Saturday, May 2, 2026

Coyote x Statik Selektah "Machetes & Micheladas" [VIDEO]


The Morales brothers grew up split between Hawthorne's South Bay and Mexico, lost a championship basketball game, and started writing raps. That origin story is almost too clean, but "Machetes & Micheladas" sounds like it earned every detail. This is Coyote's fifth full-length and their most focused collaboration yet – handing the entire production slate to Statik Selektah, the Massachusetts DJ and producer who has been building East Coast drum palettes for two decades, and letting the chemistry do the work. Statik delivers the weight: jazz-sourced loops chopped with precision, kicks that carry real bottom end, a sonic consistency that gives LadiesLoveGuapo and Ricky Blanco a stable foundation to build on track after track. The Morales brothers operate in English and Spanglish interchangeably, moving between drive-by narratives, sneaker histories, immigration fury, and letters to firstborn sons without breaking rhythm. On "Blasphemy" – the final video from the album – Guapo plants himself next to historical iconography and keeps rapping, as if the comparison doesn't require acknowledgment. That confidence runs through the whole record. The guest list is heavy and purposeful: Conway the Machine, Xzibit, B-Real and Sick Jacken of Psycho Realm, Curren$y, Berner, Locksmith, R.A. the Rugged Man, Daylyt among others – every feature earns its spot. Few records in 2026 have come out of West Coast underground hip-hop with this much structural integrity.

Indigo Phoenyx & Adwerdz "Eloquence in Execution" [EP]

 

Indigo Phoenyx built Rugged Triad Records from the ground up in 2020, and the label's catalog – with names like Nivek B and releases alongside Shabaam Sahdeeq – reflects a clear curatorial standard: underground, uncompromising, rooted in craft. "Eloquence in Execution" reunites her with producer Adwerdz, who handled the beatwork on 2024's "The Black Swan," and the chemistry is evident from the jump. Adwerdz builds dark, dense production – drums that sit with weight, samples chosen for atmosphere rather than accessibility – and Indigo raps into that space with the directness of someone writing from lived experience, not observation. The thematic center of the project is her embrace of Islam as a teenager and what it meant to hold onto faith through transformation and hardship. That's not subject matter most MCs tackle with real texture; Indigo handles it with exactly the kind of unflinching honesty the production demands. Foul Al appears as a feature. Mix by Jeremy Joshua, artwork by Indy. Released on Rugged Triad Records.

Sham Blak "Ain't Nothing Like San Diego" [VIDEO]


Sham Blak repräsentiert South East San Diego – das ist kein Marketing, sondern der tatsächliche Ausgangspunkt für alles was er macht. Produziert von Shile, trägt "Ain't Nothing Like San Diego" genau diese Adresse im Beat: ruhig, gritty, mit einem Undertow der sich nicht beeilt. Der Track ist die erste Single aus dem kommenden EP "Man of My Word" – zehn Tracks, mit Features von Lorde Smis, NVY JONEZ LKR, Mr Brady, Destruct und Mischif, Production auch von Seas in the Slap, Yellow Bone Production und PHD Beats. Sham Blak hat 2025 zwei volle Alben rausgebracht, zuletzt "Red October" komplett produziert von PHD Beats. Die Energie hier ist bewusster, etwas verhaltener – Fokus auf Delivery und Substanz statt Lautstärke.

Jazzy Lion Man "Just Trying To Get By" [ALBUM]

 

Jazzy Lion Man operates at a pace most producers don't attempt – a prolific Delaware-based beat craftsman with well over a hundred releases to his name, he treats the album format more like a running log than a statement. "Just Trying To Get By" lands in that spirit: nine tracks, spare and efficient, built on the kind of MPC-rooted abstract hip-hop that trades in texture and feel over pop structure. The feature list – JOHNNYTRA$H, Jules Clay, Granada, Charley Roy, Ant Kelly, Skip The Kid, itsjusdra – reads like a roll call from a specific corner of the independent underground that doesn't bother with press cycles or playlist pitching. Every guest is a co-worker, not a co-sign. The cover art, handled by Jazzy Lion Man himself, keeps that DIY thread consistent. This is the kind of release that exists for people who are already paying attention.

Da Inphamus Amadeuz x The Punchline Academy "ShaBlaze" [VIDEO]


"ShaBlaze" arrives from within the infrastructure of the Punchline Academy, the cypher-focused show Da Inphamus Amadeuz has been running on Shade 45 since 2017, and it sounds exactly like that – a session that got serious. INPH's production keeps the palette lean: East Coast drum patterns with real velocity underneath them, a loop that doesn't overstay its welcome, the kind of beat that demands the MC do the work. Shortee Sha and Blazin answer that demand without hesitation. The track has the feel of two MCs who've been warming up for this – precise, aggressive delivery, tight rhyme construction with no dead space between ideas. It's bar-for-bar hip-hop with no framing device beyond the craft itself, and that's enough.

Omen44 "Da Games People Play" [VIDEO]


Omen44 releases the official video for his single “Da Games People Play,” which is already ruffling feathers and stirring commotion inside the political ring. Audiences see Omen44 in a new fashion from long hair, dark shades, bandana, to fringed attire. Bold imagery on a projector behind Omen44 puts the message front and center. A gritty, thought-provoking performance reinforces the track’s political stance and raw honesty. Each bar and visual transitions into a statement: direct, unapologetic, and meant to be felt as much as heard.

Watch the official video for “Da Games People Play” and stay tuned for more releases form the forthcoming ‘u.s.’ album.

