Artistic influence MTV Unplugged No. 2.0 has been cited by numerous artists and writers for its significance and influence on their work.
Adele named the album as an inspiration for her own unplugged session on
VH1, telling
MTV News "My favorite one is the Lauryn Hill one; I've got that one on CD as well. I've never been so choked up by something, and it was so refreshing". She also praised Hill's artistry during the performance, stating, "that broken look, just her and a guitar, her banter between the songs — I felt like how I feel when I hear
Etta James. I was just like, 'I totally get it. She's in my head, she's in my heart, she knows me". In a 2014
Entertainment Weekly interview, English singer
Ed Sheeran ranked Hill's
Unplugged set among the series' standout entries, alongside
Unplugged (1992) by
Eric Clapton and
MTV Unplugged in New York (1994) by
Nirvana, while calling it "great".
Katy Perry also listed it as a personal favorite, stating "I remember listening to Nirvana and Lauryn Hill and wanting to do that one day". Singer
Sam Smith once referred to it as "My Bible" in a tweet. Songwriter
Jack Antonoff credited
MTV Unplugged No. 2.0 as a major creative influence during an interview on
Total Request Live referring to the album as life-changing. Writer and comedian
Neal Brennan stated that he and
Dave Chappelle watched Hill's set on
VHS "over and over" while writing the
sketch comedy television series ''
Chappelle's Show. Author Casey Gerald included "I Get Out" and "I Remember" in a PBS playlist accompanying his 2018 memoir There Will Be No Miracles Here, stating that their themes of rebellion and remembrance "mirror the spirit and intention" of his book. Actress America Ferrera wrote in her book American Like Me: Reflections on Life Between Cultures
that the album helped her accept her African ancestry. Jerrod Carmichael cited "I Just Want You Around" as a source of personal comfort, and stated that he prefers MTV Unplugged No. 2.0
to The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill''. Women in both hip hop and R&B have acknowledged
MTV Unplugged No. 2.0 as a creative influence, including
Ella Mai,
Samara Cyn,
Celeste,
Kelela,
Doechii, and
Sinéad Harnett. Songwriter
H.E.R. named "Just Like Water" from
MTV Unplugged No. 2.0 as one of her favorite Lauryn Hill songs, while recalling how Hill influenced her early songwriting.
Rapsody credited the album as foundational to her personal work, stating that she often listened to it while recording her 2023 album ''
Please Don't Cry'', and later covering "Adam Lives in Theory" for
Amazon Music.
Sampling The album's songs have also been widely sampled and reinterpreted. According to
music executive JB Marshall,
MTV Unplugged No. 2.0 was a major influence on Kanye West's 2004 debut studio album
The College Dropout, recalling that it was considered "like the Bible" during the album's creation, leading to West's interpolation of "Mystery of Iniquity" on "All Falls Down".
ASAP Rocky and Frank Ocean sampled "I Gotta Find Peace of Mind" for their track "
Purity", the closing song on ASAP Rocky's album
Testing (2018).
Pitchfork noted Hill's influence as essential to the song's emotional resonance, referring to it as the moment where ASAP Rocky "finally grasps that ineffable quality that makes artists like Hill and Ocean iconic: humanity". Ocean also interpolated "Just Like Water" on his track with
Jazmine Sullivan on the song "Rushes" from his 2016 visual album
Endless, and
Wu-Tang Clan member
Method Man sampled Hill's vocals on "
Say", the lead single from his 2006 solo album
4:21... The Day After.
Protest, activism, and cultural influence Solange Knowles cited
MTV Unplugged No. 2.0 as an inspiration for her album
A Seat at the Table (2016), and hailed it as a rare example of a Black artist occupying a space usually reserved for
punk performers, who are embraced for their disruption, rage, and
anti-establishment expression. She stated "That's something that Black artists are not usually able to do, especially R&B artists," adding that Hill sang "some real shit… disruptive things that are going to shake some people up". She also reflected on the backlash Hill faced at the time and noted how public perception has evolved, with audiences now embracing the album's messages.
Jason Russell, creator of
Kony 2012, cited Hill's quote from
MTV Unplugged No. 2.0 ("Fantasy is what people want but reality is what they need") as part of his inspiration for the film's message. Hill re-released the song "I Find It Hard to Say (rebel)" in 2016 amid the rise of the
Black Lives Matter movement. The original song was written in response to the 1999 police
killing of Amadou Diallo in New York City.
Joe Talbot of the
post-punk band
Idles described Hill's original version as a spiritual song about breaking down and regaining strength. The song was also sampled by
Egyptian hip hop artist
Arabian Knightz during the
Arab Spring uprisings, alleging that they were blocked from releasing the song until Egypt's
internet censorship was lifted. Similarly, Hill's "Freedom Time" has been used as a protest song, including by
Palestinian-American rapper Phay in his 2024 single "Watermelon Seeds", written in response to the
Israeli bombing of Gaza. Poet and activist
Donte Clark cited the album as part of his personal reflection and inspiration.
Musicianship and performance influence Publications have noted Hill's use of the nylon-string
classical guitar during the performance as a prominent example of the instrument's role in contemporary music. British singer
Lianne La Havas cited the album and Hill's guitar playing as an inspiration, stating, "[I was inspired by] Lauryn Hill’s
MTV Unplugged. I already loved
The Miseducation… and the
Fugees, and finding out that she played guitar was mind-blowing." In an interview with
Billboard, rapper
B.o.B cited Hill's guitar playing as inspiration for his career, stating, "Lauryn Hill was a huge influence to my guitar playing, her whole
Unplugged DVD that she did… I mean, it just changed my life. It kind of gave me the inspiration to keep going, [to] invest a lot more time into the music and not the stuff that doesn’t matter." ==Track listing==