gold star for USAHOF
 

424. The Streets

The Streets, led by the enigmatic Mike Skinner, redefined the British music landscape in the early 2000s by blending UK garage, hip-hop, and indie rock into a gritty, conversational style known as "geezer rap." Skinner’s debut masterpiece, Original Pirate Material (2002), acted as a cultural lightning rod, capturing the mundane reality of British youth culture—think rainy high streets, kebab shops, and late-night clubbing—with a poetic, stream-of-consciousness delivery that bypassed the posturing of American rap. His impact peaked with the 2004 concept album A Grand Don’t Come for Free, featuring the chart-topping "Dry Your Eyes," which proved that vulnerable, raw storytelling could resonate on a massive commercial scale. By eschewing polished production for DIY authenticity, The Streets paved the way for future icons like Arctic Monkeys, Lily Allen, and the modern UK grime and drill scenes, cementing Skinner’s legacy as a generational chronicler of the ordinary.

The Streets

The Streets are basically the project of Mike Skinner, who wanted to (and succeeded in) taking the U.K. Garage and Alternative Hip Hop genres to a more socially aware place. Skinner, who does most of the vocals, arranging, producing and mixing is unarguably multi-talented but again the lack of an American impact does him no favors for this argument.