Sunday, July 12, 2026

Buckshot "Good Day" [VIDEO]


First, an important correction to the earlier album coverage: the now-clear credits identify BDI Thug—Buckshot’s own production identity—as the producer behind the full project. The Package is therefore not an anonymously constructed or externally directed record. It is largely shaped by Buckshot himself. “Good Day” makes that decision especially interesting because he does not build a beat designed to imitate the classic Black Moon atmosphere. Instead of permanent basement darkness, he chooses a more open, jazz-informed frame. For an emcee whose voice remains inseparable from Enta da Stage, Bucktown, and Da Beatminerz’ shadow-heavy architecture, a title such as “Good Day” carries its own tension. This is not summer-commercial optimism. A good day in Buckshot’s Brooklyn feels more modest: the city simply decides not to work against you for a few hours. Nothing has been permanently solved. The pressure has only loosened. That restraint is what makes the record human. Buckshot does not rap as if relevance has to be proven through exaggerated aggression. His voice has aged without losing command; there is more space in it now, more perspective, less need to rush toward every bar. He understands the effect of his pauses and lets the production speak between phrases. Jazz textures and boom bap structure remain balanced without turning the track into passive lounge music. It is still Brooklyn—just with the shutters raised. Mo Stafford’s visual supports that grounded perspective. There is no need to manufacture a Golden Era set when Buckshot carries the history into every frame himself. The video works as an extension of what makes The Package meaningful: this is not only the return of Black Moon’s frontman, but the reappearance of Buckshot as producer and Duck Down architect. General Steele’s presence elsewhere on the album and fresh O.G.C. activity around Duck Down keep the possibility of wider Boot Camp Clik movement alive. “Good Day,” however, does not depend on reunion speculation. It stands as a quieter achievement: a veteran respecting his past without rebuilding it scene by scene.

Novatore feat. Merkules "Machines" [VIDEO]


“Machines” is not a collaboration assembled through streaming mathematics. The key figure is behind the boards. C-Lance has spent multiple projects developing a dark, melodic hardcore language with Novatore while maintaining an extensive working relationship with Merkules. He does not simply know both voices; he knows how each one responds to pressure. That makes him the hinge between two emcees whose energy is related but mechanically different. Novatore comes from Chicago’s South Side and has long occupied the space between hardcore rap, shadowed boom bap, and tightly constructed multisyllabic writing. His approach draws from East Coast battle mechanics without erasing his own environment: aggressive internal patterns, commanding projection, and enough range to move from personal struggle toward social criticism. His place within Goon MuSick and the Snowgoons network therefore makes sense beyond sound alone. He belongs to a transatlantic underground tradition where hardness is expected to carry actual writing. C-Lance has helped shape that language through several phases. The continuing Embrace the Darkness series and their wider collaborative catalog mean Novatore’s rhythmic instincts do not need to be renegotiated every time. On “Machines,” the producer can move directly into the mechanics: forceful impact, dark melodic tension, and a framework where rhyme patterns interlock instead of resting comfortably in the pocket. Merkules enters as a controlled contrast. His broader, more frontal vocal force pushes against Novatore’s tighter construction. Because C-Lance also has a substantial history producing Merkules, the feature never feels attached after the record was built. The producer creates common ground without sanding either voice down. The title works on several levels: technical precision, repeated pressure, emcees functioning like coordinated mechanisms. Yet the record does not feel mechanical in the empty sense. Personality remains audible beneath the patterns. Novatore is not a rap machine because he lacks emotion; he uses machine-level control to give anger, thought, and discipline a physical shape.

Black Silver x HardMoney "All Gas" [SINGLE]

 

“All Gas” gains its real weight through Black Silver’s history. Also known as The Navigator and Silver Synth, he was part of the Analog Brothers alongside Ice-T, Kool Keith, Marc Live, and Pimpin’ Rex—a deliberately strange unit that brought vintage synthesizers, drum machines, futuristic personas, and underground abstraction into the same room. His wider connections include Tha Likwit Crew, Black Ice, and other West Coast networks. Black Silver does not need a rugged beat to prove underground credibility. He comes from an era when independence was not campaign language; it was basic survival. His relationship with HardMoney is equally important. The producer is handling the complete Void Where Inhibited project and has known Black Silver for more than two decades. That history gives the rollout room to move through different states. “W.O.L.F.” converted setbacks into instruction. “Fadeaway Shots” stepped away from the permanent outrage cycle. The title track pushed boom bap toward less restricted, more experimental shapes. “All Gas” accelerates again. These are not conflicting ideas. They form a sequence: reflection, alignment, motion. Black Silver does not perform like a veteran asking permission to enter a younger scene. His authority comes from experience, but also from refusing to turn that experience into museum material. The title promises forward drive, yet his delivery does not confuse momentum with panic. “All Gas” means commitment: once the direction is clear, there is no point in moving halfway. HardMoney controls that engine. The instrumental version is useful because it reveals the motion beneath the vocal recording—the producer’s role in creating urgency without forcing the emcee to chase the beat. Rather than surrounding Black Silver with oversized impact, HardMoney builds around his cadence. That is the advantage of an actual emcee-producer relationship: the production does not require the rapper to become somebody else in order to survive it.

