Michel is at his most vulnerable on “Giggles,” recounting the ignorance of his adolescent classmates. Wyclef Jean and Pras Michel rapped with chips on their shoulders-for the flack they endured as young Black men making their way in the world, and then also an otherness they embraced as Haitian-Americans making their way in the Black American culture of MCing. Though 1994's Blunted on Reality was more aggro than it needed to be, the Newark trio’s charms would not be dimmed.' I’m the girl Yankee rolling with the kids from Haiti cooling at the Mardi Gras,” Lauryn Hill raps on “Refugees on the Mic.” If Fugees had nothing else on Blunted, they had identities. The Fugees of the band’s debut, Blunted on Reality, were a trio of hungry MCs susceptible to the influence of gritty and successful outings such as Wu-Tang Clan’s Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers), Lords of the Underground’s Here Come the Lords, Naughty by Nature’s 19 Naughty III, and of course Onyx’s opus of aggy, Bacdafucup, all released in 1993.
Now-legendary producer Salaam Remi has gone on record more than once with a highly specific criticism about the earliest Fugees music: They sounded like Onyx.