Friday, April 24, 2026

Rashad x Confidence "Non-Stop" [SINGLE]

Below System Records has unearthed another unreleased gem from the duo of Rashad And Confidence. “Non Stop” was recorded in 2011 as part of the sessions for highly regarded The Element Of Surprise LP sessions. On par with the best moments of that album, this unreleased gem is possessed by Confidence’s use of boomin’ drums and piano/horn stabs, fluid cuts from DJ Technic and Rashad’s smooth lyrical delivery. The result goes down as a spiritual sibling of the 90's era Hip-Hop sound

Listen to “Non Stop via streaming services: https://bsr.ffm.to/nonstop

Vinyl grit, analog warmth, booming low end and an ethereal jazz element.

“Non Stop” as well as another unreleased track “Feel It” and 2019 single “Desires” will be part of the Below System 2xLP vinyl edition of The Element Of Surprise.

Listen to “Feel It”: https://bsr.ffm.to/feelit

Pre-orders for the vinyl is available now via the link below and will start shipping in early May.


Rashad, a Brooklyn NY emcee who sports a nimble and rapid flow excels at making anthemic choruses interspersed with highly detailed bars. Examples of album topics include a vivid picture of the hood while making a cautionary tale of its pitfalls (“The City”), his personal emcee origin story (“Days Of My Youth”), and the results of low motivation (“Pass Me By”) among others.

Boston based producer Confidence has made a career of sample chopping and analog warm heaters. He also tends to favor the one emcee/one producer line-up of the golden years. This extends to his recent collaborative LP's on Below System Records including Library Of Sound with M-Dot and Kool Moe Dese with Big Dese.

Konflik "Let Me Be Me" (feat. Craig G & A.Plus) [VIDEO]

AfterLyfe’s leading MC, Konflik, returns with his latest single, “Let Me Be Me” featuring Juice Crew’s freestyle legend Craig G and Souls of Mischief/Hiero founder A.Plus. The track blends sharp lyricism, clever storytelling, and undeniable authenticity over a smooth, soulful production by 10x platinum producer/engineer, NasteeLuvzYou.

“Let Me Be Me” delivers a powerful message aimed at doubters and critics, reinforcing individuality and artistic integrity. Accompanied by a visually striking music video filmed in the snow-capped mountains of Vermont, the release pairs compelling wordplay with a raw, no nonsense tone.

This single marks the third release from Konflik’s upcoming third album, “3rd Q.T.R. – Quote Of The Raven”, available via AfterLyfe’s Bandcamp page.

Kista & Glad2Mecha "Thrifting Gems" [ALBUM]

 

01. (Intro) Keep On
02. Gotta Get Mine (Feat. Masta Ace)
03. The Jig Is Up (Interlude)
04. Deceptions
05. Facts Of Life
06. Jewels (Interlude)
07. Hard To Be Great
08. The Feel (Interlude)
09. Its Been A Long Time
10. The Dig (Interlude)
11. Straight Vibing (Feat. Big Shug)
12. 2 The Grave (Outro)

More than a decade after their debut "Collecting Dust," North Yorkshire producer Kista and Arizona MC Glad2Mecha return to Soundweight Records with "Thrifting Gems" – and the core of what made the first album work has not been reworked, it has been deepened. Kista's production remains rooted in hypnotic, melodic jazz-sample digging: dusty drums, warm loops, the kind of texture that rewards headphone listening and patient ears. Glad2Mecha handles all the writing and performance, approaching bars with the measured, thought-provoking delivery the duo established on their debut. Two significant guest appearances extend the project outward: Masta Ace brings his Queens pedigree and characteristically precise storytelling to "Gotta Get Mine," while Big Shug, a longtime Gang Starr Foundation member, appears on the '90s boom bap-rooted "Straight Vibing." Cover photography comes from Que Points, shot at House of Oldies and A1 Records in New York City – both legendary crate-digger destinations, which fits the album's thematic orientation exactly. The project is dedicated to the memory of Jimmie Wells.

Sam Krats "It's Going Down" (feat. Guilty Simpson & DJ Rasp) b/w "360 (New Brand Remix)" (feat. ED O.G, Jeru the Damaja & El Da Sensei) [SINGLE]

 

Bristol producer Sam Krats has been quietly building one of the most consistent transatlantic catalogs in UK hip-hop, and this heavyweight 7" single is another marker in that run. The A-side, "It's Going Down," pairs Krats' production with Detroit's Guilty Simpson – a pairing that works precisely because neither needs to overstate the case. Simpson's delivery is characteristically blunt and grounded, Pete Webb's bass sits in the pocket, and DJ Rasp handles the cuts. The whole thing is mixed by Krats and mastered by Matt Colton at Metropolis, which gives it a density that carries on wax. The B-side is where things get historically interesting: the New Brand Remix of "360" brings in ED O.G, Jeru the Damaja, and El Da Sensei – three MCs whose pedigree stretches back to foundational early-'90s East Coast records – remixed by the duo Nick Doobay and Pete Webb. It reads less like a bonus and more like an argument about where the lineage lives. The single is extracted from Krats' forthcoming double album "Culture" on PCP Records and Revorg Records.

MC Serch "Questions" [SINGLE]


Hip-hop veteran MC Serch makes a high-stakes return with his new single "Questions," a sharp and unflinchingly honest reintroduction to the game. Serving as the lead cut from his forthcoming EP Millions Of Zeroes, the track benefits from the cohesive production of Apathy, setting a gritty tone for what’s to come. The project marks a major milestone, reuniting Serch with 3rd Bass partner Pete Nice, while also drafting in modern titans like Boldy James and Ice Cube. It’s a powerful display of veteran expertise meeting modern urgency, proving that Serch's voice carries as much weight as ever in 2026.

D12 "Tear It Down" (feat. Xzibit & B-Real) [SINGLE]


D12 drop a new single featuring Xzibit and B-Real. No producer credits or broader album context are confirmed at this point – release details are limited to the single itself, so further background will need to follow once more information is available.

Cypress Hill x Mellow Man Ace "Campeones" [SINGLE]


The collaboration between Cypress Hill and Mellow Man Ace has a family logic that goes beyond the music: Mellow Man Ace – real name Ulpiano Reyes – is the older brother of Cypress Hill's B-Real, and one of the pioneers of bilingual Latin hip-hop, having made his mark with "Mentirosa" in 1989. The reunion brings two foundational voices in West Coast Latinx rap together on the same track.

Chubs "D.R.U.G.S." [SINGLE]


Chubs drops a raw, unfiltered single with "D.R.U.G.S.," leaning into the gritty storytelling he’s known for. The track relies on a minimalist beat that allows his lyrics to carry the weight, offering a stark look at street realities without any unnecessary polish.