Perso & JustMusicBeats "Quelques Grammes" [VIDEO]


“Quelques Grammes” is not an introductory handshake between rapper and producer. Perso and Just Music Beats have been building together for years. BuddahKriss and Oliver produced several early records for him before handling Affaire Personnelle in full, and the partnership continued through later work including Chambre Noire. The new single therefore does not feel like a beat sent through an inbox and filled after the fact. It sounds rooted in a relationship where both sides understand how the other moves. Perso emerged from Avignon at a time when French rap infrastructure outside the main urban centers was limited. He began with Le Turf, recorded early demos through modest cassette-based equipment, and eventually worked with established Marseille voices including Akhenaton and Faf Larage. Longevity, however, is not the most interesting part of his story. His refusal to become trapped by it is. Perso has consistently argued that the job is to rap: the production may draw from nineties boom bap or more contemporary forms, but the emcee has to adjust cadence and placement without sacrificing language. That flexibility is also central to Just Music Beats. The duo can work with dusty drums and traditional sampling while moving comfortably into colder or more modern textures. Perso has made the point that an older production method does not have to sound dated; flow choice, arrangement, and sample treatment determine whether a record lives in the present. “Quelques Grammes” is therefore less an attempt to restore a lost French rap era than proof that its principles can still move when handled by artists who understand them deeply. The title itself reads like a measure of concentrated rap. No wholesale quantity, no inflated concept—just a few carefully weighed grams. Perso works best when his observations land with dry control rather than forcing every line into punchline theater. Just Music Beats give him a frame that neither freezes in reverence for the past nor runs after current fashion. The artwork and visual complete the package, but the real center remains the long-developed chemistry between voice and production.

Figerson x BhramaBull "Revenge of the Manji Clan" [VIDEO]


“Revenge of the Manji Clan” was already introduced through an anime edit, but the official music video changes the function of the record. The earlier version foregrounded its reference language; this one has to place Figerson and BhramaBull inside the world they created. That distinction matters. An edit can borrow atmosphere from existing characters. An original visual has to prove that the song’s mythology can stand without them. For Figerson, Japanese imagery is not a one-record costume. His catalog has repeatedly drawn from titles and concepts such as Oyabun, Oni the Anxestor, Reanimation Jutsu, Geisha Music, and Year of the Dragon. The Bronx emcee uses that vocabulary to construct a personal underground mythology built around clan identity, ancestry, warrior codes, and loyalty. “Manji Clan” therefore belongs to an established language rather than a temporary anime trend. The revenge promised by the title feels like another chapter in a universe Figerson has been developing across multiple projects. BhramaBull understands how to score that universe. With Philadelphia roots and a career stretching between coasts, the Gryndfest Music Group founder has built a reputation around gritty, cinematic production and a curatorial ability to place distinct underground voices inside cohesive settings. He and Figerson previously connected on “Kisame Blakuza,” making this less a streaming-era pairing than a continuation of proven chemistry. The production chooses menace over clutter. The sample creates the weather, the drums establish the ground, and Figerson’s voice remains clearly positioned at the center. His delivery carries controlled aggression rather than theatrical rage, allowing the imagery to sharpen the writing without replacing it. That is the record’s strongest move: anime energy and boom bap are not used to disguise one another. The references provide color and world-building, but the foundation remains emceeing.

Saturday, July 11, 2026

THE TANGIERS FEAT. IAMPROFIT "WEAPONS OF WAR" [VIDEO]


"Weapons Of War" isn't a new recording it's the video treatment of a single first released back in 2021 off The Tangiers' (Benefit & Messiah Kane) debut album "The House Always Wins," out of Western Massachusetts. That record already carried guests like Smif-N-Wessun, RJ Payne, and M-Dot. This video now serves as a lead-up to the duo's upcoming EP "Old Vegas" (August). Production by Champagne Made That, direction by White Ape not about glorifying violence, but a study of the psychological scars survival leaves behind.