Friday, May 1, 2026

Jalen Frazier x Fumes The Threat "The Empires Destroyed" [ALBUM]

 

01. Marbled Delmnonicos
02. Passive Income
03. Badge Of Honor feat. Reek Osama
04. Cuban Link Arsonist
05. Bloodshed Interlude
06. Fortune 500
07. Corrupt Minds feat. Hell’z OWN
08. Stained Nubuck
09. Front Row View

The Empires Destroyed is a collaborative album from Jalen Frazier and Fumes The Threat that operates squarely within the no-frills East Coast tradition: tight track lengths, dense bars, raw production, and two guest appearances from Reek Osama and Hell'z OWN that fit the established aesthetic. The track titles alone tell you where this album lives – Stained Nubuck, Cuban Link Arsonist, Bloodshed Interlude – and the execution matches the intent without theatrical excess. Nine tracks, nothing wasted, a project built to reward listeners who come for craft and leave satisfied.

Chubs x FiveEight Fever "Grhyme" [ALBUM]


01. Grhyme Intro
02. Primal Jux
03. Plaid Colored Carpets feat. Lungs
04. Eat The Rich
05. Words Are Weapons
06. Dead Danson feat. Bub Styles
07. Epileptic
08. D.R.U.G.S.
09. Work To School feat. Blizz From Juice & Gripz
10. Sket The Hitman Hart feat. Brad Piff
11. Get Off My Cross Trainers
12. Burl Talk
13. Camp Kill feat. A.M. Early Morning
14. Monsters
15. Trail Of Kerosene
16. Soul Deepens feat. Ox Omni
17. Crown Or Crutched
18. Monsters (Demo Version)

Chubs presents Grhyme as a standalone album with a title that fuses grime and rhyme – a framing that hints at the stylistic range at play. The release arrives on streaming without an extensive promotional apparatus, which is its own statement about priority: the music first, the context secondary. An independent album release operating on its own terms.

Benny The Butcher & Fuego Base "Rev X" (feat. Sule) [VIDEO]


Ashes In The Safe is the collaborative full-length from Benny The Butcher and Fuego Base, with "Rev X" – featuring Sule – serving as its visual centerpiece in video form. Benny is the household name, but Fuego Base is arguably the album's engine: the Connecticut MC carries momentum across multiple tracks with the hungry precision that defined his 2023 standalone work Biggest Since Camby. Benny brings his measured, veteran menace; the two voices rub against each other productively rather than merging into a single tone. The album's production – cold, mob-influenced loops and heavy drums – maintains the dark atmosphere that Black Soprano Family has made their signature. The 16-minute short film directed by THIRDEYERAZ, released alongside the April 22 project, gives the album a cinematic companion that reinforces rather than replaces the music itself. Nine tracks, no filler, the correct length.

Struggle Mike "Solid" (feat. Party G the Humble) [SINGLE]


Struggle Mike operates far from the aggressive energy that Chicago's drill wave brought to global attention, favoring instead a contemplative, introspective approach that places him closer to the boom bap tradition in spirit if not always in sound. "Solid" with Party G the Humble is a statement of values as much as a track: the word itself is both a descriptor and an aspiration. An independent MC continuing to build a catalog that prioritizes substance over spectacle.

Daniel Son x ManZu Beatz "Boss At The Door" (feat. Jay Royale) [SINGLE]


Daniel Son appears for the second time in this batch – here over production from ManZu Beatz as part of Voci Storiche Vol. 6, a series that frames each volume as underground testimony: powerful rhymes, heavy production, raw truth. Jay Royale contributes a guest verse; ManZu Beatz handles production, mixing, and mastering throughout. The WAV/MP3 dual-format release signals a working approach that prioritizes DJ utility as much as streaming access. Two Daniel Son releases in a single day document a current phase of output that complements the Shattered Glass material with a different production context while maintaining the same lyrical intensity that defines his best work. Consistent regardless of the production chair he's sitting across from.

OT The Real "750" [SINGLE]


OT The Real steps out of the Black Soprano Family ensemble context for a solo single while remaining entirely within the aesthetic family that BSF has established. His appearances on Benny The Butcher and Fuego Base's Ashes In The Safe demonstrated his ability to hold ground alongside his label peers; "750" gives him the room to state a solo position. Compact, direct, and carrying the same gritty delivery that made his BSF contributions stand out. No softening of approach.

Risskant x DJ MP "Turn It Up" (feat. Jinnahcide & Ruste Juxx) [VIDEO]


Risskant and DJ MP recruit Ruste Juxx and Jinnahcide for "Turn It Up," a collaborative single where DJ MP handles production, mixing, and mastering. Ruste Juxx is a consistent presence in the harder-edged New York underground, with a history that connects to the Griselda extended family and a relentless work rate that mirrors their output ethic. The Netherlands has a deep and longstanding relationship with US underground rap – DJ MP and Risskant operate squarely within that tradition, using the transatlantic connection not as novelty but as working practice. The video by @martijnvisuals gives the track a clean visual document to go with the audio. Hard-hitting, purposeful, no softening of edges.

Lord Sko x Statik Selektah "Hangman" [VIDEO]


Lord Sko is 21 years old and from Washington Heights, Manhattan – and those two facts combined with his output to this point make him one of the more interesting younger voices working within the New York boom bap tradition. His 2025 album PIFF, which brought in Conway the Machine, Grand Puba, and Curren$y alongside Harry Fraud and Statik Selektah production, demonstrated both his reach and his range. "Hangman," the lead single for his forthcoming collaborative album Elevator Music with Statik Selektah – due May 15, 2026 – is produced entirely by Statik and leans toward the meditative: themes of pressure, identity, and self-acceptance delivered with the kind of vulnerability that reads as earned rather than performed. A young artist working at a genuinely high level with one of the most respected producers in the New York independent tradition.

UllNevaNo x Philth Spector "Yellow Jackets" (feat. DJ illMEASURED) [SINGLE]

 

UllNevaNo and Philth Spector arrive at "Yellow Jackets" from two distinct but compatible scenes – Baltimore's underground rap community and Philadelphia's beat-making tradition – and the result sounds like it should: grimy loops, dusty samples, a drum pattern that snaps without being pristine. DJ illMEASURED's cuts from Maryland add a dynamic element that keeps the track moving. The project title Stephon Barbury is layered: it references Stephon Marbury's Georgia high school and carries the wasp-sting implication of the track's lyrical approach. The Wu-Tang "Triumph" reference in the release notes isn't just aesthetic positioning – the cypher-style intensity UllNevaNo brings here earns the comparison. A strong opening statement for a collaboration between artists who know exactly what they're building.

