2. The kids.
The classroom conversation scattered throughout the album about love was pure, memorable, and important.
1. The lasting impact.
Over the years, there's been much discussion about the trifecta of statement albums released in the two-year period surrounding The Miseducation's debut — The Miseducation, Erykah Badu's Mama's Gun, and Mary J. Blige's My Life. While Mama's Gun arguably reigns supreme, there's no denying that all three albums were essential at the time, pivotal and influential in their own right, with The Miseducation emerging as both a community standard and mainstream classic. At the 41st Annual Grammy Awards in 1999, Lauryn Hill was nominated for ten awards and won five, making her the first woman to win five Grammys in one night. The album also broke a record for first-week sales by a female artist and achieved diamond status. But the power of The Miseducation goes well beyond the numbers. It's about the perspective, the soulful energy, and the delivery. It's why everyone was talking about it when it dropped, and why, even 25 years later, the conversation continues.