T.F & DJ MUGGS "100 DOLLAR BILL" [VIDEO]


T.F. out of South Central L.A. has spent the last stretch building a run of single-producer albums first with Mephux/Roc Marciano, then a Khrysis-produced full-length and DJ Muggs now delivers the third chapter in that pattern. The album ships alongside a companion short film by Jason Goldwatch, whose credits include work with Kanye West and Nas.

TRUECIPHER FEAT. ESTEE NACK "S.E.T.U." [ALBUM]


"S.E.T.U. (Se Embromaron Todito Ustedes)" is now the full ten-track album between TrueCipher and Estee Nack. Nack, born in Lynn, Massachusetts to Dominican parents, built his name through the Tragic Allies crew and later The Cloth, becoming one of the East Coast underground's most distinct voices a guttural, low delivery, dense wordplay, and features alongside Westside Gunn, The Alchemist, and Roc Marciano. TrueCipher handles the entire production, the bilingual title translating roughly to "you all messed up."

RON BROWZ "FIEND" [VIDEO]


Harlem's Ron Browz remains one of the defining producer figures in East Coast diss-track history he built the beat behind Nas's "Ether" in 2001, the record that took down Jay-Z and made his name. He's carried the "Ether Boy" tag and label ever since. "Fiend [Gwitty Diss]" continues a recent run of diss cuts from Browz alongside "New York City [Aye Verb Diss]" a producer still actively writing chapters in the genre he helped define.

STAN IPCUS "THE WORKING MAN IS A SUCKER" [ALBUM]

 

White Plains, New York's Stan Ipcus has spent years building a reputation for street-smart storytelling over technically clean flows his latest LP "Sleep If You Want" made Bandcamp's best hip-hop list in October 2024. "The Working Man Is A Sucker" pulls together a producer roster of Black Joey, United Crates, Montega Mateos, Ras Beats, and Syer, with cuts from DJ Eclipse, plus features from Fazeonerok, J.Tree, and a revisited "La Life" with Defcee. Straight boom bap, no detours.

MACARTHUR MAZE "CHEERS" FEAT. JANE HANDCOCK [VIDEO]


MacArthur Maze is an Oakland five-MC ensemble Blvck Achilles, Champ Green, D.Bledsoe, Ian Kelly, and Roux Shankle backed by a four-producer engine room led by turntablist DJ D Sharp and S. Kaminski. Following their well-received 2023 debut "Blvck Saturday," "Unaltered Egos" is the follow-up, and "Cheers" brings back Jane Handcock, a guest voice from that first record. The crew has been explicit about honoring Bay Area lineage from Too $hort to Hieroglyphics without leaning into nostalgia, and this cut leans into live instrumentation guitar, bass, horns over straight sample work.

FEL SWEETENBERG x DJ BRANS x DJ DJAZ "THE CHEF'S KISS" [SINGLE]


Fel Sweetenberg has been a fixture of the East Coast independent scene since '98, cutting his teeth with Da Nuthouse on Bobbito Garcia's legendary Fondle'Em imprint before landing at Goodvibe Recordings alongside Slum Village and J Dilla. Running his own Effiscienz camp, he's built a reputation as both MC and producer. "The Chef's Kiss" reunites him with longtime collaborators DJ Brans on production and DJ Djaz on cuts the same trio behind the "Invisible Garden" EP.

CHARLIE BEATZ & AL FRESCO "STRAPPED" FEAT. NOBODY FROM NOWHERE [VIDEO]


Charlie Beatz and Al Fresco, out of Park Hill, Staten Island, have built a steady run of joint projects together, including the album "New Amsterdam" and the EP "C.H.A.M.B.E.R.S." "Strapped" brings in a third voice, Nobody From Nowhere, and gets extra weight from a Cappadonna cameo a fitting nod given the shared Staten Island lineage running through both camps. Directed by @700App.

JIZZM HIGH DEFINITION x JAHS ONE "COPACETIC" [SINGLE]

 

Jizzm High Definition is one of the most prolific beatmakers in the LA underground north of 70 Bandcamp releases deep, spanning instrumental full-lengths and collaborations with names like Chino XL and Tash of Tha Alkaholiks. "Copacetic" keeps it lean: a three-track pack pairing the vocal cut with instrumental and acapella versions, the kind of DJ-ready format built for cutting and battling rather than streaming numbers.

