September 14, 1993 — September 14, 2026
33 Years of
’93 ’til Infinity
How four kids from Oakland made a track that never got old — and what it means to still be here, still ahead of the game.
Listen to the Album →The Record That Started Everything
On September 14, 1993, Souls of Mischief — Tajai, A-Plus, Opio, and Phesto — dropped ’93 ’til Infinity on Jive Records. The debut single, and then the full album, landed like a statement: West Coast hip-hop wasn’t just one sound. Oakland had something to say.
The title track — built on a Jazz sample that still sounds like summer — became one of the most recognizable instrumentals in hip-hop history. Thirty-three years later, it still sounds like right now.
Oakland’s Voice
The album didn’t just introduce Souls of Mischief — it introduced the world to a sound that would define the Hieroglyphics collective: introspective, lyrically dense, jazz-influenced, and 100% West Coast without being defined by the G-funk era dominating the charts.
A-Plus, Tajai, Opio, and Phesto were teenagers when they recorded it. The fact that it still resonates across generations is a testament to craft that doesn’t chase trends.
33 in 2026
This September marks the 33rd anniversary of the album’s release. To celebrate, Hieroglyphics will be running a full campaign: archival features, unreleased memories from the sessions, and a special anniversary show at Red Rocks Amphitheatre in June — where the crew will perform alongside Cypress Hill, Method Man & Redman, and De La Soul.
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