Block McCloud x Arichussettes x Problemattik "Sewa Side Squad: The Warriors" [ALBUM]


Block McCloud, Arichussettes, and Problemattik return as Sewa Side Squad with "The Warriors," the long-anticipated second album from the trio. Their debut set a high bar for the collective's lyrical and sonic identity, and the follow-up arrives with thirteen tracks. Block McCloud has built a well-regarded career across multiple collaborative projects with a reputation for technical precision and consistent delivery. Full production credits, features, and label details are not confirmed at this time – the release is noted here as submitted, pending further information.

Termanology & Royal Flush "Angel Whispers" (feat. Dru Hoffa) [SINGLE]


Termanology from Lawrence, Massachusetts and Queens veteran Royal Flush link up for "Angel Whispers," featuring Dru Hoffa. Both MCs have built long careers in the independent Boom Bap lane – Termanology through years of output with producers like DJ Premier, Pete Rock, and Statik Selektah, and Royal Flush through his deeply rooted Queens affiliations and a voice that carries the weight of the mid-'90s Queensbridge and DITC-adjacent aesthetic without imitation. The pairing is a natural one – two artists who have never needed the mainstream to validate their craft.

Billy Danze (M.O.P) x TooBusy "The Answer" [ALBUM]


01. Intro
02. The Answer (Feat. Lady Lee)
03. Got Time (Feat. Jadakiss)
04. Brooklyn Confidential
05. Let It Be (Feat. B-Real)
06. Gotham Part 2 (Feat. Ghostface Killah)
07. Beginnings (Feat. Busta Rhymes & Nova LeReign)
08. Blessings And Prayers (Feat. Lady Lee)
09. What If (Feat. Conway The Machine & Showtyme)
10. For You (Feat. Styles P & Pharoahe Monch)
11. Hope (Feat. Evidence)
12. Maverick (Feat. Inspectah Deck)
13. The Fix (Feat. Lady Lee)
14. In Case You Forgot (Feat. Lil Fame)
15. Win Or Lose (Feat. Redman)

Thirty-plus years in, Billy Danze has not recalibrated his coordinates. "The Answer" is his third solo album, produced in its entirety by Swiss producer TooBusy – the same collaboration that produced the earlier "We Busy (The Listening Session)" – and it is a sixteen-track record built to the dimensions Danze established in M.O.P. and has refused to abandon since. The feature list is a statement unto itself: Lil Fame, Ghostface Killah, Jadakiss, Pharoahe Monch, Redman, Evidence, Styles P, and Inspectah Deck – artists assembled not as a commercial strategy but as a mutual recognition of shared principles. TooBusy's production, demonstrated across the singles including "Let It Be" (featuring B-Real) and "No Losses," keeps the drum weight and directness that Danze needs without becoming a pastiche of M.O.P.'s most aggressive moments. Danze's delivery across the previewed material carries the authority of someone who has never needed to perform conviction because he has always had the real thing. Released on WeBusy.

Nems & Ron Browz "I Should Boom You" [ALBUM]


01. Hottest In America
02. Earl Manigault (Feat. Lil Fame)
03. First48
04. Kruger
05. Here I Go (Feat. Papoose)
06. P Anthem
07. Nothing Gon’ Stop Me
08. The Mush
09. Bendicion
10. The Bar Exam (Black Moon Remix)

Ron Browz made his name producing beats that became part of rap history – he built the instrumental for Nas' "Ether" and Big L's "Ebonics," which puts his resume in rare company. "I Should Boom You" is his first proper collaborative album with Brooklyn battle veteran and Gorilla Nems, and the concept is stated clearly by both artists: drum-heavy production matched against aggressive, unvarnished flow, as a direct response to the no-drums, sample-only aesthetic that has become the dominant mode in the lyrical underground. Whether you agree with the critique or not, the argument is audible on the record – Browz leans hard into percussion and Nems delivers with the controlled menace he built his reputation on through years of battling and recording. Ten tracks, fully produced by Browz, with features including Lil Fame and Papoose rounding out the Brooklyn and Harlem gravitational pull. Released on Gorilla Music and Etherboy Music Group.

Taiyamo Denku x Bofaat "Way I Am" (feat. Killah Priest) [VIDEO]


Taiyamo Denku and producer Bofaat drop "Way I Am," a single from their album "Darker Side of Light," featuring Killah Priest of the Wu-Tang Family. Bofaat operates within the CyphaDen Music network and carries an affiliation with the Snowgoons, which places him in a specific lane of heavy, international underground production. The video features cameos from CyphaDen emcees Pestilence and Urban Legend, keeping the release embedded in the collective's broader community. Killah Priest's presence brings the Wu-Tang gravitational pull that has defined a significant portion of his collaborative work over the last decade – his lyrical style, rooted in esoteric and spiritual reference, provides a contrast to Denku's more direct approach.

Q-Unique x DJ Rhettmatic "Fire Vision" (feat. LMNO) [VIDEO]


DJ Rhettmatic's credentials in this music go back to the mid-'80s – he is a co-founder of the Beat Junkies, a two-time ITF Team World Champion (1997/1998), a DMC West Coast Champion, and the DJ and production backbone of the Visionaries. "Fire Vision" is the second single from "The QR Code," his forthcoming collaborative album with Q-Unique, where Rhettmatic handles all production and cuts and Q-Unique supplies the verses. The track features fellow Visionaries MC LMNO, which gives the pairing an internal coherence – both artists have a long shared history within the West Coast underground ecosystem. The album title itself carries a double meaning the duo has articulated: QR as in Q-Unique and Rhettmatic, but also as a code – a set of principles around pure intent and authenticity in hip-hop that both artists describe as central to their practice. Distributed through Soulspazm. Directed by Ahren Anthony.

Benny The Butcher & Fuego Base "Ashes In The Safe" [VIDEO]


Fuego Base has been one of Black Soprano Family's most reliable contributors since the collective's formation as a Griselda spinoff – his 2023 project "Biggest Since Camby" established him as more than a supporting player. "Ashes In The Safe" gives him a proper platform alongside Benny The Butcher, and he does not waste it. The album runs nine tracks in under twenty-six minutes, which is the correct decision: the production is cold, mob-influenced, and built on eerie loops and heavy drums, and a longer runtime would exhaust that aesthetic rather than deepen it. Fuego matches Benny in terms of presence – his punchlines land, his flows are controlled, and his verses on tracks like "The Fighting Irish" and "Like It Is" demonstrate that the comparisons to Jadakiss in tone are not accidental. Benny brings the veteran authority the project needs as an anchor, and the guest appearances from OT The Real, Rick Hyde, and Sule keep the album inside the B$F family without feeling insular. Released on Black Soprano Family, LLC.