APAKALYPSE "DEMON SLAYER" [VIDEO]


Lord Apakalypse has been grinding in the Miami underground for over two decades, racking up more than 60 self-released albums under his own name and his production alias Apak Masters. "Demon Slayer" is the first advance video off his forthcoming album "As Above So Below," built on a Sponatola beat the Tampa producer who's spent nearly twenty years anchoring that city's Beat Fanatic scene alongside longtime partner SlopFunkDust. Struck directs, Apakalypse himself handles the edit under his own tag. Nothing here is softened for playlists: dense, esoteric-leaning bars over raw drum work, the same lane he's held since the 2000s.

Friday, July 10, 2026

ONYX Live in München 2026 | Strom Club [SHOW]


ONYX brought their signature New York energy to Strom in Munich. The show was put together by Cypher Sound Nation & Rap Legends Live, with special guest Ben Shorr and Sick Boy Simon flying in from Italy. Support came from M-Dot (USA), El9Six, and Exit Fame (USA), with DJ Ice Cap holding down the decks all night.

Stick around toward the end of the video for a bonus moment: every artist on the bill linked up for an impromptu freestyle cypher — raw, unplanned, real hip-hop.

Lineup:

– ONYX

– Special guest: Ben Shorr

– Sick Boy Simon (Italy)

– Support: M-Dot (USA), El9Six, Exit Fame (USA)

– DJ: Ice Cap

Organized by: Cypher Sound Nation & Rap Legends Live

Venue: Strom, Munich

Big Twins "God Said It" prod. DJ Woool [VIDEO]


Big Twins, formerly known as Twin Gambino, does not carry Queensbridge as a reference. He carries it inside his voice. As a member of Infamous Mobb and a longtime Mobb Deep associate, he appeared on *Hell on Earth* before his own group made its full statement with *Special Edition*. His connections to The Alchemist, Evidence, Prodigy, and the wider Queensbridge circle helped create a solo catalog that has never depended on technical polish. “God Said It” continues that line with DJ Woool. The production does not need to modernize Twins; its role is to create space for that grainy, immediately recognizable voice. He does not rap with the flexible mechanics of a young technician. He raps with the weight of somebody whose pauses and emphasis have become part of the storytelling. Hostage Media keeps the visual equally direct. There is no manufactured Queensbridge drama—just a veteran who does not need to perform a character because the voice already carries the history. 

O.G.C. "3:30" [EP]


O.G.C.—Starang Wondah, Top Dog, and Louieville Sluggah—release three new tracks through Duck Down under the title *3:30*. The package runs only about nine minutes, yet its existence carries weight. The Originoo Gunn Clappaz belong to the inner Boot Camp Clik circle; *Da Storm* and their wider BCC appearances made their voices permanent components of the Bucktown identity. The fact that this release arrives directly beside Buckshot’s *The Package* is therefore notable. Both projects run through Duck Down, both reactivate central figures from the collective, and Buckshot has publicly described the beginning of a new label generation. That is not yet proof of a complete Boot Camp Clik album or a coordinated crew return, but it is more than random noise. *3:30* stays intentionally small. That may be the correct entry point: no inflated comeback campaign with fifteen guests, just three tracks that allow listeners to hear how O.G.C. function as a unit now. If further releases emerge from the Smif-N-Wessun, Rockness, or wider BCC circle, the bottles can finally open. Until then, *3:30* is a meaningful sign of life—nothing more, but certainly nothing less. 

PlunderDawgMusik x Veteran Eye feat. Poncho The Honcho "W.O.R.K" [VIDEO]


“W.O.R.K” is the first official video cut from the collaborative album by PlunderDawgMusik and Veteran Eye. Poncho The Honcho joins the record, while Brian Staples at LiveWire Studios handles recording, mixing, mastering, filming, and editing. That concentrated production structure gives the release a distinct Carolinas identity: short distances, independent infrastructure, and complete control. The album title *The Weed House on Black Wall Street* connects cannabis economics with the historical symbol of Black enterprise. Whether the full project explores that tension in depth remains to be heard. “W.O.R.K” establishes the foundation first: labor not as a corporate slogan, but as daily repetition, self-organization, and the condition required for independent release.

