by Brian Raftery
Call Lauryn Hill the mother of
hip-hop invention; with her 1998 solo debut The Miseducation
of Lauryn Hill, the Fugees'
most vocal member not only established herself as creative force on her own,
but also broke new ground by successfully integrating rap, soul, reggae, and
R&B into her own sound.
Raised in
That criticism made Miseducation
even more of a surprise. Hill wrote, arranged, or produced just about
every track on the album, which is steeped in her old-school background, both
musically (the Motown-esque singalong
of "Doo Wop (That Thing)") and lyrically
(the nostalgic "Every Ghetto, Every City"). As Miseducation
began a long reign on the charts through most of the fall and winter of 1998 --
initially thanks to heavy buzz and overwhelming radio support for "Doo Wop (That Thing)" -- Hill became a national media
icon, as magazines ranging from Time to Esquire to Teen People vied to put her
on the cover. By the end of the year, as the album topped virtually every major
music critic's best-of list, she was being credited for helping fully
assimilate hip-hop into mainstream music. (Such an analysis, however, is
lightweight at best: Hip-hop had been a huge force on the sales and radio
fronts for most of the decade, and rappers Jay-Z, DMX, and Outkast
had dropped similarly lauded LPs prior to or just after Miseducation's
release, adding to the genre's dominant sales for the year). The momentum
finally culminated at the February 1999 Grammy awards, during which Hill took
home five trophies from her 11 nominations, including Album of the Year, Best
New Artist, Best Female R&B Vocal Performance, Best R&B Song, and Best
R&B Album; the most ever for a woman. Shortly after, she launched a highly
praised national tour with
Hill also faced a lawsuit from two musicians who claim they
were denied full credit for their work on the album. In an interesting twist,
Hill's album proved to be such a commercial and critical success that it shed
doubt on the Fugees' future. Their in-fighting became
common knowledge, and matters were complicated when many fans interpreted Miseducation's various anti-stardom rants as a public dissing of co-Fugee Wyclef Jean.
She did continue shaping her solo career. The double-disc
MTV Unplugged No. 2.0 appeared in spring 2002, showcasing a deeply personal
performance from Hill.
Source: All Music Guide
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