DJ Kawon "Dirty Angels" (feat. Cold Camp) [VIDEO]


DJ Kawon positions "Dirty Angels" as the opening statement for Boombap Alumi, his debut production album due June 23 via Mad Good Records, with Cold Camp providing the MC presence. The debut production album format is itself a genre declaration: boom bap as a producer's art form, the DJ and beatmaker as primary architect rather than support function. Cold Camp delivers on their part of the track; the production gives them the right foundation. June 23 will tell the full story of what DJ Kawon is building, but this introduction sets the coordinates clearly.

Solitario Soldado "Sonido Bendito" (feat. Zabaz LCM) [VIDEO]


Solitario Soldado and Zabaz LCM deliver "Sonido Bendito" from deep within Colombia's underground, with Zabaz handling production. The visual was made by La Colina. The phrase in their own promotional text – rap makes us brothers, out of respect – is not marketing language; it describes the operating principle of a scene that has built itself on genuine community values rather than industry access. The Envigado-Bosa connection surfaces again here, mirroring the same regional solidarity that runs through MC Ari's work: different cities, same commitment to hip-hop with real content. A track built from the inside of a scene that doesn't need external validation.

Outerspace x Planetary x Reef The Lost Cauze "Mechanic Shop" [SINGLE]


Outerspace and Reef The Lost Cauze are both established presences in the Philadelphia underground, with Planetary serving as the natural connective tissue between the two acts. Reef The Lost Cauze has built a career on technical precision and a relentless output rate that has made him one of Philly's most respected lyrical voices; Outerspace operates with the group chemistry that comes from years of work as a duo. "Mechanic Shop" doesn't need to explain itself: three Philadelphia MCs on common ground, no unnecessary framing required. A single that arrives from within a scene rather than toward one.

Who Knows "WK Ultra" [VIDEO]


Who Knows delivers the fifth installment of their WK Cypher series with "WK Ultra" – eight MCs (Jonny Tightlips, Keggles, Wise Guy, Eras, Masta Marx, Context, Skels, Mr. Whippy) over production from Jack Danz, shot by Jesse Phillips with camera assistance from Mikayla Grosse. The format is its own argument: faces change, the movement continues. A Cypher series that demonstrates quality through consistency rather than individual event status. Five rounds in and the series knows what it is.

Evaize "The Epilogue" [ALBUM]

 

Evaize presents The Epilogue as a 10-track album that builds its own atmospheric world through track titles that suggest something beyond the usual underground coordinates: Something Strange In the Air, Mortals Among Gods, The Obelisk, Plutonium. CLO appears on two tracks (Velvet Tunnel and Other Side), suggesting a genuine creative relationship rather than a strategic feature placement. Erica M. and Baked Plissken round out the guest appearances. The Epilogue implies a concluding chapter – to what, the album itself must answer. A release that operates as a complete statement rather than a collection of singles.

Kappa-O "L'Impero Colpisce Ancora" [VIDEO]


Kappa-O operates out of Bologna within the Hard Squat Crew and Hard Record network, and "L'Impero Colpisce Ancora" – The Empire Strikes Back, a title whose irony is entirely intentional – surfaces as an unofficial video from his 2024 album Kappa-O vs Kappa-O, with production by KIQUE and direction by Alberto Portland. The non-official framing ("una storia vera, forse" – a true story, perhaps) sets up the film's approach: self-aware, direct, grounded in the specific geography of Bologna's underground. Kappa-O is in the pre-release phase of a new album, with a presentation video announced as forthcoming. Italian underground rap building on its own terms.

Snowgoons x A-F-R-O x DJ Robert Smith "Say Something" [SINGLE]


The Snowgoons have spent two decades building a functional transatlantic bridge: German production meeting American MC culture in a way that doesn't feel like appropriation but genuine creative exchange. Their catalog is one of the most consistent in independent boom bap, and "Say Something" with A-F-R-O and DJ Robert Smith continues that trajectory. A-F-R-O brings the lyrical density and battle-sharpened delivery that suits the Snowgoons' production philosophy: nothing soft, nothing wasted, the bars doing the work the title demands. DJ Robert Smith contributes the DJ element that keeps the track grounded in real-school values.

Sean Links "Jefe" [VIDEO]


Sean Links brings "Jefe" with production from True Cipher: a direct, no-detours video single with the leadership-energy its title implies. True Cipher provides a solid production foundation; Sean Links rides it without waste. Independent and unapologetic.

Self Defence "Addiction Syndrome" [EP]

 

Self Defence structures Addiction Syndrome as a deliberate arc: First Dose as the scratched intro and Last Dose as the credits roll at the close, with five tracks in between that carry the thematic weight of addiction as organizing principle rather than subject matter. The concept provides cohesion without constraining individual track identity – Return Of The Jedi, Expensive Habits, Pretty Stars operate as standalone statements that also contribute to the whole. VeNoM's scratches on the bookending tracks establish and close the boom bap framework. A seven-track EP that takes its concept seriously without wearing it as a costume.

Chip Fu ft. Busta Rhymes "Have Mercy" [VIDEO]


"Have Mercy" reunites Chip Fu with Busta Rhymes on the first single from his forthcoming EP Invisible Footsteps – two artists whose shared lineage in the early 90s Brooklyn creative explosion, though arriving through different groups (Fu-Schnickens and Leaders of the New School respectively), produced some of the most technically demanding rapid-fire rap of that era. Chip Fu arrives sharp: the speed-shifting cadences, tongue-twisting patterns, and animated wordplay that defined his work with Fu-Schnickens are present and undiminished. Busta enters measured – patience before explosion – building through the verse before shifting into the rapid-fire territory that is his signature. The contrast in approach gives the track genuine shape. Invisible Footsteps, due May 15, 2026, also features a reunion with Shaquille O'Neal more than three decades after "What's Up Doc (Can We Rock?)" A return that arrives with something to say rather than something to trade on.

