AfterLyfe’s premier MC, Konflik, makes an electrifying return with his newest single, “D.W.M.H.S.” the fourth release from his full-length project, 3rd QTR: The Quote Of The Raven. Set against a haunting yet rich soundscape crafted by acclaimed producer NasteeLuvzYou, Konflik delivers a commanding lyrical performance from start to finish.
Armed with intricate wordplay, dynamic rhyme patterns, and an effortlessly captivating flow, Konflik seamlessly blends unfiltered intensity with refined lyricism. Paired with a visually compelling music video, “D.W.M.H.S.”serves as a bold testament to Konflik’s lyrical mastery and further solidifies his growing presence in the hip-hop scene.
Built on a foundation of classic West Coast G-funk, “LA Timez" unites Dheezy with West Coast hip-hop legends Snoop Dogg and Kurupt, delivering a smooth yet hard-hitting blend of rolling basslines, laid-back grooves and melodic synth work that pays homage to the golden era of California hip-hop. Opening with a spoken-word introduction that firmly establishes its South Central Los Angeles roots, the record immediately sets the tone for a celebration of West Coast culture, identity and influence, with Snoop Dogg and Kurupt bringing an undeniable authenticity, legacy and veteran presence that further anchors the track in the sound and spirit of Los Angeles.
Dheezy drives the track with a sharp, energetic performance packed with intricate rhyme schemes, clever wordplay and references that stretch from New Zealand rugby to pop culture icons. His commanding delivery is complemented by Snoop Dogg’s unmistakable melodic drawl, while Kurupt reinforces the record’s street-level edge with his signature intensity and unapologetic perspective, creating a dynamic showcase of three distinct voices united by a shared respect for the culture.
Lyrically, the song bridges Los Angeles and Australia, reflecting a shared connection through hip-hop while exploring themes of regional pride, success, and street credibility. The result is a nostalgic, head-nodding anthem that honours the legacy of 90s and early-2000s West Coast rap whilst giving it a contemporary international twist. The track closes on a reflective note with a roll-call tribute to respected and fallen figures of the West Coast hip-hop community, including Nate Dogg, Ty Cuzz and Bad Azz, underscoring the record’s deep respect for the culture and artists who helped shape its sound.
DHEEZY UNVEILS HIS MOST AMBITIOUS PROJECT YET: "DHEEZY DOES IT LP"
Years in the making, Dheezy proudly presents his long-awaited passion project, Dheezy Does It LP. Originally conceived under the titles Tell Em Where Ya From and Show Em Where Ya From, the album represents four years of dedication, perseverance, and an unwavering commitment to authentic hip-hop culture.
Created between Australia and Los Angeles, California, Dheezy invested countless hours into crafting the project, recording music and filming visuals both at home and abroad. The result is a body of work that reflects not only his artistic growth but also his deep respect for the genre that inspired him from the beginning.
At its core, Dheezy Does It LP serves as a tribute to Dheezy's greatest musical influence, Eminem. The album features an introduction from the rap icon himself, alongside contributions from several artists affiliated with the legendary Shady Records camp. Executive-produced by KXNG Crooked, the project also includes appearances from Royce da 5'9", the late Nate Dogg, D12, and a previously unreleased verse from Proof, Eminem's longtime friend and fellow D12 member.
Beyond its Shady Records connections, the album brings together an impressive lineup of hip-hop legends and respected voices from across the culture. Featured artists include Kurupt, Snoop Dogg, Onyx, Big Twins, Planet Asia, E-40, the late Chino XL, and the late Coolio, creating a project that bridges generations and regions of rap music.
With 16 tracks packed full of lyricism, authenticity, and classic hip-hop energy, Dheezy Does It LP is designed for fans who grew up on the golden era sounds of the 1990s and 2000s while remaining fresh enough to resonate with a new generation of listeners. Every track reflects Dheezy's passion for preserving the essence of real hip-hop while putting his own stamp on the culture.
"Dheezy Does It LP is more than an album—it's the culmination of years of hard work, sacrifice, and a lifelong love for hip-hop. This project brings together artists and influences that helped shape my journey, and I'm proud to finally share it with the world.”
Whether you're a longtime fan of classic rap or simply appreciate great music crafted with passion and respect for the culture, Dheezy Does It LP delivers a listening experience that celebrates hip-hop's past, present, and future.
El Gant and maticulous return with their new single entitled “House Of Cards”. Gant gets introspective and reflective on the personal ups and downs of life plus balancing music industry politics...flowing with ease and precision over an infectious piano track provided by maticulous. This is the second single leading up to their joint album also titled "House of Cards" out this July.