Skweeks x John Canada "Celtic Pride" [EP]

 

Gritty City Records has been one of the most consistent independent collectives out of Richmond, Virginia for over a decade, weathering personal losses and building a catalog rooted in grit, directness, and regional identity. "Celtic Pride" reunites MC Skweeks with producer John Canada for what the Gritty City camp calls their second collaborative album together, following a run that stretches back to their 2017 joint work and Canada's earlier production on Gritty City releases. John Canada handles all production on the project, and the mix belongs to collective lynchpin Johnny Ciggs – whose fingerprints are on most of the label's output. Skweeks writes and performs all verses, with contributions from Rah Scrilla appearing twice across the tracklist, and Johnny Ciggs and Starr Nyce each showing up once. The track listing – from "Scurvy" and "Dali's Ocelot" to the title track – shows a range of tone without abandoning the label's core commitment to straightforward, unvarnished delivery. Released on Gritty City Records.

KAPPA-O x Cevasco "Il Lato Oscuro" [VIDEO]


"Il Lato Oscuro" – the dark side – is a single extracted from KAPPA-O's project "KAPPA-O vs KAPPA-O," released through Hard Record Bologna and Hard Squat Crew. The video is unofficial, but the track points toward a full album built around a self-confrontation concept: the MC positioned against himself, lyrically and conceptually. Production is by Cevasco, with Alberto Portland and Bibbia Violenta listed as executive producers. KAPPA-O operates in the Italian underground scene out of Bologna, a city with a distinct rap tradition tied to independence, political consciousness, and raw street lyricism. Detailed album credits and track listing are not yet confirmed, but the single signals the broader project is imminent.

Da Dysfunkshunal Familee "All This Time" (feat. ASARU, Craig G & Lucky Tatt) [SINGLE]


Da Dysfunkshunal Familee return with "All This Time," a single featuring ASARU, Craig G, and Lucky Tatt. This is the radio edit version. Producer credits and further project context are not confirmed at this point – the single stands as the available information. Craig G's presence connects the record to the classic Juice Crew lineage, and the feature list points toward an East Coast orientation that keeps the traditional boom bap axis intact.

Spoda x Sovath "Destinies" [EP]

 

Spoda teams up with producer Sovath for the "Destinies EP," a concise collection of hard-hitting tracks. Sovath’s production is lean and menacing, providing the perfect stage for Spoda’s focused delivery. The title track featuring Brogawd is a particular highlight of this potent release.

Magno Garcia x EvillDewer "So We Loved Ourselves" [VIDEO]


London-based MC Magno Garcia and producer EvillDewer didn't rush back from an eight-year absence – they came back when they had something worth saying, and So We Loved Ourselves reflects that discipline in every bar and every chord change. EvillDewer holds the production throughout: melodic jazz-rooted sampling, unhurried grooves, a palette that gives Garcia room to breathe without letting him disappear. Garcia approaches the album as a writer first – his delivery is measured and deliberate, his structures literary rather than formulaic, his subject matter moving between personal reckoning and wider cultural reference. "The Jazz In My Head" captures that tension best, where production and lyricism feel genuinely intertwined rather than layered on top of one another. "Mansa Musa $$$" expands the frame toward history and legacy without the forced gravity that topic often invites. This is not an album about comeback. It is an album about what accumulates when you are honest with yourself over time.

Mike Titan x Tali Rodriguez "Forever Is a Dangerous Place" [EP]

 

Since 2022, Bronx MC Mike Titan and producer Tali Rodriguez have been building a mythology that draws from comic-book cosmology, underground ethics, and a distinctly working-class Bronx voice. "Forever Is a Dangerous Place" is their latest collaborative EP – three tracks extending that framework, with DJ Decepta handling scratches across the project. The feature credits span Generalbackpain and Kingdom Kome on the opening track, Money Mogly on the second, and Here$ Johnny and Orion on the third – a roster that keeps the project firmly within the extended circle Titan and Rodriguez have been cultivating. Rodriguez produces, mixes, and masters everything himself, which gives the project a sonic consistency that holds even across different tempos and moods. Titan's delivery – gritty, precise, Bronx-rooted – functions as the project's anchor. The EP is self-released on Titan's Bandcamp.

Travisty The Lazy Emcee x DJ Kawon "Know My Name" [VIDEO]


Travisty The Lazy Emcee and Dallas producer DJ Kawon continue to push their collaborative album "What a Time to Be Alive" with the third official music video, "Know My Name." DJ Kawon produced the entire album – his aesthetic leans toward dark, smoky, abstract boom bap with what the artists themselves describe as a Bombay-influenced sensibility, which gives the project a distinct atmosphere that sets it apart from both New York and LA reference points. Travisty's delivery is deliberate and unhurried, his pen focused on intricate wordplay and grounded storytelling; the BenchWarmers Clique affiliation signals his roots in the independent underground. The video was shot and edited by 40orty and Infinitenine. Physical formats come in cassette and CD through Mad Good Records in New York City, with a limited vinyl pressing handled directly by Travisty – the kind of artist-controlled distribution model that keeps releases authentic and scarcity intentional.

Rosco P Coldchain & Nicholas Craven "Die Slow" (feat. Bruiser Wolf) [VIDEO]


Montréal producer Nicholas Craven has built one of the most impressive production resumes in the contemporary underground without ever losing his identity in the process – from Griselda collabs to Mach-Hommy, Roc Marciano, Boldy James, and Ransom, his catalog reads as a detailed map of where the hardest and most literary rap has been made in the last decade. "Die Slow" is the third video extracted from his collaborative album with Rosco P Coldchain, "Play With Something Safe" – produced by Craven, mixed and mastered by Roberto Viglione, and featuring Bruiser Wolf, whose deadpan Detroit delivery continues to be one of the more distinctive voices in the scene. Directed by Kogan, the video follows the same visual aesthetic that has accompanied prior singles from the project. The album itself is a sustained argument for Craven's ability to create coherent, immersive listening environments rather than just providing individual beat placements.

John Brown The Rapper & Da Beatminerz "Extraordinary" [VIDEO]


John Brown The Rapper stakes his claim alongside the architects of the dark Brooklyn sound, Da Beatminerz, for their lead single "Extraordinary". Sharpened by the rigorous lyricism training at Pendulum Ink, Brown delivers a masterclass in cadence and layered wordplay over a menacing, gutter-level soundscape. The collaboration feels like a bridge between the golden era's rugged soul and 2026's technical evolution. With a cinematic video directed by Victorious De Costa that celebrates 90s culture, the trio sets a high bar for their forthcoming full-length project, Waxing In Mecca, featuring heavyweights like Your Old Droog and Smif-N-Wessun.

Carlito Black "Rap Is Back" [VIDEO]


Carlito Black comes out of Binghamton, New York – the 607, Upstate, a scene that doesn't get the visibility of the city but has its own underground current. "Rap Is Back" is presented as an official music video, shot and edited by Lilkurby out of New Wave Vizions, which has been documenting the local underground scene. The track is a declarative statement – the title makes the intent plain – and the video format grounds it in the regional community that produced it. No album or EP context is confirmed; this reads as a standalone visual drop.

