The National Recording Registry welcomes albums from the iconic Wu-Tang Clan, A Tribe Called Quest, and Alicia Keys.

Alicia Keys
62nd Annual Grammy Awards, Show, Los Angeles, USA – 26 Jan 2020
For Keys, her 7x-Platinum project, Songs in A Minor, has been selected.
“I’m so honored and grateful that Songs in A Minor, the entire album, gets to be recognized as such a powerful body of work that is just going to be timeless,” says Alicia Keys.
Wu-Tang Clan’s legendary Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers) will be added to the registry as well.
“The National Recording Registry reflects the diverse music and voices that have shaped our nation’s history and culture through recorded sound,” Carla Hayden, Librarian of Congress, said on Wednesday. “The national library is proud to help preserve these recordings, and we welcome the public’s input. We received about 1,000 public nominations this year for recordings to add to the registry.”
Albums from Duke Ellington, Bonnie Raitt, and Linda Ronstadt are also among the newest class.
NEWS: The @LibnOfCongress has announced the annual selection of 25 recordings to be inducted into the National Recording Registry, chosen for their cultural, historic or aesthetic importance to preserve the nation’s recorded sound heritage. #NatRecRegistryhttps://t.co/0p6y8KNjxu pic.twitter.com/nkyTkzY4o5
— Library of Congress (@librarycongress) April 13, 2022
.@aliciakeys tells us about recording most of her debut album, “Songs in A Minor,” in a makeshift studio in her tiny Harlem apartment, and how her neighbors clued her in that they could hear every note. The record will be preserved on the #NatRecRegistry.https://t.co/xz7unr6VfW pic.twitter.com/yBkJ0tBeGz
— Library of Congress (@librarycongress) April 13, 2022
The @WuTangClan released “Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers)” in 1993 and shaped the sound of hardcore rap in the process. The record — intense lyrical energy layered over a lo-fi mix and samples from dozens of kung fu movies — will be forever preserved on the #NatRecRegistry. pic.twitter.com/TYuvqbbadq
— Library of Congress (@librarycongress) April 13, 2022