“The Jackals” is the single from the upcoming collaborative album by Mic Bles, produced entirely by Avant Garde. The beat lands as a hard-edged underground banger, with Mic Bles riding it through clean rhyme technique. The black-and-white noir visual underscores the cinematic intent, while the mix and master from Klutch Norris and DJ Romes keep it tight. It’s a preview aimed at a fully produced one-MC, one-producer album — the kind of cohesive pairing that tends to age better than scattered single-driven releases.
“Good Business” is e-fluent’s first project of 2026 and possibly his most accessible — produced entirely by NaBY. It leans on deliberate, catchy hooks rather than wall-to-wall rawness, but the bars are still firmly present. He brings in NY underground personnel including his regular partner MyneFrame alongside Queens voices WÜLF and FastLife. The posture lives in the title: businesslike, reliable, built on doing the work cleanly rather than cutting corners. It’s a more commercial lean that doesn’t sacrifice the lyrical foundation underneath.
“Muckleberry Finn” — a wink toward Twain — pairs Killah Dilla’s lyricism with Frizzy Astro’s production into a cohesive album. The beat approach stays sample-driven and jagged, the delivery direct. Despite the playful title, the core is serious underground rap: wordcraft riding an atmospheric foundation. It’s the kind of producer-MC pairing that benefits from a single sonic vision running the length of the project rather than a scattered guest-producer approach.
Jamal Gasol belongs to the heavily expanded Buffalo scene and carries its signature blend: cold street imagery, forceful flow, no gloss. “7 or Better,” produced by The Standouts, stays in that lane — a dark beat, direct delivery, filmed in Harlem. It’s underground rap built on substance and atmosphere rather than hook logic, the work of an MC fully at home in the gritty East Coast tradition his city has come to represent.
Rasheed Chappell remains one of the New York school’s underrated narrators. Drawing from his Passaic upbringing, he represents New York with incisive, lyrical depictions of reality over dirty drums. His path runs from early work with Kenny Dope through collaborations with D.I.T.C. veteran Buckwild on Sinners & Saints, then 38 Spesh, XP the Marxman, Little Vic, the Arcitype, and Beatsbyjblack. “No Era for Margins” continues that lineage: cinematic imagery, quiet authority, and a refusal to waste a word. His words capture and convey cinematic emotion — it’s as if you’re watching a movie more than listening to music.
The Muggs/T.F. axis is fully locked in for 2026, following their album “Don’t Call Me Lucky,” released April 10, 2026 on Soul Assassins Records, pairing Muggs’ signature production with T.F.’s sharp, street-rooted delivery. “Power Tools” extends that chemistry into EP form and brings in Nems, a distinctive Coney Island voice. Muggs — the sonic architect behind Cypress Hill — has spent years moving deeper into the underground, into spaces that prioritize creativity over scale. The mode stays cold, stripped down, and grime-coated, exactly the Soul Assassins atmosphere that has defined his recent run alongside Roc Marciano, Rome Streetz, and Boldy James.
Wish Master is among the more word-dense voices in the UK underground, and “Lifes A Gamble” — a title carrying a clear Nas/“Illmatic” echo — stays true to that lane. Forceful flow, tight rhyme chains, and a beat built on a dusty sample core. It’s British craftsmanship that respects the New York school without merely copying it, the work of an MC who prioritizes lyrical density and delivery over easy accessibility.
The title sets the theme: “Illusion of Permanence” circles impermanence and the deceptive nature of anything that seems to last. Mickey Blue keeps the EP compact and reflective, with writing aimed inward rather than outward. It’s a format built on mood and coherence over breadth — a short, focused statement that trusts atmosphere to carry the weight rather than chasing a wide spread of ideas.
“Bounds” is deeply rooted in Pittsburgh: Beedie writes and performs while Nice Rec handles all production, with the mix coming from Big Jerm at ID Labs — the same orbit that shaped Mac Miller’s early sound. Titles like “kintsugi,” “me versus me,” and “regeneration of self” signal the introspective, almost therapeutic tone. Mars Jackson and Cam Chambers add features but stay supporting voices. The result is a cohesive record built on warm sample foundations and honest writing — a Pittsburgh project that values self-examination over posture.
