Paid In Full by Eric B. & Rakim
User Submitted Album

Paid In Full

Eric B. & Rakim

1987
3.3
Rating
66
Votes
1
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3
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5
Distribution

Album Summary

Paid in Full is the debut studio album by American hip hop duo Eric B. & Rakim, released on July 7, 1987, by Island-subsidiary label 4th & B'way Records. The duo recorded the album at hip-hop producer Marley Marl's home studio and Power Play Studios in New York City, following Rakim's response to Eric B.'s search for a rapper to complement his disc jockey work in 1985. The album peaked at No. 58 on the Billboard 200 chart, No. 8 on the R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart, and produced five singles: "Eric B. Is President", "I Ain't No Joke", "I Know You Got Soul", "Move the Crowd", and "Paid in Full". Paid in Full is credited as a benchmark album of golden age hip-hop. Rakim's rapping, which pioneered the use of internal rhymes in hip-hop, set a higher standard of lyricism in the genre and served as a template for future rappers. The album's heavy sampling by Eric B. became influential in hip-hop production. The record has sold over a million copies and the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) certified it platinum in 1995. In 2020, the album was ranked number 61 on Rolling Stone magazine's list of the "500 Greatest Albums of All Time".

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Reviews

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Oct 30 2025 Author
5
How was this not in the original list? era and genre defining and setting the standard for all who follow. How did they leave us without a dope beat to step to?
Oct 19 2025 Author
4
There's some cool stuff in here, I particularly enjoyed Extended Beat along with the first track and the title track. "I hold the microphone like a grudge" is a great line. I'm not versed enough to understand the landmark status this album appears to have in the genre. Without that knowledge I can just rate it "pretty cool". 3.5 rounding up on faith.
Oct 19 2025 Author
4
Ridiculous to think that this wasn’t on the list proper. If there ever was a classic rap album, this is it! The beats haven’t yet caught up to Rakim’s futuristic rhyming sense by this point, but the rapping is more than enough to carry the lp.
Oct 29 2025 Author
4
This kind of thing is bordering on classical music by now. Not much for me to say, pretty foundational material of a significant stylistic shift in hip hop.
Nov 04 2025 Author
5
I do love it when I hear an album that's been recommended here, and realise that "Hey, this is where that thing I absolutely love is sampled from!" - and in this case it's "I Know You Got Soul" - which was sampled by DJ Steve Thorpe in his mix "blow the speaker". Steve Thorpe was resident in the breaks room at Tangled - one of Manchester's longest running club nights, and to this day I think that "blow the speaker" is one of the best DJ sets I've come across - you can find it on his SoundCloud and I suggest you do. To hear it here in presumably its original form is quite, quite wonderful. But - that's a distraction from talking about the actual album at hand, which is also wonderful. The flows are tight, the beats minimalist - dry but catchy. The scratching is accomplished. You'll spot things throughout this that became hip-hop staples, and that's just great. Great suggestion - and one I'd argue should be in the main list. Punt out a valueless Dylan album, for sure.
Nov 26 2025 Author
4
Paid in Full is an early hip hop classic by Eric B. & Rakim. The instrumentation is sparse and the drum rhythms sometimes childishly simple. Some of the songs are too long. Still this album provided a solid ground for later hip hop acts to follow.
Nov 03 2025 Author
5
Two of the best to ever do it
Oct 24 2025 Author
4
Paid in Full was huge when I lived in the Netherlands. The rest I didn't know. It's good old school hip hop. I really enjoyed it.
Oct 24 2025 Author
4
Cool beats. 4/5 Great addition to the list.
Oct 30 2025 Author
4
Solid
Nov 06 2025 Author
4
Great
Nov 14 2025 Author
4
After listening to this album, I regret having called everything else on this list (both the original 1001 and the extended user's list) "old school hip-hop". This is the real old-school. I felt I was back in the 90s during my teenage years while enjoying some random episode of "Fresh Prince of Bel-Air" on TV or something like that. What scratches, hum?
Nov 23 2025 Author
4
I don’t think the original list did too bad with early hip-hop, but this is a glaring omission, I think. A landmark record for hip-hop and highly influential; seems like it should have been a no brainer for inclusion.