Epic & Deadly Stare "A library called Calder (Instrumental)" [ALBUM]


In 2025, Epic and Deadly Stare released their collaboration album A library called Calder, a world-building hip hop album combining the thought-provoking narratives of Epic over the ever-evolving cinematic production of Deadly Stare. With instrumentals this layered alongside the numerous unpredictable change-ups throughout, it was inevitable these instrumentals would get their own separate release. It’s evident these beats hold their own even without an MC involved. A library called Calder (Instrumental) reveals Deadly Stare as an intricate producer with an eye for detail and a tendency to take a beat to unexpected places. 

Produced and mixed by Deadly Stare

Mastered by W.C. Spicer


Thursday, April 23, 2026

Lord Willin x Alias Blekaut "Back In The Days" (feat. Wolfman Jeckyll) [VIDEO]


Lord Willin and Wolfman Jeckyll have a documented history — their collaborative LP Crooked City is a street-level record about Providence, RI, produced by Wolfman and built around their shared geography and perspective. "Back In The Days" extends that partnership by bringing in Alias Blekaut, a Polish producer who runs Studio Alias and handles both the mix and mastering here. The beat is deep and deliberate, old school in its bones without performing nostalgia, and both MCs fill it with bars that are grounded rather than retrospective — this isn't a reflection on the past so much as a statement about who they are now. The collaboration across continents is seamless; Alias Blekaut's production aesthetic clearly aligns with where these two have always operated.

Jazz Spastiks "Rock The Block" (feat. Wee Bee Foolish) [VIDEO]


Jazz Spastiks spent seven years building Camera of Sound, and that patience shows in every groove — this is a record assembled with the patience of people who know the difference between a beat that's done and a beat that's right. "Rock The Block" is one of the album's most energized moments: uptempo, dusty, constructed with the head-nod science that the duo has refined across collaborations with some of the sharpest underground MCs in the game. Wee Bee Foolish — Yeshua DaPoEd and Ken Boogaloo — deliver fluidly over a track that demands it, the kind of pairing where the MC and the beat feel found rather than forced. The full album's guest roster — Artifacts, Count Bass D, C-Rayz Walz, Kool Keith, The Procussions — isn't assembled for name recognition, it's assembled because Jazz Spastiks clearly sought out people who would do right by the music. Available on vinyl, cassette, and CD.

Emskee x MiLKCRATE "Identity (MiLKCRATE Remix)" [SINGLE]

 

Emskee and MiLKCRATE's Vintage Souvenirs is an album made by two people who've put in enough time together that the collaboration sounds inevitable rather than constructed. MiLKCRATE — Toronto-based, running a consistent production catalog that keeps returning to the same classic values — handles every beat on the project, and the "Identity" remix package extends that work with a main, radio, and instrumental version. The original track was already one of the album's anchors, and the remix doesn't reinvent it so much as refocus it, putting different air around the same core. Emskee writes with the measured confidence of an MC who's been doing this long enough to know exactly where to place every word. The Good People label keeps its catalog tight and purposeful, and this single lands in that same tradition.

Jude Laroux & La Vilerie "Scope" [VIDEO]


"Scope" comes from Bon Appétit, the latest project between Jude Laroux and La Vilerie, the French producer and Vilmuzik Records founder who has built a quietly consistent catalog of underground boom bap with a distinctly European sensibility. La Vilerie's production here does what it always does well: soulful loops, crisp drums, and an atmospheric quality that creates depth without relying on elaborate construction. Jude Laroux brings bars that sit comfortably at the intersection of technical precision and genuine introspection — the kind of MC whose lyrics reward repeat listens without being obtuse about it. The partnership has deepened since Marie Laveau and Bon Appétit builds on that foundation with confidence.

L-Biz "Stop It" [SINGLE]

 

L-Biz — Donald Foreman — comes through with "Stop It" as a proper DJ pack, clean, dirty, and instrumental versions all accounted for. Josiah Haygood lays down a production that's built for open space and warm weather, not technical contemplation — the kind of beat that wants to move people rather than challenge them, and it earns that ambition. L-Biz rides it with assurance, declaring the summer season opened with the energy of someone who's been waiting for the right moment. Short, purposeful, designed to work in rotation. Sometimes that's exactly what the format calls for.

P45 "It's All Gone P's Tongue" [VIDEO]


Mob Rule Records out of Lincoln, UK, has built a catalog that sits in the gap between boom bap construction and a more hallucinatory, unsettled underground — and P45's new single with OrmusStool fits squarely in that space. The production is deliberately creepy: textured layers beneath a boom bap skeleton, a beat that doesn't resolve where you expect it to. P45 operates in that discomfort zone lyrically as well, delivering a worldview framed as a prison matrix that most people don't register they're inside. There's no uplift here, no redemption arc — just an unflinching read on reality delivered with the conviction of someone who's thought about it for a long time. Mob Rule keeps doing what Mob Rule does.

James Joyce the Squatch "Pick Your Poison" [VIDEO]


Four albums deep and James Joyce the Squatch is finally operating in a setting that matches the weight of what he's putting on the mic. Discomfort Inn, his debut on Stray's Rogue Hollow imprint, pairs him with Charlie Beans as primary producer — and that partnership is the clearest upgrade his catalog has seen. Beans builds beats that sit in the uncomfortable middle ground between sinister boom bap and chopped G-funk undertow, giving Squatch's delivery room to breathe without softening its edge. "Pick Your Poison" captures that dynamic well: the production is controlled menace, and Squatch approaches the bars with the confessional bluntness of someone getting things off their chest rather than performing for an audience. Mixed by Beans, mastered by Eddie Logix. This one is a proper introduction to a catalog worth digging.

Serial Killers (Xzibit, B-Real, Demrick) "By Any Means" [VIDEO]


Serial Killers return with their tightest project to date, and the key to that cohesion is straightforward: Scoop DeVille handles every beat on This Thing of Ours, giving the album a unified sonic architecture that their earlier efforts sometimes lacked. "By Any Means" is one of the album's most uncompromising moments — heavy low end, no ornament, a track that functions like a threat delivered calmly. DeVille holds down a verse himself and earns his spot, which says something about how embedded he is in this group's chemistry rather than merely serving it. Xzibit closes tracks with condensed mob logic and an authority that hasn't softened, B-Real works the middle with that nasal, battle-worn delivery Cypress Hill built a career around, and Demrick opens with the dry precision of someone who's been quietly putting in reps for years. The La Cosa Nostra concept isn't window dressing — it's structural, written into the cadences and the content with enough specificity to feel earned.

Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Ghostface Killah & Shyst Vader "Heavy Artillery" (feat. DJ Profluent) [VIDEO]


Ghostface Killah doesn't show up to compilations to coast and "Heavy Artillery" makes that clear from the jump. Produced entirely by DJ Profluent, whose sonic fingerprint runs through the whole Reshaping The Culture Vol. 1 project, the track pairs the Wu-Tang veteran with Shyst Vader, a New York-born, Raleigh-raised MC who carries years of underground groundwork into every verse. The drums are weighted and deliberate, the kind of boom bap architecture that demands a certain level of pen to compete on — and Shyst Vader, who describes himself as "The Legendary Rookie," arrives with enough command to hold his own. The compilation itself, executive produced by EMG CEO Jeffrey Burton and hosted by DJ Whoo Kid, pulls together a generational cross-section of East Coast names, and this particular pairing lands as one of its more focused moments: two MCs, one producer, no filler.

Sean Links x True Cipher "Rudeboy Sean" [VIDEO]


Sean Links doesn't perform nostalgia — he operates from it as a foundation. The Rocky Mount, North Carolina MC has been building his catalog on a single principle: lyricism first, everything else second. That principle was sparked by Enter The 36 Chambers, and decades later it still shapes every technical choice he makes on the mic. "Rudeboy Sean," produced by True Cipher and serving as a preview of the forthcoming Chalky White album, sits precisely in that lane — production that gives the MC room to work, drums that move without cluttering, and enough sonic restraint to let the pen carry the full weight. Links doesn't need the beat to rescue him, and True Cipher knows it. What makes this single worth noting beyond its immediate impact is where it sits geographically: North Carolina underground hip-hop operating entirely in a New York boom bap lineage, with no Southern genre signifiers diluting the approach. Clean, sharp, and built to last a few hundred plays before you reach for the next thing.

Prince AK "This Ain't That" [ALBUM]

 

Prince AK has spent years building quietly — through the 050 Boyz movement, through Treach's orbit, through a Jersey-to-New York underground lane that never needed mainstream validation to stay relevant. This Ain't That is a six-track statement entirely in that tradition, produced front to back by Buff Beats, whose production locks in where the classic boom bap mechanics — weighted kicks, dusty sample textures, clean hi-hat swing — still do the talking. The title alone signals intent: this isn't whatever's currently trending, and AK has no interest in pretending otherwise. Ice T and Treach appear as guests, less as cosigns than as natural extensions of a network AK has moved through for the better part of two decades. Short, focused, no runtime padding. For heads who still rate Jersey's contribution to the East Coast sound, this is a proper entry.

BAWON "World World (Committee of 300)" [VIDEO]


BAWON arrives on the second video from Winter In America (The Epstein Files Disclosure) with a track that uses Gil Scott-Heron's legacy as a moral compass rather than a mere reference point. Formerly recording as Stalin The Innercity Rebel, the Queens artist has rebranded and refocused — and the rebrand carries conceptual weight. "World World (Committee of 300)" goes directly at institutional power, shadow governance, and media complicity, shot at a cemetery with documentary footage woven into the visual. The boom bap production keeps the record grounded in East Coast tradition while the lyrical content pushes toward the kind of unfiltered political writing that conscious hip-hop often approaches but rarely commits to fully. Free Em All Records functions as both imprint and statement — a structure built to avoid the exact conflicts of interest the music describes. Covered by both The Source and Hype Magazine, the project has already moved beyond the underground-only circuit without compromising the message or the independence.

Mista Pigz & Mike iLL "Sewer Plant Kids" [ALBUM]

 

Sewer Plant Kids is the kind of record that only exists because two people decided to document something real before time moved past it. Mista Pigz — one of Upstate New York's most consistent underground voices, a fixture in the Capital District scene since long before Albany rap got any outside attention — and producer Mike iLL, whose relationship with Pigz runs back through shared neighborhoods in the 845 and 518, finally deliver the collaborative full-length they've been sitting on. Mike iLL handles all ten productions and adds cuts across several tracks, keeping the sound unified: deliberate drum patterns, textured samples, the kind of boom bap that breathes without rushing. Mista Pigz brings the storytelling of someone who's seen Upstate New York from inside — not nostalgia, just precision. Shyste Chronkyte and Animal Cracker appear as guests, both brief and fitting. For anyone who's followed Pigz's output through Final Word Records and beyond, this is a record they've been owed for a while.

Gaine$ x NOM "The Otherside Of $$$" [SINGLE]

Buffalo wordsmith Gaine$ has reached "The Otherside Of $$$" in new single (and accompanying video shot by Austin Barker).  The first leak from his forthcoming LP, Mr. Gaine$ to drop on May 1st the track marks a milestone in the emcee's growth.  As he relates "a lot of my music depicts my transformations in life, this one is about my journey from a petty hustler, on government assistance to moving legally and learning how to step back from making art to balance my priorities."


Glacially cool with echoed vibes and a languid piano, this is late-nite reflection music for Gaine$ to immerse the listener in.  The single as well as the album is produced by NOM, whom Gaine$ met in a studio session several years ago.  

The album cover as well as recurring soundbytes throughout the project reference the character, Mr. Gaines from the beloved 90's sitcom, A Different World.  Fans of the show will recall Mr. Gaines as the surly owner of the Hillman College eatery, The Pit.  Speaking on the connection, the emcee said "My surname is also Gaines and like that character represents wisdom to the younger students I'd like to think that I represent that somewhat amongst my friends and peers.  I'm also relaying what I have learned/experienced in hopes that listeners can take something from it."

Album guests on the project are sparse but Buffalo-centric including Griselda's own Brother Tom SOS on the track "Ms. Merrimac" as well as Gaine$ brothers-in-rhyme Toneyboi and Skate Cobain.


Tuesday, April 21, 2026

CRIMEAPPLE "Beemer On Broadway" [ALBUM]


01. Blue Angel (Prod. By Preservation)
02. Fireworks (Prod. By Loman)
03. Open Road (Feat. Seafood Sam) (Prod. By Loman)
04. Coming Down (Prod. By QThree)
05. Patio Bonito (Feat. Estee Nack) (Prod. By Wino Willy)
06. Broadway Interlude (Prod. By Comma Uno)
07. No Reason (Feat. Mir Nicolas) (Prod. By Comma Uno)
08. Rosie Perez (Prod. By DJ Skizz)
09. Jean Paul (Feat. Jay Worthy) (Prod. By Loman)
10. Beef (Prod. By Cuffedgod)
11. Pigs Feet (Prod. By Comma Uno)

The ineffable CRIMEAPPLE is back once again and this time with an offshoot from his "Jaguar On Palisade" series titled "Beemer On Broadway." Features from Estee Nack, Jay Worthy, Seafood Sam, and Mir Nicholas!! Production from DJ Skizz, Wino Willy, DJ Preservation, LOMAN, and more!! Make sure you peep "Open Road," "Patio Bonito," and "Rosie Perez."