“Blood of the Lamb” closes the joint trilogy between Mickey Diamond and Big Ghost Ltd. Coming off both Wolf Tickets and Black Sheep, it arrived without any prior announcement. What makes it an interesting conclusion is that the production is likely more sample-heavy than its predecessors, alongside the likelihood of Diamond at his most religious topically. Soul- and gospel-inflected boom bap carries the record — gospel flips, piano-driven instrumentals, and grittier survival narratives running through tracks like “Communion” and “Collection Plates.” The project runs twelve tracks with a guest appearance from Daniel Son, Diamond’s delivery staying the center while Big Ghost’s signature frames it.
The title alone signals attitude: “Manic! At The Shitshow” is a producer-driven album that makes unrest and pressure its concept. Illtemper builds jagged, dark beats that sound more basement than polish. It’s a project that puts the producer at the center, deploying the MCs as instruments within his sonic world rather than the other way around — a cohesive statement of mood over any single standout verse.
“Animal Writes 2” keeps it lean: seven tracks, a clear focus on wordcraft. Tha Rhyme Animal carries the lyricism while Slang Hugh sets the production frame. Titles like “K.Y.S.,” “Lethal Injection,” and “Writers Block” hint at the dark, occasionally self-aware tone. It’s compact underground craftsmanship that bets on rhyme technique over runtime — the kind of short project that says what it needs to and gets out clean.
Two worlds meet here as equals: Supreme Cerebral as a heavyweight lyricist and The Beat Junkies as one of the most influential turntablism crews in the culture. Adding D-Styles brings a scratch master whose work turns the cuts from garnish into main event. “Faces of Death” thrives on that friction — hard bars over a foundation that pushes DJ artistry to the center. For anyone who values the turntable as an instrument, this pairing is a genuine event rather than a routine feature.
“Love the Sound” is solid UK craftsmanship: MANAGE handles production while Airklipz and Composure share the floor, with Fidel Cutstro adding cuts as a classic structural element. The beat stays warm and sample-led, the delivery distinctly British — crisp enunciation, forceful flow. Global Faction supplies the visual, as they so often do for the UK underground. It’s a love letter to the sound itself, stated without melodrama, rooted in the boom bap purism that the UK scene has long championed.
Tone Spliff is the kind of producer-DJ who still builds beats with genuine turntable knowledge — cuts and scratches as foundation, not decoration. “At All Costs” hands Benny Slumz and Freddie Black a hard, sample-driven platform, and both move across it with classic rhyme technique. It’s forceful boom bap that takes DJ culture seriously, the sort of record that keeps the fourth element audibly present rather than treating it as an afterthought.
“Khronicles of Kain” is the Detroit duo’s reunion and a direct follow-up to “SUMP.” Kain Cole writes and performs everything while Foul Mouth produces all the beats and handles recording, mixing, and mastering — a fully self-contained operation. The sound stays distinctly Detroit: grimy, forceful, balancing menace with momentum. Bang Belushi and Ketch P provide the only guest spots, but they stay supporting players to the core duo. The strength here is the closed-circuit chemistry: one MC, one producer, total control of the sound.
Milano Constantine sits within the extended D.I.T.C. family and delivers exactly what that school promises: a sturdy flow, clean rhyme technique, and beats built on dusty sample cores. “Wild Kingdom” stays direct and compact, with nothing surplus in the frame. This is New York craftsmanship without posturing — the kind of record that values precision and tradition over trend-chasing, made by someone who came up under genuine pedigree.
“IHNY” is one of the key moments on Ancient History, produced by Navy Blue — exactly that dreamlike weightlessness of post-Earl Sweatshirt underground rap that defines stretches of the album. Wiki stays introspective, the delivery unhurried, the beat foggy and soul-soaked. The visual carries that muted mood rather than overplaying it, letting the track breathe the way the production intends. It’s a strong illustration of how Wiki and Navy Blue’s sensibilities lock into the same melancholic frequency.
“The Wolves” runs on pack mentality: Ayoo Bigz on the mic, Imperativ handling the beat-side foundation. The instrumental stays dark and jagged, the delivery direct and unfussy. It’s a track that works through posture and pressure rather than hook logic — classic underground mechanics, built for the heads who value grit over gloss.
Wiki delivers his first proper solo album since 2019’s Oofie, and it’s a focused one. Lifelong New Yorker Patrick Morales’ introspective, lightly melancholic street rap sits in a tradition that goes back to Biggie and Wu-Tang — slices of city life that feel both minute and expansive. On another level, Ancient History is something more, a quietly psychedelic album mixing the dreamlike weightlessness of post-Earl Sweatshirt underground rap with the melodic directness of soul and R&B. Production comes from the Alchemist, Nick Hakim, Navy Blue, and Laron, plus Mount Kimbie under his Dom Maker alias and MIKE as dj blackpower. Your Old Droog, duendita, and Salimata make appearances without ever pulling the center away from Wiki’s defined, lived-in vision.
