0
N.W.A.
N.W.A.
American hip hop group
1
J. J. Fad
J. J. Fad
American hip hop group
2
MC Ren
MC Ren
American rapper
3
Eazy-E
Eazy-E
American rapper
4
Ice Cube
Ice Cube
American hip hop artist, music producer and actor
5
Tim Dog
Tim Dog
American rapper
6
Dr. Dre
Dr. Dre
American rapper, record producer, and entrepreneur
7
Compton's Most Wanted
Compton's Most Wanted
American hip-hop group
8
Arabian Prince
Arabian Prince
American rapper
9
MC Eiht
MC Eiht
American rapper
10
Goldie Lookin Chain
Goldie Lookin Chain
Welsh comedic rap music group
11
DJ Quik
DJ Quik
American rapper
12
The D.O.C.
The D.O.C.
American rapper
13
DJ Yella
DJ Yella
American DJ, rapper and record producer
14
Young Maylay
Young Maylay
American rapper
15
Smitty
Smitty
American rapper
16
O'Shea Jackson Jr.
O'Shea Jackson Jr.
American rapper and actor
17
Michel'le
Michel'le
American singer
18
Kurupt
Kurupt
American rapper
19
The Real Richie Rich
The Real Richie Rich
American record producer
20
Detroit's Most Wanted
Detroit's Most Wanted
American rapper
21
Warren G
Warren G
American rapper,record producer
22
Allfrumtha I
Allfrumtha I
23
King Tee
King Tee
American rapper
24
Everlast
Everlast
American musician and songwriter
25
Run-DMC
Run-DMC
American hip hop group
26
Problem
Problem
American rapper and songwriter from California
27
Geto Boys
Geto Boys
American hip-hop group
28
Jaz-O
Jaz-O
American rapper
29
Young Buck
Young Buck
American rapper
30
Lil Jon
Lil Jon
American rapper
31
Prairie Oyster
Prairie Oyster
band that plays country music
32
Mustard
Mustard
American record producer, DJ and hype man from California
33
World Class Wreckin' Cru
World Class Wreckin' Cru
band that plays electro

Rodney-O & Joe Cooley, consisting of rapper Rodney O and DJ Joe Cooley, were an American rap group from Compton, California, United States, best known for tracks such as "Everlasting Bass," "Cooley High," and "This is for the Homies." At the height of their popularity, the group toured with MC Lyte, N.W.A, Kool Moe Dee and Grandmaster Flash. The group would gain more popularity in South Florida than their native Southern California, giving them a pioneering role in Miami bass.

Though their 1987 song "Everlasting Bass" never charted, it is their best-remembered song. In 2015, Rolling Stone named it as one of the 20 greatest West Coast Rap Songs released prior to N.W.A's 1988 album Straight Outta Compton.

After over a decade of silence, the group announced that they were planning a new album in 2011. The album was tentatively titled Joe And Me, but only the single "That Supa Radio" materialized.