The Source Hip Hop Music Awards 2001

The Source Hip Hop Music Awards 2001
Compilation album by Various artists
Released August 14, 2001
Recorded various times
Genre Hip hop, rap, Mainstream urban
Length unknown
Label Def Jam Recordings
The Source chronology
The Source Presents: Hip Hop Hits, Vol. 4
(2000)The Source Presents: Hip Hop Hits, Vol. 42000
The Source Hip Hop Music Awards 2001
(2001)
The Source Presents: Hip Hop Hits, Vol. 5
(2001)The Source Presents: Hip Hop Hits, Vol. 52001
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]

The Source had the First Rap Award Show. In 1991, The Source began handing out trophies on a special episode of Yo! MTV Raps, and three years later came a full-fledged production, complete with a stage show at Madison Square Garden’s Paramount Theater. The next year, The Source returned to that very same theater, except the climate in hip-hop had changed dramatically. 2Pac had been shot and was sequestered in jail, Bad Boy was the hottest new label in music, and beneath it all an East Coast-West Coast rivalry was bubbling.

“Any artist out there that wanna be an artist, stay a star, and won’t have to worry about the executive producer trying to be all in the videos, all on the records, dancing—come to Death Row!”

Suge Knight’s famous remarks that night became the first real shots in a deadly battle. But there was more. Snoop Dogg’s rant (“The East Coast ain’t got love for Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg?”). Diddy throwing shots (“I live in the East, and I’m gonna die in the East”). OutKast getting booed and Andre 3000’s prophecy (“The South got something to say!”). And, too, there was an early sighting of Raymond “Benzino” Scott, then just an unknown rapper from Boston, presenting an award long before his behind-the-scenes involvement in The Source became the magazine’s Achilles’ heel.

The events of that night reverberated through hip-hop for years to come. The East Coast-West Coast beef ballooned into a true rivalry, culminating in the deaths of 2Pac and the Notorious B.I.G.; rap’s balance of power shifted south of the Mason–Dixon line, albeit temporarily; and The Source itself became an even bigger powerhouse, with even more award shows, and eventually more competition to do battle with.

To celebrate the 20th anniversary of the 1995 Source Awards, we called up Dave Mays and Ray Benzino, the magazine’s controversial former co-owners, who parted ways with the company almost a decade ago, after years of warring with Eminem, XXL, and a myriad number of former staffers. While they’ve both moved on to greener pastures—a supermarket tabloid called Hip-Hop Weekly and Love & Hip-Hop Atlanta, respectively—neither has spoken publicly about The Source since then. Hip Hop Music Awards 2001 is the third (and final to date) annual album produced by the magazine to focus on its nominees of the now-defunct award show. It features nineteen hip hop and rap hits (two of them being bonus tracks). It went to number 34 on the Top R&B/Hip Hop Albums chart and peaked at number 28 on the Billboard 200 album chart.

This is the only The Source Hip Hop Music Awards compilation to feature a Billboard Hot 100 and R&B and Hip Hop number one hit: Ms. Jackson. In addition to that song, two more songs (out of three) made number one on the Hot Rap Tracks chart: Bow Wow (That's My Name) and Oh No.

Track listing

  1. Ms. Jackson - Outkast
  2. Southern Hospitality - Ludacris
  3. How Many Licks? - Lil' Kim and Sisqo
  4. Bonnie & Shyne - Shyne and Barrington Levy
  5. Who's That Girl? - Eve
  6. The Blast - Talib Kweli f. Vinia Mojica
  7. Pull Ova - Trina
  8. Lay Low - Snoop Dogg, Master P, Nate Dogg, Butch Cassidy and Tha Eastsidaz
  9. Bow Wow (That's My Name) - Lil Bow Wow and Snoop Dogg
  10. Gravel Pit - Wu-Tang Clan
  11. Look Me In My Eyes - Scarface
  12. E.I. - Nelly
  13. Shake Ya Ass - Mystikal
  14. X - Xzibit
  15. Ante Up (Robbing-Hoodz Theory) - M.O.P. and Funkmaster Flex
  16. Put It On Me - Ja Rule and Vita
  17. Keep It Thoro - Prodigy
  18. Making It - The Poe Boy Family, Rick Ross and Brisco
  19. Oh No - Mos Def, Pharoahe Monch and Nate Dogg

References

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