Ty Nitty carries real Queensbridge weight as an Infamous Mobb voice — his delivery sits low, unbothered, and street-hardened. Vodka Gravas lays a cool, modern beat beneath it, shadowed enough to make the voice feel menacing rather than nostalgic. “The Machine” isn’t a throwback exercise; it’s lived QB experience riding a contemporary underground foundation. The pairing works because Vodka Gravas gives him room rather than trying to dress up a veteran who never needed decoration.
Tres Coronas have long bridged New York hardcore rap and Spanish-language street narrative, and “Chupacabras” stays true to that lineage. The beat hits with force, the rhyme chains stay tight, and the delivery never abandons its East Coast foundation. Jhon Rey fits the track cleanly, adding color without pulling focus from the group. This is genuine Latin boom bap craftsmanship — no reggaeton concessions, just hard rap rooted in the same soil that raised the crew’s NY connections.
“Filthy” lives up to its name: a grimy beat, hard drums, and a delivery built on pressure rather than ornamentation. Kool Taj The Great stays in the classic lyricist’s zone, keeping word choice and flow up front with no concession to radio logic. It’s a single-as-statement — attitude over polish, the kind of raw record that announces intent without needing a chorus to carry it.
Puff Down brings Anwar HighSign’s 2007 EP to physical format for the first time. The release matters historically: F*ck Has Day marked the first time he handled all of the production on one of his releases, and in its booming bass lines, drum loops, cutting, laidback delivery and reflective themes, you can hear the foundations of In Case I Don’t Make It and many of his later records. This edition is modelled after the 2010 digital re-release, pairing every track with its instrumental alongside updated artwork from original designer Kyle MT. For anyone tracing the Mello Music Group classics back to their root, this is the source code — and it’s strictly limited to 100 cassettes and 100 CDs.
Ankhlejohn remains one of DC’s most singular minds — a producer and MC who moves between raw street rap and almost meditative abstraction. “AURA FARMING” carries that tension: jagged sample material and a delivery that mutters more than it shouts, yet lands every bar with weight. The title flirts with internet slang, but the music stays uncompromisingly underground, rooted in his Black Noise world of self-built, self-determined records. He’s always been more interested in mood and texture than easy hooks, and this stays the course.
“15 Min” sits squarely in the Soulspazm tradition — raw East Coast sonics built around bars and beat quality rather than gloss. Enemthagreat keeps the delivery compact and direct, riding a dark, pressing instrumental that never lets up. As a piece of a larger album frame, it makes the posture clear: no filler, no decoration, just hard-nosed underground rap doing exactly what it sets out to do.
Raz Fresco stays true to his lane: a producer and MC in one body, drawn to dusty loops and cold East Coast aesthetics despite his Toronto roots. “The Blind Borders” runs on dark sample material and dry drums, with his voice sitting confidently on top. The record leans on atmosphere and control rather than spectacle, carrying that Bakers Club signature of self-produced, self-contained underground rap. It’s the kind of track that rewards repeat listens — built for headphones and crate-digger ears, not instant impact.
The title alone cuts against the usual “everything was realer back then” nostalgia trap. Afrob and Ferris MC anchor the record, with Curse adding his measured, reflective weight and Gini supplying contrast. Vanta lays the foundation, while live keys and guitar from Klimperboy Gaudes and Boris Mesaric loosen the beat and keep it from sounding rigid. This isn’t aging-rapper sentimentality — it’s seasoned MCs using experience as an argument rather than a monument. It works because none of them are coasting; the chemistry between long-standing German rap voices carries genuine weight here.
"Lost Sons, Pt. 2" moves with the conviction of a crew that doesn't need to announce itself. A.P. Da Overlord (Allah Preme) operates through the Free Thinker Klan, a network built around restoring pure hip hop to its original prominence. That ethos bleeds through the track: no compromise in the delivery, no softening in the approach. Bah Label provides the sonic architecture, CX and A.P. share the floor without either trying to outshine the other. The "Pt. 2" tag signals continuity with weight — this record doesn't reintroduce anything, it doubles down.