Lozee x Brokenfinga "All Elements" [SINGLE]


Lozee drops the new single "All Elements." Produced by Brokenfinga.
Available on all streaming platforms!

TNF Inc. (Thrust x Frankenstein) "Smooth Therapy" [SINGLE]


TNF Inc. (Thrust and Frankenstein) are back for "Smooth Therapy."
This new single is available on the offcial website only https://tnf-inc.com/pages/releases

Benny Slumz x Tone Spliff "So What" [VIDEO]


Tone Spliff doesn't ornament. His production sits in the lineage of Premier and Pete Rock without mimicking either — rugged chops, carefully weighted drums, scratch hooks that earn their space by serving the song rather than showing off. "Behind The Smile" is the kind of album that rewards the listener who wants real over slick: Benny Slumz rapping about depression, survival, and the stubborn refusal to fold, over production that never softens the blow. "So What" is the album's philosophical center — not an anthem, not a pity party, just a hard-eyed look at keeping it moving when the weight gets heavy. It lands because neither artist is performing toughness; they're reporting it. Ruste Juxx contributes the sole feature elsewhere on the record.

CODENINE x ??? "MEMENTOMORI (Preview: THE FIRST SUPPER)" [VIDEO]


CODENINE has been building a catalogue in the margins of the Massachusetts underground for years — aligned with Estee Nack's extended network, consistently working with A1Beatz whose production chemistry with the Lynn MC goes back to "ELCIRCULOVICIOSO" in 2018. "MEMENTOMORI" arrives as the announcement for "THE FIRST SUPPER," releasing imminently, and the single does exactly what a teaser track should do: establishes tone without giving away the whole blueprint. A1Beatz builds something heavy and precise, Codenine raps with the quiet intensity of someone who knows something the listener doesn't yet. The conceptual framing — memento mori, a last supper, a mystery collaborator hidden behind question marks — signals this is being approached as a coherent work, not a content drop.

Emerg Da Mc x BK Bonez "LOST TAPES" [ALBUM]

 

BK Bonez operates in a specific register — beats that feel excavated rather than constructed, lo-fi textures that are clearly intentional, a stripped minimalism that places the entirety of each track's weight on the MC. Emerg Da Mc is equipped for exactly that kind of exposure: dense rhyme patterns, unadorned delivery, bars that don't ask for your attention but hold it anyway. The Grave Wax Music catalogue they've been building together — "The Banquet," "Odd Timez," and now "LOST TAPES" — has the consistency of a genuine creative partnership rather than a series of transactional collabs. "DOG WALK" with Baby Israel is a standout. This is boom bap that doesn't dress up, doesn't pitch to an algorithm, doesn't soften its edges for broader consumption — and that's the whole point.

HEARTBREAK JC x DJ MUGGS "FIFTH AVE" [VIDEO]


DJ Muggs doesn't sign acts as a courtesy — the Soul Assassins imprint has always been a curation of rawness, from its foundational Cypress Hill records through the series of collaborative albums with Roc Marciano, MF DOOM, and Rome Streetz that established his current status as underground rap's most consistent atmospheric architect. HEARTBREAK JC, a Memphis artist who has been building toward this moment through a series of increasingly focused releases, fits the Soul Assassins mold not because he sounds like what came before, but because he operates with the same commitment to unvarnished truth-telling over instrumentation that demands attention rather than comfort. "Fifth Ave" is another chapter in a 2026 collaborative run that has already yielded multiple EPs — the album is close.

SC Static x Raminbeatz "I Don't Smoke (For the Taste)" [VIDEO]


Fifteen-plus solo albums in, SC Static operates with the discipline of someone who has nothing left to prove and everything left to say. "The Sesquipedalian" — his debut collaboration with Vietnam-based producer raminbeatz — is notable partly for the geography: a Chester/Warwick MC and a producer operating from the other side of the world, finding common ground in a shared commitment to substance over surface. raminbeatz handles the full sonic architecture, production through mastering, and "I Don't Smoke (For the Taste)" shows the partnership working cleanly — atmospheric beats that give Static's vocabulary room to breathe, which is exactly what his style demands. The album title signals exactly what kind of MC you're dealing with, and the music delivers on that signal.

Jamal Gasol x Denny Laflare "Motion" [VIDEO]


Niagara Falls doesn't often get its name on the hip-hop map, but Jamal Gasol has been building a case for years — methodically, project by project, through the "World Is Piff" series and beyond. His partnership with Denny Laflare, whose Griselda affiliations speak to a shared taste for street-driven minimalism, has produced some of his most focused work, and "Motion" — a visual from their album "Get Me 2 Heaven" — is another example of that chemistry landing cleanly. Laflare's production is deliberately stripped: weight in the low end, space for Gasol's deliberate cadence to fill the room. There's no wasted motion in the rapping either, which is the whole point. RetroFilmz captures the environment with appropriate honesty.

Primo Profit, RLX & MichaelAngelo "02128" [VIDEO]


Primo Profit and MichaelAngelo have built one of the more interesting ongoing creative partnerships in the Boston underground — a Latin-inflected lyricism and a production approach that layers cinematic warmth over structural hardness, the two elements finding equilibrium across project after project. "GABO," titled in tribute to Gabriel García Márquez, carries that literary ambition without wearing it as a costume: the reference lives in the conceptual framework, in the weight with which Profit approaches language, not in obvious quotation. "01841 / 02128" grounds the project in geography — both ZIP codes mapping the Lynn/Boston corridor Profit calls home — making the magic realism feel earned rather than imported. With RLX contributing as a third voice, the album has room to breathe. Chow Films handles the visual.

BLOODBLIXING & LYNC LONE "THE BOTANIST (Gangsta Edition)" [ALBUM]

 

BLOODBLIXING has been running his own lane for years — a self-contained operation where he writes, produces, and mixes everything himself, with the rough edges presented as deliberate aesthetic rather than limitation. The Gangsta Edition series has become its own institution within the American underground, and "THE BOTANIST" continues that lineage with LYNC LONE as a constant presence, a creative foil who pushes the material without overshadowing it. Vic Spencer, AJ Suede, and Iceberg Theory round out a guest list that signals exactly what kind of listener this album is for — people who already know that AJ Suede's bars are built differently, that Iceberg Theory is operating on a frequency most MCs can't tune into. If the lo-fi mixing bothers you, this catalogue isn't for you. If it doesn't, you're already in.