Stretch Money x Dub Muzik "Dirty Daran" [EP]

 

Stretch Money and Dub Muzik deliver a five-track EP that wears its Bay Area identity clearly: the track San Francisco PD doesn't require additional context to understand its thematic territory. Dub Muzik produces throughout; Stretch Money handles the lyrical work. The compact EP format suits the material – five tracks, each making its point without padding, the total package clocking in as a focused statement rather than a sprawling project. Independent West Coast output with its eyes open.

Da Inphamus Amadeus x The Punchline Academy "ShaBlaze" [SINGLE]


Da Inphamus Amadeus and The Punchline Academy assemble Shortee Sha, Blazin, DAARMY97, and Tone Spliff's cuts for "ShaBlaze" – a collaborative single that prioritizes collective energy over the single-voice statement. Multiple MCs sharing a track in this configuration is a declaration of aesthetic solidarity: everyone operates from the same foundational values, the differences in delivery and cadence are what create texture rather than conflict. Tone Spliff's scratch contributions anchor the boom bap identity of the release with the same precision he brings to his own productions. A single built to document a community of craft.

Killah Dilla "Life's War" [VIDEO]


Killah Dilla operates across multiple roles in the underground – including camera work on Daniel Son and Futurewave's visual for "Paid My Tolls" – and "Life's War," produced by Frizzy Astro, presents the standalone MC side of that versatility. The self-stated thesis – Life's Lessons Equals Life's Stories – is the most honest briefing for what the track delivers: lived experience as lyrical content, no philosophical distance between the subject and the source. A compact, direct independent single from someone with genuine skin in the game.

Termanology & Royal Flush "Royal Terms" [ALBUM]

 

Royal Terms pairs two MCs who have spent their careers in the same sonic coordinates without always working together: Termanology from Lawrence, Massachusetts, whose output with DJ Premier, Pete Rock, and Statik Selektah has produced some of the most respected independent boom bap of the last two decades; and Royal Flush, whose 1997 debut Ghetto Millionaire established his Queens identity and whose voice carries the weight of the mid-90s DITC-adjacent aesthetic without imitation. The album's production roster – Statik Selektah, AraabMuzik, Spunk Bigga, Cartune Beatz, and others including the two MCs themselves – provides a varied but consistent foundation across eight tracks. Tek of Smif-N-Wessun, UFO Fev, and Dru Hoffa appear as features. The result is exactly what it sets out to be: a cohesive boom bap album from two artists whose chemistry is structural rather than manufactured. May 8, 2026.

Peter Amo1 "Key Minor" [VIDEO]


Peter Amo1 brings "Key Minor" with production from Precise Omega and visuals from Steve Bauza of Space Cadet Films. The title's tonal implication – minor key as emotional register – carries through in the track's construction: a foundation that prioritizes atmosphere without sacrificing the directional energy an MC needs to work against. Amo1 rides the Precise Omega production with focused intent. A single that states its position clearly and asks for nothing beyond attention to the music.

P-Ro x Sankofa x Tali Rodriguez "The Long Leash" [ALBUM]

 

The Long Leash was built in difficult times – the liner notes speak plainly of loss, of candles going out, of uncertainty ushering in dark days – and the album carries that weight without melodrama. P-Ro's voice has the quality their own description captures precisely: a post-apocalyptic Tom Waits, lived-in and dog-eared, undeniable in its raw honesty. Sankofa rides alongside with a complementary presence; Tali Rodriguez produces and engineers the whole project, providing a sonic vehicle whose variety meets the terrain of each track without forcing a unified aesthetic. Twelve tracks from Tunnel at the Light's End to Snoop's Nail Gun chart a route that belongs to the artists who made it: uncertain destination, chosen path. G Fam Black appears on the penultimate The Fallout Begins, a feature that earns its placement. An album that asks for patience and rewards it.

ethemadassassin & D.R.U.G.S. Beats "The Manual" [VIDEO]


"The Manual" arrives as the fourth single and video from ethemadassassin and D.R.U.G.S. Beats' Late Night With Wave Letterman, shot documentary-style by Ty Brueilly Films. The documentary approach is consistent with their working aesthetic: no theatrical staging, no distance between the artists and the viewer, just the music and the context around it. D.R.U.G.S. Beats' production and ethemad's delivery have established a clear chemistry across the album; this single extends the documentation of that chemistry to the visual format. With "Culinary Class" alongside Milano Constantine running concurrently, ethemad's current phase is notably active on both the collaboration and the primary project front simultaneously.

Stonam "STONAM" [SINGLE]

 

Stonam releases two tracks that didn't make the cut for Fight Vol. 2 – SAVE! and BYOL (Build Your Own Legacy) – with the most honest framing available: "songs that didn't make it, enjoy." There's no attempt to reposition the material as a bonus or a special edition; it's overflow material released with confidence rather than apology. SAVE! at 4:27 has room to develop; BYOL runs tighter. The self-titled format puts his name on two tracks that stand independently from the main project. A small release that doesn't oversell itself.

Mickey Blue x Celph Titled x M-Dot ft. Starvin B & Tone Spliff "Villains for Hire" [SINGLE]


New Jersey producer Mickey Blue builds "Villains for Hire" from a grimy, sample-heavy foundation – dusty drums, ominous textures, raw underground intensity – and populates it with a guest list that delivers on the brief without compromise. Celph Titled of Army of the Pharaohs brings his recognized technical precision; M-Dot operates in his established register of dense, architectural bars; Starvin B rounds out the ensemble. Tone Spliff's cuts add the final layer. Mickey Blue's approach to production is to build for the MC first – the instrumental provides the right frame without competing for attention. Following the Apathy and Ferris Blusa-assisted "Veil Of Reality," this single demonstrates a consistent approach: heavyweight guests, heavyweight production, no softening of intent for accessibility.