Doza The Drum Dealer is the head producer of the Narcotechs and carries a production résumé that spans Raekwon, M1 of Dead Prez, Flee Lord, Saigon, Ill Bill, and Hus Kingpin. "Look At Me" plants the core lineup in one frame: Dax Mpire and Ark Medina aren't featured guests in the conventional sense — they are structural parts of the Narcotechs bloc, voices that have been moving alongside Doza since the project's foundation. The Narcotechs entity has been running since 2017 as a collective built around Doza, Dax Mpire, and their extended circle. The single pulls from that long-established chemistry rather than manufacturing it — and that kind of familiarity has a weight that studio-assembled lineups can't fake.
Bub Styles keeps his Brooklyn grit completely intact on “Fuckutalkinbout.” Producer Sebb Bash supplies a dusty, uncompromising instrumental that acts as the perfect backdrop for Bub’s raspy, dominant vocal tone. The “Outerwear SZN” series has always been fueled by this exact energy: cold weather, heavy coats, and unapologetic street rap with zero attempts at crossover appeal. The beat and the emcee operate on the exact same grim frequency. Limited physical cassette and CD drops reinforce the strictly independent groundwork of the release.
GRYFFYTH and $IN keep “FREEDOM HAS A PRICE” strictly rooted in the darker, loop-heavy corners of the underground. Discarding polished arrangements for dry drum patterns and sparse sample cuts, the production relies on a strict, minimalist aesthetic. Both emcees split the space naturally, playing off each other’s deliveries and prioritizing thick atmosphere over traditional hooks. It’s a project built like a cold street corner: unvarnished, compact, and entirely focused on the lyrical core.
Nasty Killah’s “Underdogs” lands with the right kind of underground pressure. Aleph’s beat is raw and forward-moving, with dark enough texture to let the voices cut through without needing extra drama. Nasty Killah keeps the performance sharp, leaning into hunger, defiance, and the kind of delivery that sounds built from repetition, not posing. D Yesca adds the proper counterweight, while DJ Elemento’s cuts give the track a traditional hip-hop backbone instead of just a cosmetic scratch layer. The recording, mix, and master keep it compact and hard-nosed — street-level, direct, and focused.
"Middi Magazine" sits deep inside the strange orbit that only Kool Keith records can occupy. Emperor Middi and Number One Producer shape a world less concerned with orthodox boom bap than with crooked funk, odd textures, and room for Keith's fractured imagination to move at its own pace. Keith sounds sharpest when the production lets him bend reality without guardrails: sexual surrealism, deadpan comedy, sudden image flips, and bars that feel disconnected until the whole weird pattern starts to reveal itself. The guests add voice and texture, but the pull of the record is the clash between Middi's off-center editorial framework and Keith's lifelong refusal to rap in straight lines.
LJ Lewis' "The Smoking Gun" steps straight into a grim New York pocket. The loop is sinister, the drums hit dry, and nothing in the production tries to soften the room. LJ writes and delivers with a hard cinematic edge — shaping the track through pressure, imagery, and controlled aggression rather than excess volume. OSVN fits the frame naturally, adding veteran Queens weight without taking the wheel. The record works because it stays tight: no wasted motion, no decorative polish, just two emcees trading sharp bars over a loop built for cold stairwells and late-night tension.
Onse TSW's "2 Faces" feels self-built in the best sense. With Onse handling most of the production, the project carries a consistent emotional temperature: heavy, reflective, and shaped by pressure rather than polish. The beats stay rooted in a classic rap language — somber loops, firm drums, and enough negative space for the words to land with full weight. Minart Prod and Hanto bring in useful shifts in texture, while DJ Hill's cuts on "Brique par brique" give the record a sharper traditional backbone. The guests add breadth without disrupting the core, which is Onse working through strain, solitude, and the double-sided nature of survival — measured and undecorated throughout.
Hard Crew's "Follow Me" is built around collective motion. Naick B, Zaru, Bazz, and Yies Snap bring different vocal textures into a record that runs on presence and crew chemistry rather than overworked complexity. Naick B's instrumental keeps the frame tight, while Bazz's electric guitar adds grit and gives the track a sharper edge than a standard street-rap loop. The writing is less about layered abstraction and more about command, attitude, and movement — a crew statement that works best when taken as exactly that: direct, physical, and meant to be felt before it gets dissected.
"Guerriers de l'ombre vol. 3" plays like a deep French underground dispatch rather than a polished compilation — crowded by design, different voices, different pockets, different shades of pressure, but Talenkoprod remains the spine holding the room together. The production leans into dust, minor-key tension, and drums that feel cut for basements, not playlists. Crazyox Beats, The Gloomy Sailor, Kyo Itachi, and Oxydz widen the palette without breaking the project's shadowed mood. Lyrically the tape moves through survival codes, inner resistance, working-class fatigue, and warrior imagery without turning the concept into decoration. The beat section at the close matters too — it frames the project as a producer-driven workshop, not just a roll call of names.