Passport Rav x Bloo Azul "Smoker Lips" [VIDEO]


Three albums deep into their "83" series and the Jersey-Bronx duo of Passport Rav and Bloo Azul haven't lost a step — if anything, "83rd Strike" refines what was already a compelling partnership. Passport Rav's involvement extends well beyond the mic: he handles production credits, and took care of the entire mix and master, which gives the album a cohesion that most multi-producer projects lack. "Smoker Lips," produced by Showalter!, captures the duo at their most hypnotic — a track built on patient, suffocating pressure rather than any kind of flash, the kind of record where the atmosphere is the point and the bars confirm it. The title pays homage to Street Fighter, which is exactly the kind of detail that makes underground hip-hop fun.

UUuTANG MASKMAN "SANTI DISCIPLE OF THE 36TH CHAMBER" [ALBUM]

 

A dedication album done right is a rare thing — most collapse under the weight of their own reverence, losing the listener in tribute while failing to stand as a work in its own right. UUuTANG MASKMAN threads that needle on "SANTI DISCIPLE OF THE 36TH CHAMBER," a 23-track project that situates itself firmly in the Wu-Tang cosmology — the RZA production aesthetic, the Staten Island grit, the esoteric frameworks — while keeping the MC's own voice at the center. The guest roster moves from Killarmy-era figures to Kinetic 9 representing the next generation, and the span of that lineage is precisely what gives the project its authority. This isn't nostalgia tourism. It's an active claim on continuity.

Henri "Tonight Is The Night" [VIDEO]


With "Welcome To The Show" — released via Fat Beats and featuring production from DJ Premier alongside Grammy-winning contributors — Henri announced himself as one of the more considered arrivals in the modern underground: a rapper from Huntsville, Alabama with a firm grasp of East Coast lineage and the confidence to frame it as his own. "Tonight Is The Night" arrives as a deliberate exhale. Produced by Enrique1x, a veteran of the Huntsville scene, it leans into warmth and rhythm rather than grit, a party-adjacent track that sits comfortably alongside the album's heavier stretches without undermining them. The range is the point. Henri knows exactly what he's doing, and a track this easy-going requires just as much control as the grimy ones.

Eddie Kaine x BhramaBull "Smoking Burner" (feat. Reek Osama) [VIDEO]


Eddie Kaine has built one of the most quietly consistent catalogues in the Brooklyn underground — a rapper who never chases a trend, just keeps laying bricks. BhramaBull, stationed in LA, operates in a zone of heavy, excavated boom bap where the sample work feels geological rather than decorative, and that weight carries on "Smoking Burner." Pulled from the project "Still Tryin to Figure Me Out," the track plays to Kaine's core strength: storytelling stripped of excess, delivered with the quiet assurance of someone who's been doing this long enough to know exactly how hard to hit. Reek Osama adds presence without overstaying. The anime-inflected visual pairs well — stylised surface, grit underneath.

Monday, April 20, 2026

Billy Danze (M.O.P.) x TooBusy "No Losses" [VIDEO]


Thirty-plus years in and Billy Danze has not recalibrated his coordinates. "No Losses" is the fourth single ahead of his solo album "The Answer," produced by Too Busy, and it functions exactly as advertised: no concessions, no reach, no adjustment for an era that would have him do otherwise. Danze's delivery carries the authority of someone who has earned every bar twice over – his cadence, his attack, his unflinching directness all intact. As one half of M.O.P. he built an entire aesthetic on controlled aggression married to street principle, and this single draws from that same well. The "The Answer" album arrives imminently, and the assembled feature list – Lil Fame, Ghostface Killah, Jadakiss, Pharoahe Monch, Redman, Evidence, Styles P, Inspectah Deck among others – reads like a statement of allegiance to an era and an ethos. For those waiting: it won't be long now.

Jay Royale x Anibal Beats "Woes Of The Creator" [ALBUM]

 

01. Woes Of The Creator Intro
02. The Suffocation Of Clout feat. P.U.R.E.
03. Fabric Of Molotov feat. Sule
04. Chips From The Goldschlager feat. Jae Skeese
05. The Mask Of Rorschach feat. RJ Payne
06. Acrobatic Teppanyaki Skills feat. Ansolu
07. Playwrites From The Motown feat. Elzhi
08. Scene 3 Act 1 feat. SageInfinite
09. Weapons Found In The Study
10. Where Sobriety Looms
11. Woes Of The Creator Outro

Jay Royale has spent years building a reputation on the merits of his pen alone, and "Woes of the Creator" is the kind of project that makes that case without needing to raise its voice. The East Baltimore emcee commits fully to a single producer here – Anibal Beats, a Connecticut craftsman Royale has been deliberately introducing to the underground circuit – and the uniformity of sound that results is a strength, not a limitation. Anibal's production aesthetic sits in the atmospheric-but-gritty pocket: sample-driven, deliberate in its swing, never competing with the lyrics for attention. Royale's delivery remains one of the underground's more distinctive voices – a raspy authority that sounds like lived experience compressed into syllables. Pete Twist handles the mix and mastering out of Boiler Room Studios, giving the project a cohesion that befits its concept. The guest roster – including Elzhi, RJ Payne, and Jae Skeese – contributes without derailing the focus. This is an MC's album, curated from a position of complete creative confidence.

New Villain "The Mind of Hugo Strange 3" [ALBUM]

 

01. Welcome Back To Arkham (prod. by New Villain)
02. Mount Olympus (prod. by What?
03. Dart Desperados feat. Emhyr Rhymes (prod. by 9th Uno)
04. The Masked Man Show (prod. by Brand The Builder)
05. Life Line (prod. by 9th Uno)
06. Dead Sea Scrolls (prod. by Grand Luke)
07. Public Enemy (prod. by BeatsByBoogie)
08. The Unlucky Ones feat. Vektrx (prod. by Brand The Builder)
09. My Own Worst (prod. by Brand The Builder)
10. The Beyonder (prod. by Nagashi)
11. Days Of Future Past feat. King Adroit (prod. by Grand Luke)
12. Absolutely Strange (prod. by Brand The Builder)
13. Emerald Rain/Ryoka (prod. by What?)

New Villain continues to develop one of Toronto's most singular artistic frameworks in underground rap. The "Mind of Hugo Strange" series now reaches its third installment, with 13 tracks and a production roster spanning What?, BeatsByBoogie, 9th Uno, Brand The Builder, Grand Luke, and Nagashi – a diverse pool that nevertheless serves the project's consistent aesthetic. The concept draws on the Batman villain archetype but extends far beyond it into anime, wrestling, and pop culture mythology, all filtered through a sensibility clearly shaped by the MF DOOM school of masked intellectual rap. New Villain's pen is genuinely witty without sacrificing technical rigor – he builds extended conceits with patience, and the comic book references function as more than surface decoration. For a Toronto underground that the artist himself has noted is "marvelous but a little slept on," this series has become a reliable flag in the ground. Each Hugo Strange chapter tightens the world-building further.