Nov 24 2025 Author
4
As per Wikipedia, "In 2003, Eric B. alleged the duo had not been paid in full for their work, and filed a lawsuit against the Island Def Jam Music Group, Lyor Cohen, and Russell Simmons." Oh the irony. To be clear, everyone and their mothers know this album has repeatedly been heralded as seminal and incredibly influential for hip hop at large. Of course, it's a little hard for younger rap fans to understand that today. As a matter of fact, I can relate with those younger hip hop heads, even if I'm a somewhat old guy. My entry points into the genre was through acts such as A Tribe Called Quest, De La Soul, Public Enemy and the likes, only a couple of years down the line, and compared to those acts the instrumental minimalism of *Paid In Full* already felt like prehistory. Same with Rakim's flow -- stoic and groundbreaking for sure at the time, and yet admittedly sounding quite corny compared to everything that followed. But no rap act from the eighties -- be they Run-DMC, BDP/KRS One or the Beastie Boys -- is immune to that sort of retrospective take, right? So I will still place this record in my high-rated gallery, first for historical reasons, and also because those tracks are still pleasant and interesting to listen to decades later. To this day, I still prefer the jazzier and livelier peaks of *Don't Sweat The Techniques* (an overall great 1992 Eric B. & Rakim album, more furbished on a production viewpoint, yet also pestered by a couple of absolute duds -- including the opener, very unfortunately). Yet if really you want to have the more consistent and influential effort in the duo's discography, *Paid In Full* is the one to go first. The three instrumentals showcasing Eric B.'s scratching skills -- including one which is simply the instrumental version of one song, maddeningly -- are absolutely pointless today, sure. But the seven other tracks are flawless. And I repeat, the influence of this record on subsequent artists -- from M/A/R/R/S and PM Dawn to Nas and Eminem... -- is so pivotal. So even if I'm not sure I would include this record in my own potential list of 1001 keepers, I just gotta to consider the idea, at least... I might not be able to pay Eric B. & Rakim *in full*, but I can pay them the respect that they deserve, right? ---- 3.5/5 for the purposes of this list of essential albums, rounded up to 4. 8.5/10 for more general purposes (5 + 3.5) ---- Number of albums from the original list I find relevant enough to be mandatory listens: 465 Albums from the original list I *might* include in mine later on: 288 Albums from the original list I won't include in mine: 336 ---- Number of albums from the users list I find relevant enough to be mandatory listens: 58 Albums from the users list I *might* select for mine later on: 78 (including this one) Albums from the users list I won't select for mine: 140 --- Yo Émile, Comment va ? Je vais pouvoir, moi aussi, répondre en plusieurs fois, en reprenant point par point. Soyons méthodiques et synthétiques (ça me changera, arf ! 🙃) Je te cite à chaque fois... "Je suis content qu'on n'ai pas le même profil musical, il y a plus de spice et ça permet aussi de meilleurs suggestion d'écoutes qui nous sort de nos bands et genres usuels." 100% d'accord. Ça permet de sortir de sa "zone de confort", et je trouve ça très important en tant qu'audiophile à long terme. Pis après, y a cette histoire de "subjectivité" et d'"objectivité", mais j'en dirai plus là-dessus demain, suite à une autre de tes interventions / questions... "J'ai vraiment trippé sur le band MASERATI que t'as recommandé sous Ping Pong Go..." Excellent. On entend plus beaucoup parler d'eux, je sais même pas s'ils sont encore en activité... Le concert que j'avais vu d'eux dans l'Indiana il y a 12 ou 13 ans était bien cool, en tout cas. "Je te laisse le lien de l'animation que j'ai fait pour la chanson Corvette..." Ah ça c'était super, mec ! Parfaite animation pour le morceau, et ça m'a permis de laisser un commentaire sous le lien You Tube. T'as déjà dû le voir. Et maintenant, je sais quelle tête tu as aussi ! Tu te souviens de ta présentation de la Classe Américaine ? "Monde de merde", certes -- mais monde hyperconnecté. Jolie présentation d'un classique audiovisuel par chez nous, au passage. Entre cette aisance à l'oral et tes animations, t'as toutes les billes pour devenir un vrai you tubeur si tu le souhaites ! "Je serais aussi bien curieux d'entendre le band de ton chum qui joue du gamelan, j'ai jamais entendu parlé de ce drôle d'instrument, je me demande comment ça sonne" Bien tiens, voilà un lien vers la