"La vida brinda" moves with grounded street warmth rather than forced aggression. The record carries a Latin-rooted pulse and leaves enough open space for the voice to sit upfront, giving the track its human weight. Boz One keeps the delivery steady and lived-in, letting the phrasing do the work instead of chasing spectacle. Ontoroporro fits the pocket naturally, adding color without pulling the center away from the main voice.
Rique Wit Da Wickz delivers a 7-track project through The 17th Cipher, with production handled by Blackadinme, Kash Flow, True Cipher, and Drugs Beats. The title sets the posture before the first bar lands: cold grits aren't a meal, they're a reminder of scarcity, of grinding with no guarantee of payoff. Four producers in the room means four different textures to move through, but the project holds its thread because Rique is the consistent voice threading them together. The record sits squarely in boom bap and underground hip hop territory — no attempts to soften the edges, no concessions to convenience. That kind of clarity is rare and always worth clocking.
"Frank Sobotka" borrows its frame from one of The Wire's most tragic figures — a man who played the system and got swallowed by it — and uses that weight deliberately rather than as decoration. Hella Treez holds the center, building a performance grounded in that same tension between loyalty, survival, and the cost of compromise. Asun Eastwood and Bobby Bishop bring their caliber without pulling focus, each adding pressure rather than pivoting the record. The beat stays in that muted, overcast zone: no warmth, no flash, all grey pavement. It works because the reference earns its place in the bars.
Estee Nack and Mike Shabb deliver "Estupido" from "Live From The Tabernacle Vol. 2" (releasing June 30, 2026). Mike Shabb handles production while One Eye Films directs the visual. Estee Nack stays in his typical dense, image-heavy writing style. The track sounds raw and direct – exactly what fans have come to expect from both artists. Another strong chapter in their ongoing collaboration.
G Fam Black and Tali Rodriguez deliver their sixth collaborative album with "The Melody Of Chaos." The feature list is strong: P-Ro, Che Uno, Feral Serge, and Sankofa. Tali Rodriguez handles production, mixing, and mastering entirely himself. The project moves between dark, chaotic beats and clear, direct bars. Standouts like "Tuck Your Tail" with Che Uno and "Blind or Biased" with Sankofa show the project at its strongest. Another powerful chapter in this long-running partnership.
Conway The Machine drops "Chains & Whips Freestyle," an acapella performance that immediately reminds listeners why he remains one of the most technically gifted MCs of his generation. Taken from the "I Heard You Paint Houses" project, Conway moves without a beat, making his timing and rhyme schemes even more apparent. This isn’t a gimmick – it’s pure proof of his skill level.
"Head Bangers" is a project from two DJs: DJ Supa Dave and DJ Mickey Knox. DJ Mickey Knox is already known through the "Grimey Life Remixes" with Big Twins and through work in the Queens-affiliated underground. Six tracks with titles that name the agenda directly: "True Grit," "Smoke Clears," "Pearly Gates," "Locked In," "The Walker," "Different State Of Mind." When two DJs build a joint project, the craft takes center stage – beat construction, cuts, sample selection, the interplay of drums and loops. "Head Bangers" as a title is a statement: these are tracks meant to move the neck, not background lo-fi but material with pressure. The combination of two DJ sensibilities promises particular attention to rhythmic architecture – the role of the DJ as an equal partner to lyricism rather than a mere beat supplier.
Eff Yoo delivers "Brilliance" – or "The Brilliance" – from the album "God Is An Artist," produced by Kel-C. The description makes the thematic core clear: a deeply personal reflection on maturity, depression, fatherhood, confronting your past, and facing your future. This isn't a battle track or a flex; it's vulnerable introspection. The album title "God Is An Artist" shifts the perspective: if God is an artist, then life – with all its fractures, pains, and unfinished places – is the work of art. "Brilliance" as a title works against the heaviness of the themes: shine and depression, brightness and darkness in the same breath. Eff Yoo uses rap here as a therapeutic tool, not a stage for image. Kel-C provides production that carries this emotional depth without overdramatizing it.
