Artist

Compton's Most Wanted

Genre: Rap ,West Coast Rap ,Gangsta Rap ,G-Funk ,Golden Age
Origin: U.S.A
Active: 1987 - 1993,2000 - Present
Listen on Coda
Though N.W.A captured the lion's share of attention, Compton's Most Wanted also played a pivotal role in shaping and spreading early-'90s West Coast gangsta rap. Fronted by MC Eiht, who would later pursue a solo path, and the Unknown DJ, a revered figure in West Coast electro production, the Compton, CA outfit—commonly abbreviated as CMW—centered its material on guns, women, gangs, and drugs, thereby establishing patterns that later became standard. Equally notable was the group's skill at crafting unhurried gangsta narratives driven less by raw force than by relaxed beats infused with '70s soul elements and introspective verses. Their breakthrough arrived in 1991 via "Growin' Up in the Hood," featured on the Boyz n the Hood soundtrack; that track reached the summit of Billboard's Hot Rap Singles chart in the same week the soundtrack claimed the top spot on the R&B album survey. Eiht soon launched his solo endeavors, and after We Come Strapped (1994) entered Billboard's chart at number five, he maintained steady momentum, setting the group aside for almost ten years before a brief early-2000s reunion yielded a new album and a career retrospective.

Formed in 1987, the lineup of rappers Eiht and Chill MC, turntablist DJ Mike T, and producers DJ Slip and the Unknown DJ issued its first full-length, It's a Compton Thang (1990). That release stood as a defining statement alongside N.W.A's Straight Outta Compton (1988). In 1991 the group joined the Geto Boys on tour while completing Straight Checkn 'Em, whose lead single "Growin' Up in the Hood" simultaneously rode the success of the Boyz n the Hood soundtrack (1991). Buoyed by that exposure, Straight Checkn 'Em climbed to number 26 on Billboard's R&B chart in September, marking the collective's strongest commercial showing to date. Music to Driveby (1992) followed the next year and ultimately foreshadowed the group's initial breakup.

Eiht's elevation to rap stardom was already underway, and his appearance in Menace II Society (1993) further cemented his profile, reinforced by his contribution to the soundtrack's number-one run. Once We Come Strapped (1994) landed inside Billboard's Top Five, he maintained a consistent release schedule for years. By decade's end, however, West Coast gangsta rap had waned in popularity, a shift mirrored in Eiht's own trajectory. He therefore reconvened with former CMW members—excluding the Unknown DJ—to deliver Represent (2000), an effort that drew minimal notice. The ten-year-anniversary compilation When We Wuz Bangin' (2001) appeared soon afterward. Eiht returned to solo work, yet five years later the remaining members reassembled for Music to Gang Bang, issued on Thump.