RHYMRCKA "BLK CONverses" [VIDEO]


RHYMRCKA presents "BLK CONverses" as a mini-video from his solo album The Frequency, released through DCM Entertainment and available on Bandcamp. The mini-visual format is deliberate: the track as the primary statement, the visual as documentation rather than spectacle. A focused single within a larger album body of work, presented without excess.

Weaponface "Weaponface" [ALBUM]

 

Weaponface is San Jose, Northern California's Joe Cutter and Snuff – a battle rap skater MC and his production partner – and their self-titled debut is a deliberate departure from traditional rhyme structures: 12 tracks that prioritize texture, chaos, and raw energy over formal craft as an artistic choice rather than a limitation. Snuff handles all production; Joe Cutter writes and delivers all lyrics. The track listing telegraphs the sensibility immediately – "I never thought leopards would eat my face," "Narc Johnson (flavor country)" – and the album follows through on the implied chaos with commitment. The project is dedicated to Kefer BHL. A debut that knows exactly what it is and refuses any other frame.

Nick Grant ft. BJ The Chicago Kid "Back Up" [SINGLE]


Nick Grant has built his career on a specific and uncommon quality: the kind of dense, architectural lyricism that doesn't announce itself with hype but reveals itself through repeated listening. His 2023 album Sunday Dinner was a deeply personal project that landed with audiences who prioritize craft; Smile, due May 15, 2026, extends that trajectory with a guest list that reads like a statement of intent – Westside Gunn, CyHi, Ransom, Punch, and BJ The Chicago Kid, a Grammy-nominated vocalist who brings the soulful undertow that "Back Up" builds around. The Grant and BJ Chicago Kid working relationship goes back to his debut era; it's a pairing that clearly works, and this single benefits from their established chemistry. An Atlanta-rooted MC building toward what may be his strongest album yet.

38 Spesh x Dave East "Heavy Burden" [SINGLE]


38 Spesh is one of the more versatile figures in the current New York underground: a producer of genuine skill who also raps with conviction, and whose career has built through consistent collaborations rather than a single breakthrough moment. His TCF Music Group output alongside Dave East extends a working relationship between two MCs who share a seriousness of purpose that sits outside trend cycles. "Heavy Burden" is compact and direct – the title carries its weight without theatrical overstatement. Dave East's Harlem identity and Spesh's Rochester grit meet on equal terms here, two artists who have each put in the time to earn the conversation they're having on record.

Dio Gin & Cube Ref "Steamboat vs. Savage (ECK Remix)" [VIDEO]


Dio Gin and Cube Ref release "Steamboat vs. Savage (ECK Remix)" with production from Chairman Chow and direction from Queen Philosophical, mixed and mastered by Monty Dale at Graybeard Recording Studios. The ECK Remix designation places this within a larger project framework – The People's Champion – suggesting a catalog that's building across multiple formats. Dio Gin operates with a consistent directness, and the collaboration with Cube Ref adds dimension without disrupting the established identity. A video release that stays firmly within the underground circuit and asks for nothing beyond that.

Cap Jones x Jay McElfresh "Last Battle for a New Home" [EP]

 

Cap Jones and Jay McElfresh operate with minimum apparatus on Last Battle for a New Home: Cap handles writing and recording, McElfresh produces, Cap mixes and masters the result. Three tracks, no features, no promotional scaffolding beyond the music itself. The title carries genuine conceptual weight – a final battle framing that reads as personal rather than performative – and the trio of tracks (Divine Essence, Seat At The Table, Last Battle for a New Home) suggests a progression rather than a random sequence. A small EP that makes its point and closes without overstaying. The friendship framing in the liner notes – "my brother Jay McElfresh" – is the only context needed: two people doing the work because the work matters to them.

Don Cee & DJ BTM "Synergy: The Remixes" [EP]

 

Synergy: The Remixes marks the second anniversary of the Don Cee and DJ BTM collaboration with a revisit that distributes remix duties across three producers: six from DJ BTM himself, one from DJ Headmasta, and one from Prexx. The anniversary-remix format is a practical one – it gives the original material new circulation, acknowledges the extended network, and demonstrates that the source album holds up to reinterpretation. Don Cee's lyricism finds new frames without losing its identity across the different production approaches. A considered way to mark a milestone without simply releasing a static anniversary edition.

AZ "Uniqueness" [VIDEO]


AZ's position in the canon is secured not just by his own catalog but by a specific historical moment: the sole guest feature on Nas' Illmatic in 1995, the first voice heard on what many consider the definitive New York rap album. Doe Or Die, his debut that same year, established him as a standalone force with his own virtuosic multi-syllabic approach and ice-smooth delivery. Doe Or Die III arrives via Mass Appeal – the label run by Nas and Peter Bittenbender – and closes the trilogy with the same discipline that defines his legacy. "Uniqueness," the second single produced by Mike N Keys, sits over plush, layered production that provides the right frame for AZ's precision without overwhelming it. The announcement dinner that brought Nas, DJ Premier, Slick Rick, Busta Rhymes, and Statik Selektah into one room was itself a statement about what this album means to its generation. May 8, 2026.

Evil Ebenezer x C-Lance x K-Prez "Graveyard" [SINGLE]


Evil Ebenezer has been a consistent and respected presence in the Vancouver underground for years, with a catalog that connects the West Coast Canadian scene to broader boom bap networks. C-Lance is a seasoned producer with established roots in the Canadian independent circuit, and K-Prez contributes to a release that works the "Graveyard" theme with the directness you'd expect from these operators. The single arrives without ceremony – music first, context follows – which is the correct approach when the work speaks clearly.