Hardfiz delivers "Bad Mode," a nine-track project through UnderSound Productions – the same Italian label that released Mervin's "PAURA." The production is deliberately spread across many hands: Mervin (1), Cevasco Syntharsi (2,3), Zeto (4,7), Zanhell (5), Hardfiz himself (6), and MakaiPagan (8,9). Mix and master by Dirty Mef, cover by Farmachia Illustration. The feature list runs deep into the Italian underground: John Faser, Sweet Sindaco, Arcobaledo, La Zona D'Ombra, Butch aka YoungGein, Damnatio, MakaiPagan, Dirty Chao, and Mervin. Titles like "32 Pirli Sotto Al Sole," "Terry Thompson," and "Cayenne's Calumet" show the mix of regional slang, pop-cultural references, and cryptic imagery that defines the Italian underground. This isn't a solo statement; it's a scene portrait, with Hardfiz as the hub of a dense network of MCs and producers carrying each other forward.
NÉMÉSIS delivers "Coroner Conversations" from the album "Product Of My Environment." The beat comes from Kheyzine, mix and master by Dan Akill, video by Jazzfleemarket, cover by Loizo. Available on Bandcamp and as a boxset CD version through Maison de Funk. The title is deliberately dark: "Coroner Conversations" – dialogues with the medical examiner, conversations about death, about what remains after the violence. This aligns with the album title "Product Of My Environment," which carries forward the classic hip-hop thesis: a person is the product of their surroundings, and the music documents those surroundings. NÉMÉSIS operates in the francophone underground, where forensic and dark imagery carries a long tradition. The physical boxset release through Maison de Funk shows a value placed on the object – not just a stream, but a collector's piece.
"ACT II" is conceived as a film, not a loose collection of tracks. The framing makes that clear: "Intro (Action)" at the start, "Closing Credits (Outro)" at the end, plus a bonus track "Nothing Change" with Scary Allen. Eleven pieces structured like scenes from a second act. The feature roster is dense and curated: Brother Tom Sos on "Keep Going," Kueen and Crook Brown on "Mills Outta Scraps," ILL Conscious on "ILL State of Mind," UllNevaNo on "SoulPride," Rent Moneyy on "Ghetto Alma-Mater." Titles like "Sugar Hill" (a Harlem reference, birthplace of Sugar Hill Records) and "Ghetto Alma-Mater" anchor the project in deliberate hip-hop historiography – the street as university, the ghetto as place of education. The Street Dreamers Production Club operates as a collective that treats production and curation as one unified practice. "ACT II" works as a cohesive statement where sequencing and transitions matter as much as the individual bars.
"Dame De Fer" the Iron Lady, the French vernacular name for the Eiffel Tower — places Misa and Nicholas Craven in exactly the configuration both their catalogs have been building toward. Misa (born Sami Saidi in Algiers in 1995, raised in Paris, later anchored in Montreal) carries a triple cultural formation that rarely gets fully accounted for in French-language rap: Algerian cadence and diction, Parisian street literacy, and a Quebec-connected bilingual sensibility, with range across rap and melody that makes him genuinely difficult to categorize. His profile has been built carefully: opening sets for Youssoupha and MHD at Francofolies de Montréal, an appearance on Seth Gueko's gold-certified "Professeur Punchline" project, and a track record with respected figures across both French and French-Canadian scenes. Nicholas Craven is the Montreal producer who has most consistently placed Quebec on the map of East Coast-lineage underground production: his credits with Roc Marciano, Mach-Hommy, Armand Hammer, Boldy James, Ransom, and Griselda speak to a producer who operates at the level of New York's most active beatmakers, and his Roc Nation release with Boldy James ("No Blemishes") was a first for any Montreal artist on that label. The meeting point on "Dame De Fer" is the weight the track carries — Craven's architecture built for this density, Misa's pen carrying the mass it demands. Bob Marlich features. Mix and master by Roberto Viglione. Directed by Mani Vision.
"Foolish!" is the second visual from "Khronicles of Kain," due June 12th, 2026 — the second full-length collaborative project between Kain Cole and Detroit producer Foul Mouth, operating under the Middle Finger Music banner. Their debut together, "S.U.M.P. (Survival Under Major Pressure)" (2022), introduced Cole as a Belleville, Michigan MC whose eight years behind bars weren't background noise but the actual forge: the bars carry that history without leaning on it as a narrative crutch. The writing is economical and street-documented, positioned specifically against the kind of rap that performs struggle without living it. Foul Mouth's production DNA runs through DJ Premier, Just Blaze, and Dr. Dre on the technical side — and through Detroit's own musical memory on the thematic side. His debut beat tape "Soul Louis" (2015), co-executive produced with Dart Adams via Producers I Know and distributed through Fat Beats, was a 20-track project built explicitly around Detroit's cultural and sonic history. His placement credits include Royce Da 5'9", Guilty Simpson, Bizarre from D12, RJ Payne, and others from the Michigan circuit. With his solo album "Everybody Goes Crazy Once" (November 2025) already in the rearview, Foul Mouth returns to the co-pilot seat for what promises to be a tighter, more focused statement than their debut.