Suave-Ski, Dead Perry & Apathy "Burnin & Learnin" (feat. Casual) [SINGLE]


The origin story of "Burnin & Learnin" is itself a testament to the organic collaboration networks that still define the best of underground Hip-Hop. Dead Perry built the original foundation, then enlisted Danish producer Lil Jay for a bass line, and the rough mix found its way to Apathy – Demigodz member, Army of the Pharaohs veteran, and long-time mentor and touring partner to Suave-Ski – who added a sample and executive production before handling the final mix. Casual from the Hieroglyphics holds down the feature slot with the measured precision the Bay Area legend has delivered for three decades. The result is a smoked-out, melodically layered track with a snap-back drum pattern and a screwed vocal sample in the pocket – the kind of production that rewards multiple listens. Suave-Ski, a Connecticut wordsmith with over a decade in the game and an impressive touring record alongside Apathy, ILL BILL, and the Snowgoons, situates the track in the dual metaphor of a literal and musical high. Dropping today.

M-Dot x Confidence "Rollercoaster Pt. 2" (feat. Masta Ace) [VIDEO]


The visual component of "Rollercoaster Pt. 2" alone earns it attention – shot at the iconic Cyclone roller coaster on Coney Island by director SandoFilms, it's one of those location choices that means something, matching the track's thematic terrain of life's unpredictable ascents and descents with a setting that has its own mythology. But the music is the reason. Confidence builds from the soulful boom-bap blueprint that defined "Library of Sound," adding his own cuts to a production that manages to feel both nostalgic and pointed. The reunion between M-Dot and Masta Ace is not ceremonial – both emcees bring their A-game, trading verses with the kind of ease that comes from genuine mutual respect and shared artistic language. The emotional register here is mature: perseverance, perspective, the long arc of a career measured in something other than metrics. Below System Records continues to deliver at a level that puts many larger operations to shame.

Die P x Figub Brazlevic "Alles gut" (feat. Stephen Jounior) [VIDEO]


German underground Hip-Hop has a smaller pipeline to the international audience than it deserves, and Die P is one of the clearest arguments for closing that gap. On "Magazin," her latest album, she works extensively with Berlin-based producer Figub Brazlevic – a craftsman whose Krekpek Records imprint has served as one of the more reliable foundations for quality German boom bap over the past decade. Figub's production vocabulary is steeped in the Golden Era without being a recreation of it: sample-driven, rhythmically considered, weighted exactly right. "Alles gut," featuring Stephen Jounior, is a strong entry point into the album's energy – Die P's delivery is direct and assured, her technical fluency evident without announcement, her personality intact under the bars. What's notable about "Magazin" as a body of work is that it doesn't chase trend or genre-blend – it commits fully to the craft, to the point where even German language critics working far outside the usual underground sphere have reached for superlatives. That's the signal.

ILL Conscious x Finn "Pineapple Mimosas" [VIDEO]


The build toward "The Premise" has been methodical and convincing. With "Pineapple Mimosas," ILL Conscious and producer Finn deliver a single that reads as introspective without being inward-looking – the weight of circumstance processed through craft rather than confession. Finn's production finds an interesting middle ground: the arrangement breathes, lush in its sample work, but the boom bap structure underneath ensures there's never any doubt about what genre this belongs to. What impresses is ILL Conscious's ability to maintain lyrical density over production that could easily forgive a less disciplined approach – his multi-syllabic patterns and internal rhyme schemes hold their architecture even when the backdrop invites loosening up. The album "The Premise" arrives in May with vinyl via Vinyl Digital already in pre-order and a roster that includes Recognize Ali and Asun Eastwood among the guests. Every single released so far has pointed toward something worth the wait.

Nasty Killah "1ONe" (feat. C Terrible & DJ Elemento) [VIDEO]


Nasty Killah and C Terrible team up for "1ONe," a high-octane tribute to the golden era of streetball and the raw essence of the game. Over a punchy SuppMarshall production, both MCs showcase why they are heavyweights in the Spanish scene; Nasty Killah provides the surgical precision while C Terrible counters with his signature gravelly delivery and relentless flow. The inclusion of DJ Elemento on the turntables elevates the track, bringing back that authentic hip-hop grit with sharp, rhythmic scratches that sync perfectly with the basketball-inspired visuals. It’s a flawless link-up that captures the adrenaline of the blacktop, proving that when the lyricism is this tight, the connection between the court and the mic remains unbreakable.

Shakezpeare x Persia "Crazy Outside" [VIDEO]


Shakezpeare and Manchester’s Persia collide on "Crazy Outside," a track that epitomizes the gritty vitality of the current UK independent scene. Produced by Dr G, the beat serves up a restless, high-tension atmosphere that mirrors the volatile nature of the lyrics. Persia brings a fierce, no-nonsense lyrical authority to the booth, repping her city with sharp flows and undeniable grit. Shakezpeare complements this with a commanding performance, anchoring the track’s "anything can happen" mentality. It’s a sonic representation of urban chaos—unfiltered, high-energy, and built on the kind of authentic chemistry that only surfaces in the deep underground.

Ferris Blusa x Swab "Pay Your Tithes" [VIDEO]


New Orleans has always had its own relationship with rap – heavier in the pocket, more spiritually coded, the street and the sacred braided together in a way that's distinctly Gulf South. Ferris Blusa carries that weight naturally on "If I Could Cry I Swear I Would," his full collaborative album with producer Swab, and "Pay Your Tithes" illustrates the partnership at its most direct. Swab's production keeps things lean and purposeful – no excess, drum patterns that hit with conviction, sample choices that serve the song rather than announce themselves. Ferris delivers with the kind of unflinching honesty that makes you pay attention, his flow grounded in lived experience rather than constructed narrative. At nine tracks, the project moves efficiently and doesn't overstay its welcome. For an audience that values the stripped-back craft, this is a satisfying body of work.

Darko the Super & MF Grimm "Inside a Dream" (feat. Blu) [VIDEO]


Few underground pairings in recent memory have flipped the script as cleanly as this one. Philadelphia's Darko the Super – architect of the U Don't Deserve This Beautiful Art universe and prolific producer in his own right – steps fully behind the microphone here, while MF Grimm, whose biographical mythology spans paralysis, prison, and perseverance, takes full command of the production. The result is "Beware of Bob," a 15-track concept album steeped in the surreal, conspiratorial atmosphere of Twin Peaks – an album where nothing is quite what it appears and the surface beauty conceals something darker underneath. Grimm's production methodology is austere: minimal elements, maximum tension, arrangements that leave just enough air to make Darko's delivery feel like it's floating in a fog. The single "Inside a Dream" featuring Blu is a late-album exhale – hazy, introspective, the dream state made audible. That this record arrived on cherry pie red vinyl is less a gimmick than a statement of intent: this is artifact-level work, designed to be held and felt, not merely streamed.