Showrocka & Ansolu "Dear Aries 2" [ALBUM]

 

Dear Aries 2 is Showrocka and Ansolu's return to a collaborative format that worked cleanly the first time around, with a 12-track project that the artists describe as balancing concept songs, storytelling, and complex lyricism over production that bridges golden era aesthetics with modern boom bap. The pairing reads as genuine partnership: Showrocka's established New England underground presence and Ansolu's distinct voice occupy equal ground without one overshadowing the other. Features from Bi9 Mik3 and Sa-Roc fit the album's tonal range without disrupting it. A thoughtful continuation that earns its sequel status by bringing something to the follow-up rather than simply repeating the original.

Four Limbs x Algernon Cornelius "Empires Derobed" [SINGLE]

 

Four Limbs and Algernon Cornelius work a clean division of labor on "Empires Derobed": production from Four Limbs, bars from Cornelius, recording and mixing by Joe Clayton at No Studio in Salford. The choice of Salford as the recording location is significant – the city has developed its own underground rap identity at a remove from the more visible Manchester scene, and No Studio has become a genuine independent hub in that geography. The track is compact and self-contained, built to make its point in one pass and leave. Cornelius rides the production with precision; the instrumental provides the right amount of space without becoming minimalist for its own sake.

2eleven "Revenge" [SINGLE]


2eleven operates out of Sacramento with a career built on independent output and an unflinching directness that cuts through without noise. "Revenge" is exactly what the title promises – a focused, no-detours statement delivered in single format. His body of work across the independent West Coast underground has been consistent; this continues that trajectory without unnecessary signposting. Clean and purposeful.

Caos "Neva Lose" [VIDEO]


Caos self-produces "Neva Lose" and places it within the larger frame of his second album 2 Gun Tommy, working with full control over his sonic identity. The approach is entirely self-contained – production, performance, and visual direction operating as a single integrated statement. In an underground ecosystem that often rewards specialization, the all-in-one approach here reads as preference rather than limitation. A focused single from an independent operator building his second full-length on his own terms.

Tha God Fahim "Dump Gawd: Hyperbolic Time Chamber Rap" [ALBUM]


Tha God Fahim has been operating in his own time-compressed universe for years – an Atlanta emcee and producer whose output volume is matched by a consistent commitment to quality that makes the catalog genuinely deep rather than just large. The Dump Gawd: Hyperbolic Time Chamber Rap series, produced by Montreal's Nicholas Craven, has expanded across multiple volumes, with each installment reinforcing what makes the partnership work: Craven's boom bap production anchors the spirit of the Northern soul-sample tradition, while Fahim brings an Atlanta perspective filtered through genuine New York underground values. The Dragon Ball Z reference in the series title is apt – Fahim trains at a pace that compresses time, and the results show. The Apple Music release packages this material for wider reach while the Bandcamp ecosystem carries the physical and limited editions for those already in the building.

Suave-Ski "A Million And One Questions" Freestyle [VIDEO]


Suave-Ski is a New London, Connecticut independent artist who has built his output on raw lyricism and direct storytelling drawn from his own navigation of the game. The freestyle over Jay-Z's "A Million And One Questions" is deliberately local in its visual presentation – shot in New London, Connecticut's Shore Life context intact – and the bars address the come-up without romanticism: resilience as fact rather than inspiration-poster material. The classic HOV instrumental is a high bar to bring something meaningful to; Suave-Ski earns his position on it. An award-winning independent operator working entirely on his own terms.

Hatch Wiseguy x DJ Los "Ill Dawgy" [SINGLE]


Hatch Wiseguy and DJ Los present "Ill Dawgy" as a focused single: the DJ function is front and center both as producer and co-billed artist, while the MC handles the lyrical weight. The release is compact and direct, built for one purpose and delivering it without excess. A clean single from an independent operation working within clearly defined parameters.

Showrocka & Mickey Factz "Kim Jong Leather" [VIDEO]


Showrocka has been a steady presence in the New England underground for years, building his reputation around dense, complex lyricism and a no-compromise approach to independent output. Mickey Factz brings his New York pedigree and a similar commitment to craft over trend. Their second collaborative album Manifest Destiny 2 follows the 2024 original, and "Kim Jong Leather," produced by CultXre and directed by Benji 2x, serves as one of its harder-edged cuts. The album self-describes as a balance of concept-driven material, storytelling, and golden-era-meeting-modern boom bap production – and the single holds up that brief without overreaching. The mix and master from Logikil at The Road 2 Audio give the track a clean finish that lets the bars sit where they should.

LEX x J57 "Do My Best" [SINGLE]

 

LEX drops "Do My Best" as the third single from his forthcoming project Everyday Music, produced by J57 of the Brown Bag Money collective, with mixing and mastering by ChezRocka. J57 has been one of the most reliable production addresses in the New York independent scene for years, and the release structure here – four versions including Showmix and Acapella – signals a working single built for real-world radio and DJ use, not just a streaming upload. The production is characteristically clean and purposeful, the kind of boom bap that doesn't chase attention but rewards it. LEX writes and records independently; the collaboration with J57 is a natural fit in terms of shared aesthetic priorities. Everyday Music takes shape one deliberate step at a time.

Big Twins "Pain" [VIDEO]


Big Twins carries one of the most immediately recognizable voices in Queensbridge rap – the rasp is non-negotiable, the cadence is his alone. Born and raised in the Queensbridge Houses, a twin brother to Twin Scarface who was killed in 1996, he emerged through the Infamous Mobb and established a direct line to The Alchemist through their early 2000s work together, producing street classics that remain reference points in that world. "Pain" is exactly what its title suggests: a direct, unflinching statement with no decorative excess. He's remained consistently active, with recent output including the Queensbridge EP alongside DirtyDiggs, a collaboration that placed his sound against West Coast sample aesthetics and held up without compromise. This new video documents where he is right now – and where he is hasn't moved far from where he started, which is the point.

