the project’s lead single and thematic anchor. With emotive guitar plucks and vocals from Jordan Ward, Amindi, and Tempest, the composers nailed the warmth of a seventies soul sample as he depicts the pangs of addiction and despair with bars like, “Performed surgery on myself with just a cudgel / I’m more certain about my death than my construction.” He told Rolling Stone in August that the song, like the rest of the album, reflects where he’s been personally, coping with “unstable self-esteem.” The album’s title symbolizes “a trophy case to my failures,” Mavi says. “I wanted people to champion me for being a person who is learning more than championing me because of what they feel like I know or what they’re proud to feel like I know.” —A.G.

3

Schoolboy Q, ‘Blue Lips’

The South Central Los Angeles rapper with storied backgrounds as both a Crip and a golfer returned with a vengeance on Blue Lips, an exquisite display of rap’s range and depths. ScHoolboy Q bounces from madness to tranquility through lush, rapid beat switch-ups and stylish cadences, often in a single song, like standout “THank God 4 Me.” Other tracks, like “Lost Times,” “Blueslides,” and “Cooties,” are calmer and kaleidoscopic in their overviews and minutiae of his accomplishments, relationships, regrets, and commitments. It’s art-house rap that rides its maturity with edge. —M.C.

2

Kendrick Lamar, ‘GNX’

In 2024, the world of rap belonged to Kendrick Lamar. He scored at least two Number One singles — one alongside Future & Metro Boomin with “Like That” and a second on his own in “Not Like Us.” As a nightcap to an exhilarating MVP season, GNX embraces his dual identities: the spiritualist, and the block thumper who spits venom at detractors real and perceived. To his credit, he still questions himself. In “Reincarnated,” he finds himself mimicking the voice of 2Pac as he argues with his inner God voice. “But you love war,” God says. “No, I don’t,” Lamar responds. —M.R.

1

Doechii ‘Alligator Bites Never Heal’

With her full-length debut, Alligator Bites Never Heal (a gesture to the Florida roots of the self-proclaimed “Swamp Princess”), Doechii makes herself known as a fully realized artist with immense technical and curatorial skill. She slickly glides from gritty boom-bap, sensual electronic, dance music, Miami jook, and earnest soul with a wicked pen and brilliant charisma. Her varied vocal tics and beat selections are often akin to Kendrick Lamar’s — but she also sounds like a student of A Tribe Called Quest, Missy Elliott, and Nicki Minaj as well. Most often, though, she simply sounds like Doechii. It’s a feat of originality for someone so early in her mainstream career. Standout track “Denial Is a River” features Doechii giving an Oscar-worthy performance as both herself and a therapist of sorts in an immaculate display of her quirks, relatability, and tenderness. She dishes on her depression and failed relationships and defends a pesky drug habit she picked up in Hollywood before blasting into “Catfish,” an assertion of why she made it there. Doechii can be brash, reckless at the mouth, and dizzyingly dexterous, but her gentle heart is at the mixtape’s core — her fears, vices, and dreams as she becomes who she always knew she could be are at the center. —M.C.