, in 1991. Master P used a $10,000 malpractice settlement from his grandfather's death to open a small record store called "No Limit Records and Tapes". He began selling his own music and that of local Bay Area artists out of the trunk of his car. By 1995, Master P moved the label back to his hometown of New Orleans
A showcase of New Orleans talent, including the hit "Wobble Wobble." Key Artists in the Dragan09 Collection
The brilliance of Part I of this collection is its inclusion of both multi-platinum flagship releases and rare, regional street classics. no limit records collection part i 109 albumsrapby dragan09
: A high-profile acquisition that brought a new level of energy and lyrical intensity to the label, eventually going platinum.
Beyond the sales and the style, No Limit's most profound impact was cultural. Alongside Cash Money Records, No Limit was instrumental in shifting the center of gravity in hip-hop from New York and Los Angeles to the South. They put New Orleans on the map and established a blueprint for Southern dominance that has never been relinquished. Master P paved the way for every independent mogul, from Jay-Z to Birdman, proving that street smarts and business acumen were not mutually exclusive. , in 1991
This collection by is widely regarded as a definitive digital preservation of the No Limit Records catalog, covering the label's meteoric rise during the 1990s and early 2000s. For collectors and fans of Southern rap, it is a high-quality resource that captures the label's signature "quantity over quality" era where they released nearly 23 albums in a single year. Key Highlights of the Collection Ice Cream Man
A double-disc album that went double-platinum and solidified the group (Master P, Silkk the Shocker, C-Murder) as superstars. By 1995, Master P moved the label back
: Considered the "crown jewel" of the catalog, featuring "Make Em Say Uhh!" and "I Miss My Homies." It turned millions of listeners into "No Limit Soldiers".
The Golden Era of No Limit Records: Analyzing the Legendary 109-Album Chronology