Nec Nymbl x Es "Voices" [SINGLE]

 

Nec Nymbl is a founding presence in Scarborough's late-90s underground, a scene that operated in East Toronto's shadow but developed its own distinct voice. His production catalog includes collaborations with Killah Priest, REKS, Tragedy Khadafi, Bronze Nazareth, and Dom Pachino of Killarmy – the kind of network that speaks to genuine scene connectivity rather than strategic feature-hunting. "Voices" pairs him with Mississauga MC Es for a track rooted in socio-political observation: the instrumental is dark, cinematic, and dense without being cluttered, built from the kind of atmospheric boom bap that reads as deliberate restraint rather than minimalism. Es delivers with precision over the complex drum pattern, addressing the power of voice against systems of suppression. The track arrives as the third single ahead of their debut LP Voice Over Gold, due mid-May 2026. The included instrumental signals breakdance utility – a clean addition to a release built with real-school values throughout.

ethemadassassin x Milano Constantine "Culinary Class" [SINGLE]


ethemadassassin has carved a defined space in the European underground, particularly through his ongoing work with D.R.U.G.S. Beats, and "Culinary Class" pairs him with Milano Constantine, a New York MC whose catalog runs deep into the independent East Coast tradition. The collaboration reads cleanly: both artists operate in the same precision-driven register, favoring controlled delivery and substance over anything flashy. Constantine's veteran presence anchors the track; ethemad brings the international perspective that has distinguished his output. A brief, focused single that lands its point without overstaying.

MC Ari "La Carta Jolley" & "Línea Recta" [VIDEO]


MC Ari drops two tracks in a single visual package: "La Carta Jolley" over production by Mariano with cuts by DJ Lockz, and "Línea Recta" produced by Da Funkylooper, both mixed and mastered by Askahp at Boombawa studio. The release comes under La Tinta del Caribe, a production house rooted in Colombia's coastal and urban hip-hop underground. Ari's bars operate in the direct, unflinching territory that characterizes the best of the Colombian boom bap scene – no ornamental language, no distance from the street-level subjects he addresses. The Envigado-Bosa connection referenced in the release notes points to the regional solidarity that runs through this scene: different cities, same commitment to craft on their own terms.

King Magnatic x Edo.G x Tone Spliff "How It Is" [SINGLE]


King Magnatic is a big-boned presence in every sense – the Allentown, Pennsylvania MC has built his underground reputation on straightforward delivery and an unbroken commitment to boom bap over a decade of output that includes collaborations with Sean Price, DJ Premier, Conway the Machine, and others in that orbit. "How It Is" pairs him with Edo.G, whose run as the preeminent voice out of Roxbury, Boston spans from Ed O.G. & Da Bulldogs in the early 90s through a sustained and respected solo career, and Tone Spliff, who produced and scratched throughout their 2024 collaboration Audio EDibles. That project affirmed that Tone Spliff brings out a sharper version of Edo than most producers have in years. Three distinct voices, one shared frequency: no frills, no modern concessions, just craft.

Nam Nitty "BANDIT2" [ALBUM]

 

Nam Nitty has been running Secret Sosiety Entertainment out of South Huntington, Long Island with the kind of unbroken consistency that most independent operations can't sustain. BANDIT2 is the sequel to his 2023 album BANDIT – itself executive-produced by the late Crysis BD, whose name the original carried as tribute – and Nitty handles production, arrangement, and recording himself throughout, with mixing handled by Tee One at Life of Luxury Studio. What defines his catalog is the integrated approach: he isn't producing to a different standard than he raps, the whole project moves as one piece. The extended Mxnxpxly Family circle is present across the 12 tracks – John Jigg$, The Bad Seed, PillzBury, Rah Sun among others – but the features occupy their lanes without pulling focus from the central architect. Long Island boom bap, built in-house, no handouts requested.

Daniel Son x Futurewave "Paid My Tolls" [VIDEO]


"Paid My Tolls" surfaces from Shattered Glass, the latest full-length from Toronto's most consistent underground tandem. Futurewave builds everything himself – tracking, mixing, mastering – and the architecture shows: cold, drifting loops anchored by percussion that lands with surgical weight, space where most producers would panic-fill. Daniel Son rides it with the same flat affect he brings to every topic, whether it's street arithmetic, bad nerves, or cold friendships. His delivery doesn't flag the heavy bars; they run at the same temperature as everything else, which is precisely what makes them hit. The Brown Bag Money collective veteran and his production partner have been putting out this kind of full-contact boom bap since Pressure Cooker in 2018 – UK imprints press the vinyl, the 416 rarely calls. Shattered Glass doesn't ask permission.

Dio Gin “Steamboat vs Savage” (feat. Cube Ref) [VIDEO]

 


Steamboat vs Savage (East Coast Kings Remix)” by Dio Gin featuring Cube Ref. The single is off the wrestling concept album, “The People’s Champion”
The song is produced by Chairman Chow and is heavily influenced by classic old school wrestling. The title of the song is a homage to a classic wrestling match that took place in 1987 at Wrestlemania 3. The bout was an intercontinental championship match between Ricky “The Dragon” Steamboat challenging the champion, Randy “Macho Man” Savage.
The video was filmed and edited by Queen Philosophical



Thursday, April 30, 2026

"C.Scott" "1922 Murray Ave" [SINGLE]

This new offering "1922 Murray Ave" is taken off the studio album “Phase 2” by producer C.Scott, and leads the project down a joyfully jazzy moment of instrumental Lofi.


C. Scott - Phase 2

Pittsburgh’s favorite beatsmith is back with his new project, Phase 2. Packed with rich textures and soundscapes sourced exclusively from sampling vinyl records, C.Scott proves he is well on his way to mastering the craft of sample-based beat production. The whimsically abstract yet deliberate cover artwork handcrafted by Pittsburgh artist Steph Neary is the perfect representation of this musical voyage, providing a sense of journey and self-discovery.