page du groupe. Il y a les sons du dernier album, plus des vidéos de live. Sur la plupart d'entre elles, mon pote Antoine est celui qui se trouve tout à droite sur la scène... https://www.promona.org/label/pagans/polypheme-wassim-halal-amp-gamelan-puspawarna--polypheme "Je pensais pas que tu lisais toutes mes reviews pour vrai!" Pas toutes, mais quasi-toutes, dès que je remonte le fil pour lire tes réponses. Celle assez récente sur Parliament m'a fait hurler de rire, d'ailleurs (en plus de la probable allusion sur ma remarque à propos du fait que le funk était partout autour de toi du matin au soir). Juste, fais gaffe à l'emplacement des fenêtres la prochaine fois que tu écoutes un truc avec George Clinton ! 😁 "Après +900 critiques tu perds du jus" C'est inévitable. Mais tu arrives bientôt au bout de la liste originale ! Bon, après y a la users list, et vu qu'elle gonfle dangereusement mois après moi, ce générateur commence à ressembler au Tonneau des Danaïdes ou au Rocher de Sisyphe. J'espère que je ne te porte pas un coup un moral ici. 🙃 "Je sais pas comment tu fais d'ailleurs pour écrire une dissertation universitaire à chaque jour, chapeau!" J'ai un secret, et je crois que je t'en ai déjà parlé : ça s'appelle la névrose obsessionnelle et je ne souhaiterais pas ça à mon pire ennemi. 🤣 "Pour revenir sur Kollaps brièvement, la vibe sur l'album est exactement la même que sur le génial film Funny Games, de Michael Haneke..." Énorme film, oui j'ai déjà vu il y a pas mal de temps, mais c'est difficile de l'oublier. Je crois que c'est l'un des seuls film de Haneke que j'ai vu d'ailleurs (avec La Pianiste, que j'ai beaucoup moins aimé). Je suis pas un expert en ciné, et je t'avouerai que les films disons "dérangeants" ne sont pas *tous* ma tasse de thé. Mais je n'ai aucun problème avec celui-là. De par son pitch, c'est une réflexion autour de la violence et de sa représentation, donc celle-ci n'est pas "gratuite" ici, en dépit des apparences. Dans mon souvenir, il y a un peu de moralisme à l'oeuvre, mais sans que j'ai trouvé ça donneur de leçon non plus (en gros, nous sommes tous coupables de quelque chose dans ces histoires de représentation de la violence). Faudrait que je le revoie aujourd'hui pour me souvenir de tous les détails, mais je souviens de la masterclass de mise en scène qu'on trouve dedans. Est-ce que tu sais exactement pourquoi *Kollaps* te fait penser à ce film ? "Ça c'est fou malade! T'étais voisin de Manu Dibango! Genre t'allais chez lui pis vous danciez sur du afro-beat jusqu'au petites heures de la nuit!" 🤣 Si seulement. On y a pas grandi à la même époque, et même si la Sarthe (et la France), c'est petit comparé au Canada, ça faisait pas de nous des voisins directs. En tout cas pas assez pour que j'entende de l'afrobeat de mon jardin ou de mon palier ! "Bon, je vais poursuivre demain, joyeux HALLOWEEN! (vous fêtez ça en France, right?)" Ah ça oui ! Les gamins en tout cas. Mention obligatoire de la chose tous les ans dans mon cours d'anglais pour mes petits sixièmes ! Allez, moi aussi, je vais poursuivre demain pour la suite de la correspondance. Ou ptet après-demain, j'ai souvent une très grosse journée le lundi... See ya!
Nov 24 2025 Author
4
Rating: 7/10 Best songs: I ain’t no joke, I know you got soul, Chinese arithmetic
Nov 28 2025 Author
4
The first guys to realize you could make those dj noises. One of the early hip-hop greats. Should’ve been on the OG list
Nov 04 2025 Author
3
About to get my money up
Nov 16 2025 Author
3
You'd expect an album like this to be "Seinfeld is Unfunny Effect"'d into oblivion, but it still surprisingly holds up. A bit goofy, sure, but definitely a fun time. Also "Chinese Arithmetic" slaps, I don't care what anybody says. Strong 3/5.
Oct 24 2025 Author
5
Paid in Full may not be the peak of hip hop, but it is an all-time crowning achievement in the genre. It’s akin to Vostok 1 launching Youri Gagarin, the first human, into a 108 minute orbit. Sure, later on people landed on the moon, probes on other planets, and other probes left the solar system. And gratuitous launches of astronaut dummies in roadsters followed too. We can always look back on Eric B.’s and Rakim’s Paid in Full as a marvelous marker along the way.
Oct 17 2025 Author
2
Feels kinda flat overall – the instrumentals feel repetitive, and neither MC seems jazzed to be performing. Some interesting samples here and there, but nothing to write home about.
Nov 22 2025 Author
2
This was fine. But I am not too much into the scratching aspect of hip hop. Especially early hip hop where there are only like 5 different audio tricks to do. I think, just for me, the amount of scratching time really hurt this one.