Jay-Z’s Best Lyrics From “Vol. 2… Hard Knock Life”

While it may not be his best album from a lyrical standpoint, there is no doubt that Vol 2. Hard Knock Life, released 14 years ago today, made Jay-Z a crossover sensation. His failed attempt to reach a wider audience on In My Lifetime Vol. 1 was redeemed with one sample of a theme song from a certain redheaded little girl. The album (supposedly his last under the two-album deal he signed with Def Jam at the time) sold over 5 million copies, still his highest selling work to date. To celebrate the release of this landmark (a great day for rap albums with Outkast‘s Aquemini and A Tribe Called Quest‘s last album The Love Movement released as well) check out some of Jay-Z’s best lines from each song on the album (with the exception of Hand It Down which was all Memphis Bleek): It’s the Roc!

Hard Knock Life (Ghetto Anthem) (this joint set it off for Hova’s rap career. He was really gonna retire after this album, but 5 million albums later he reconsidered and the music industry is better for it)

“where all my n-ggaz wit the rubber grips bust shots/ and if you wit me ma I’m rubbin’ your t-ts and what not/ I’m from the school of the hard knocks we must not/let outsiders violate our blocks and my plot/ stick up the world and split it fifty fifty, uh huh/ get the dough and stay real Jiggy, uh huh/ sip the Cris and stay pissy pissy/ flow infinitely like the memory of my n-gga Biggie, baby!”

If I Should Die (this was one of those hypothetical joints that was famous at the time [Ma$e's - 24 Hrs to Live, Nas - I Gave You Power], but Jay knocked it out of the park. Whatever happened to the Rahnjaz?)

“I’d tell Big they’re still hearing his songs/ run into ‘Pac ask him where we went wrong/ tell him life is miserable when you dealing in the physical form/ is everything that’s invisible gone?/ I need to know..”

Ride or Die (part two to Imaginary Player from the previous Vol. 1 album. This joint put Jay up there with KRS One and LL Cool J [remember, Eminen didn't hit the scene yet and Nas was a few years away from Ether] as rappers you did not want to cross on wax. Think about it, these lyrics may have pushed Ma$e into retirement. No one likes to get jerked)

“n-iggaz cat fightin’ wit Jigga kickin’ sneak sh-t/ makin little tapes but keepin’ it secret/ cuz I kick that deep sh-t that divide your peeps sh-t/ that ‘I don’t know if you f-ckin’ wit Jigga kickin’ that weak sh-t, dawg’ …” (Honorable mention – “you see the respect I get every time I come through/ check your own videos you’ll always be number 2…”) Ouch.

N-gga What, N-gga Who (Originator ’99) (a brilliant return to the speed rapping of his early days, Jigga featues his mentor Jaz-O on this update of Jaz’s original track)

“got a condo with nothin’ but condoms in it/ same place where the rhymes is invented/ so all I do is rap and sex/ imagine how I stroke, see how I was flowin’ on my last cassette/ rapid fire like i’m blastin’ a Tec/ never jam though never get high never run outta ammo…”

Money, Cash, H-es feat. DMX (DMX was everywhere in ’98 so it was only right Jay-Z put him on a song. The beat [produced by a young Swizz Beatz] was sick and the rhymes were slick which equals all the makings of an underground classic)

“I know they gonna criticize the hook on this song/ like I give a f-ck I’m just a crook on this song…”

(Honorable mention - “sex murder and mayhem romance for the street/ only wife of mine is a life of crime/ and since life’s a bitch in mini-skirts and big chests/ how can I not flirt with death…”) I know what you’re thinking…. that “New York’s been soft since Snoop came through and crushed the buildings” line was controversial but not the best. Next!

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A Week Ago feat. Too Short (just a year earlier The Notorious B.I.G. put the East Coast on to how funny Too Short could be on a track with “The World Is Filled” so when Jigga recruited him to talk smack on this record it was a match made in music heaven…Beyotch!)

“The Feds came to get me, we both fled quickly/ wasn’t quick enough to jump over the hedges with me/ got caught, and that’s when our relationship strayed/ used to call me from the joint til he ran out of change/ and when he called collect and I heard his name/ I quickly accepted, but when I reached the phone/ he’s talkin reckless, I can sense deceit in his tone/ I said, “Damn dawg, what, nine weeks and you’re home?”/ he said, “Main man, you think s-it’s sweet cause you’re home…” (this shot Hov up the storytelling ladder as well)

Coming of Age (Da Sequel) feat. Memphis Bleek (Jay-Z kept trying to pass the torch to young Bleek on this album hoping he would carry Roc-a-Fella Records on his back, but that didn’t work out so well. Another reason Hova had to extend his prolific run a few more summers)

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