C.Scott holds a solid catalog of releases dating back to the early 2010s, but feels his first official solo LP was Phase Shifting in 2019, making Phase 2 his triumphant return to a fully self-orchestrated expression. This is apparent right off the bat as the intro track plays with triumphant horn blasts bouncing perfectly off the drums and finalized by a few existential questions provided by a mysterious vocal sample narration. Immediately to follow is The Very Top, an undeniable head nodder accompanied by classic East Coast Hip-Hop vocal samples sporadically yelling throughout, officially starting the party. An Imaginative dreamscape of beats follow with some pleasantly comedic moments where, at times, C.Scott himself is the subject of the humour.

The track Do it! feat. Aarie presents the first vocal feature of the album and reminds the listener that this is indeed a Hip-Hop record, as he rocks the party with his undeniable hard hitting yet nimble flow and lyrics that offer lightness and humor amidst the challenges of life over C.Scott’s playfully in-the-pocket production.

Aggression is not lost on this project when the uptempo track So Hip smacks you into a realm of excitement and tension over splashy booming drums and relentless bass tones where C.Scott displays his urge to “juxtapose the expectations I felt were put on me as a 'hip' young upstart early in my career with my current trajectory and pursuit of my own individual sound and direction”. 

For those that have been following C.Scott throughout the years, there are some moments they will appreciate, like another rap feature from long-time collaborator, Moemaw Naedon, a house track, and overall, a clear advancement in production techniques.

For those just getting hip to C.Scott, they are in luck, as this project could sit alongside any veteran beat-maker's catalog.

The studio album Phase 2 is out now - https://lnk.to/rgNMMimu

Also in physical format via Soul Slime Records -  https://soulslimerecords.bandcamp.com

For more information on C.Scott: 

Mike Titan x Tali Rodriguez "The New Gods III" [ALBUM]

 

01. Forever People feat. GeneralBackPain & Kingdom Kome
02. The Inheritors feat. O The Great
03. Mother Boxes feat. G Fam Black & P-Ro
04. Council Of 4 feat. Travisty The Lazy Emcee & Feral Serge
05. Boom Tubes feat. Money Mogly
06. Granny’s Orphanage feat. Slik Jack, Aïda & DJ GlibStylez
07. Beautiful Dreaming feat. Crotona P
08. Moonrider Ranch feat. Sankofa
09. New Gods #11 feat. Heres Johnny & Orion
10. Black Vykins feat. New Villain & André DeSaint
11. The Mobius Chair feat. J.Vengeance & Mic Murphy
12. The Road Traveled (Apokolips 2 New Genesis)
13. Doctor Bedlam

Trilogies in underground hip-hop live or die by whether the finale earns the architecture that preceded it, and "The New Gods III" arrives with the scale to justify the conclusion. Mike Titan and Tali Rodriguez anchor thirteen tracks with a roster that functions like a genuine summit of the independent underground: Generalbackpain, O The Great, G Fam Black, Slik Jack, Crotona P, Money Mogly, J. Vengeance, Mic Murphy, New Villain, Andre DeSaint, Here$ Johnny, Sankofa, and others all contribute without fragmenting the project's coherence. The production is expansive and atmospheric, building a conceptual space large enough for the ambition without losing the specificity that makes it land. The two protagonists remain the center of gravity throughout — guests are contributors, not the point. A definitive closing chapter.

Jackpot Scotty Wotty xvShaka Amazulu The 7th "Walkin' On Sunshine" [VIDEO]


Jackpot Scotty Wotty is a name that has moved through Wu-Tang lore for decades without ever fully materializing — RZA has described him as GZA's rhyme partner and the figure who originated the Park Hill style that Meth and Raekwon would later carry, and he was reportedly present at the formation of All in Together Now alongside GZA and ODB before life pulled him away from the original collective. Shaka Amazulu The 7th, the London-based producer behind Black Stone of Mecca and a significant Wu-affiliate operator in his own right, handles production and brings the same philosophy to the sonic environment: dark, architecturally deliberate, built to carry weight. "Walkin' On Sunshine" follows the Parkhill Nightmare single as the second step in what appears to be a longer narrative project. The title is the inversion — in Scotty Wotty's world, sunshine exposes rather than comforts.

ethemadassassin x D.R.U.G.S. Beats "The Manual" [SINGLE]

 
North Carolina has maintained a consistent underground presence that rarely gets the placement it deserves in the broader conversation about regional rap scenes, and ethemadassassin is among the names that have sustained that presence over time. "The Manual" finds him working with D.R.U.G.S. Beats on a track that prioritizes directness — sharp production, high-energy framework, no wasted motion. ethemadassassin's delivery is authoritative and technically precise, the wordplay layered enough to earn repeated listening without performing its own complexity. This is a collaboration built on the understanding that craft speaks loudest when it doesn't have to announce itself.

Confucious & Lilman "48 Hours" [VIDEO]


KILOBARS is a six-track collaborative album from Confucious and Lilman, built entirely on production from JimmyDukes, and "48 Hours" functions as the project's calling card. JimmyDukes works with a lean, focused sensibility — beats that give MCs something to move on without requiring them to work around the production. Confucious and Lilman take that framework and push each other upward, their back-and-forth rooted in a shared commitment to technical proficiency over posture. The chemistry is audible: two MCs who know exactly what the other is going to do and prepare accordingly. Short-form projects live or die by their execution, and this one doesn't waste a bar.

Joffy Top Tiger x General Deezy x Ghetto Ghost x Baisley La "Love Don't Live Here" [VIDEO]


The Baisley Projects sit in Southside Queens with a specific weight in the borough's rap history, and Joffy Top Tiger operates from that address with a crew that understands what the address means. "Love Don't Live Here" builds around a sample that earns its place immediately — poignant and grounding, setting the tone for what follows. General Deezy, Ghetto Ghost, and Baisley La each bring a distinct voice and perspective, and the track works because the four don't converge into one — they stay distinct while sharing the same ground. The writing is grounded in loyalty, loss, and the specific emotional economy of life in the projects. No flash, no distance from the material. This is hip-hop as community document.