Jennifer Lopez’s notable R&B cuts and Hip Hop collabs
From Big Pun and Nas to Jadakiss, LL Cool J, and Cardi B, these tracks show J. Lo’s rap-and-R&B run wasn’t a phase.
17 of Jennifer Lopez's R&B joints and Hip Hop features that still hit
Some people still talk about Jennifer Lopez like she only lived in shiny pop hooks and rom-com soundtracks. Cool story, but the records say something else.

From the jump, J. Lo built a lane where radio-ready melodies met New York drums, rap features, and that slick R&B bounce that dominated the turn of the millennium.

This list isn’t about the crossover club smashes or the “let’s chase a trend” moments. It’s about the cuts where she leaned into her Bronx DNA.

These are the ones powered by hard drums, streetwise guest verses, and choruses made to ride shotgun with your windows down.

A lot of it comes down to timing and taste. She treated remixes like main events, pulled rappers into the center of the record (not just the outro), and picked beats that let her sing tough, not just pretty.

So yes, this is for the haters. These 17 picks show how she moved with heavyweight collaborators, kept the energy even when the sound shifted,

and still pops up in today’s rap-adjacent conversations with the right feature at the right time. Press play and argue with the speakers.

This was J.Lo in grown-woman R&B mode with warm vocals, slow-burn tension, and a hook that sat in your chest. The video got just as much conversation, but the song itself quietly held its own, peaking at No. 32 on the Billboard Hot 100.

The Bronx stamp felt real on this Top 3 Hot 100 hit, not cosplay. Yonkers’ own Jadakiss and Styles P pulled up with that early-2000s street-poise, and J.Lo stayed locked in on the message: Fame didn’t delete the hometown.

This one played like a victory lap with a wink. Cardi’s presence gave it extra spice, and Khaled did what he does: Loud energy, big branding. “Dinero” still cracked the Hot 100, peaking at No. 80, and hit No. 1 on Billboard’s Latin Airplay chart.

Early J.Lo, heavy New York. Big Pun and Fat Joe brought that classic uptown edge, and the record felt like it came from a time when radio loved a real rap feature. It peaked at No. 51 on the Hot 100, but the cultural placement was bigger than the number.
17 of Jennifer Lopez's R&B joints and Hip Hop features that still hit
This is modern J.Lo tapping in with Latto for a remix that added some snap and talk-your-talk attitude. It didn’t come in as a Hot 100 moment, but it did show up on Billboard airplay charts (including Pop Airplay) and even landed on U.K. Singles Sales.

If someone tried to erase J.Lo’s rap-and-R&B era, start here. This “Murder Remix” flipped the whole feel into a radio monster, and Ja Rule’s chemistry with her became a real storyline. Hot 100 peak: No. 1 (and it ranked high on Billboard’s year-end list for 2001).