Shark & Hi-Q "Every Villain Has A Story" [ALBUM]

 

Shark and Hi-Q construct the album as a descent narrative. An ordinary man moves gradually toward his darker personality until “villain” becomes less a role than a condition. Hi-Q produces, mixes, and masters every track, while Shark writes and performs the core material. That arrangement keeps the transformation sonically unified across thirteen pieces. “Hurt People,” “The Devil’s Got a Day Job,” “Halo Made of Razorwire,” “Circle of Salt,” and “Nothing’s Sacred” mark different stages of collapse. The imagery moves from psychological injury toward occult symbolism without reducing the album to horror decoration. Es, Jake Haw, Words, and B1 the Architect appear selectively. The real focus remains Shark’s internal monologue and Hi-Q’s task of making that monologue sound increasingly unstable.

Mic Bles x Avant Garde "From The Westside With Love" [VIDEO]


The single had already appeared on HHHeadz; the new element is the full video and the wider context of the forthcoming collaborative album *Since 81*. Avant Garde produces, Klutch Norris handles chorus vocals, and DJ Romes provides cuts, mixing, and mastering. Dungeon DS presents the Westside not as a film set but as inhabited space: graffiti, concrete, streets, and the beauty located beneath standard postcard imagery. Mic Bles writes with regional attachment without romanticizing the environment. The visual therefore does not simply repeat the single. It gives the record a more precise location. 

Buckshot "The Package" [ALBUM]


Buckshot describes *The Package* as the soundtrack to a short film about the future of Brooklyn. The album contains twelve tracks across approximately thirty minutes and arrives directly through Duck Down—the label Buckshot helped build and maintain as independent infrastructure across multiple eras. The central figure is therefore not only the voice of Black Moon, but the label architect who has consistently treated Brooklyn as origin, business ground, and cultural responsibility. One significant detail deserves attention. A public project profile connected to the Duck Down operation describes *The Package* as fully AI-produced. With no complete production credits currently available, it remains difficult to determine what “produced” means in this context: fully generated instrumentals, AI-assisted processing, or a broader technological workflow. For an artist whose history is inseparable from Da Beatminerz and one of Brooklyn’s most recognizable sample aesthetics, this is not a minor footnote. It changes the question from “What does Buckshot sound like now?” to “What role does human beatmaking occupy inside the next Duck Down phase?” O.G.C. are releasing new material through the same label in close proximity, showing at least some coordinated movement within the Boot Camp Clik environment. Whether that develops into a complete new chapter remains unconfirmed. For now, *The Package* stands as its own Buckshot project at the intersection of film soundtrack, Brooklyn commentary, and technological experiment. Keep the bottles cold—but do not open them yet.

Trigger tha Gambler "Rob Boys" [VIDEO]


Trigger tha Gambler comes from a Brownsville school where rhyme technique and street pressure were never separate categories. Alongside his brother Smoothe da Hustler, he helped establish “Broken Language” as a benchmark for interlocking rhyme chains, while his own *Life’s a 50/50 Gamble* remained suspended between cult reputation and a disrupted official career. “Rob Boys” does not return to that history as nostalgia. It simply reminds listeners how heavy and immovable Trigger’s voice has always sounded on a beat. Presented as a birthday release, the video avoids manufacturing a grand comeback narrative. It is a veteran stepping back in front of the camera and allowing the voice to carry its own history. 

Killy Shoot x Chuck Chan "The Schooling" [ALBUM]

 

Chuck Chan produces *The Schooling* in full, giving Killy Shoot a unified foundation across fifteen tracks. Most of the songs remain brief, allowing ideas to end before they become trapped inside standard structures. Titles including “Backpack Full of Crack,” “All City,” “Eastpak,” and “Winter in Worcester” combine graffiti, street, and backpack imagery within a clearly defined East Coast frame. Supreme Cerebral, DJ Grazzhoppa, Substance, and Deuce Hennessy appear briefly, but Killy Shoot remains both student and teacher throughout the project. “Schooling” is not treated as academic knowledge. It is information acquired through blocks, loss, observation, and repetition. Lord Sarin keeps the mix and master dry enough for Chuck Chan’s loops to remain exposed. Hometeam Records provides the appropriate setting: family-organized, but never soft.

Quincey White & The Frost General "Blood of My Ancestors" [VIDEO]


“Blood of My Ancestors” is the third track from *Chain of Command: Vol. 1* and now receives its own visual treatment. The EP has already been covered as a concise five-track statement; this cut reveals its more reflective side. Quincey White connects South Central reality with the question of what ancestry leaves inside the body and mind. The Frost General keeps the production controlled, giving White’s direct delivery enough space. Yellow Nyugen’s visual expands the song without surrounding it with unnecessary explanation.