The second single from "A Dark Storm" brings together Louie Sincere and Fat Kneel — operating as Dope Product — with Belgian turntablist DJ Grazzhoppa for a collaboration that earns its geography. Sincere is a bilingual MC whose entire catalog has been built on South Side Framingham, Massachusetts as raw material: cinematic, street-documented writing that treats personal experience as the only valid source. Fat Kneel matches that frequency on the other half of the mic, no wasted syllables. What elevates this beyond a standard MC/DJ pairing is who Grazzhoppa is: a 1991 European DMC Champion who co-founded Greedy Fingers Productions with UK's Mr. Greedy, placing him in the same room — and on the same records — as MF Doom, Necro, Cage, and the Monsta Island Czars during the late-90s New York underground's most fertile run. That transatlantic scratch lineage lands on top of a HiSpeed Network production like a credential, not a gimmick. Video shot and edited by King Author, founder of the network. Limited edition ponchos available alongside the album.
Buffalo everyman Gaine$ returns with new visuals for “Real 1.” An introspective and inspired dose of soulful hip-hop. Filmed partly on location at the Mint Cocktail Bar in his hometown, the video follows Gaine$ today as the businessman and the street operative yesterday. As he says “it’s inspired by the ideal of triumph. Getting your hands dirty but coming out clean on the other side.”
“Real 1” is taken from the newly released LP, Mr. Gaine$ (fully produced by NOM). A video for the first single “The Otherside of $$$” was also released (link below)
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.
DJ Crypt continues building his international "Tales From The Crypt" LP, enlisting Canadian hardcore MC Snak The Ripper for "Pull Up." Hip-hop saved Snak the Ripper's life – born William Scott Fyvie in 1982 in British Columbia, he nearly didn't survive his teens due to addictions and petty crime. Since his early 20s, he's devoted himself to the culture as both a prolific graffiti artist and one of the nastiest MCs in the Canadian rap game. He became the balaclava-clad face of Stompdown Killaz, a Vancouver-area collective comprising MCs, graf artists, and clothing designers, as well as his own label Stealth Bomb Records. In 2010, he became a member of 100 MAD, the hip-hop collective founded by Fredro Starr and Sticky Fingaz of Onyx. Over 150 million YouTube views, over 120 million audio-only streams, headline tours in 20 countries, and shared stages with Tech N9ne, MGK, Yelawolf, and Onyx. Co-produced by Jopez, mixed and mastered by Snares, video by Guess Who's Back Studio. Vinyl preorder is live. DJ Crypt has already connected Nine, Big Twins, and Cheloo to the album – Snak brings the Canadian hardcore dimension. The bridge between German turntablism and North American street rap stands firm.
Black Silver, born Christopher Rodgers, was a member of the Analog Brothers – the experimental hip-hop group featuring Ice-T, Kool Keith, Marc Live, and Pimpin' Rex. Kool Keith described him as "a space kinda writer" with a flexible approach. In 2008, Ice-T and Black Silver toured together as Black Ice, releasing the album "Urban Legends." He is signed to Sterling World Records and is a member of the Analog Brothers, Likwit Crew, 2000 Crows, Black Ice, and Concrete Babies, having recorded prolifically both as a solo artist and in group collaborations. "Super Shady" is the fifth preview from the "Void Where Inhibited" EP with HardMoney. The track addresses industry corruption directly, breaking from conventional loop-based structures in favor of variations and shifts that support Black Silver's lyrical complexity. The project positions itself as an anthem for the independent movement – against gatekeepers, against monotony, for creative autonomy.
Stu Bangas remains the man for uncompromising drum work in the underground. Young Reese Dude takes the beat and delivers what the description promises – real-life content with no industry formula and no gimmicks. The title references The Great Muta, the legendary Japanese wrestler known for his "Mist" attack – a green or red spray shot directly into opponents' faces. The metaphor fits: the track is toxic, unpredictable, and hits you right between the eyes. Stu Bangas has built a quality guarantee through work with Recognize Ali, Army of the Pharaohs, Vinnie Paz, and Gamblez Tha Lucky Bastard.Stu Bangas remains the man for uncompromising drum work in the underground. Young Reese Dude takes the beat and delivers what the description promises – real-life content with no industry formula and no gimmicks. The title references The Great Muta, the legendary Japanese wrestler known for his "Mist" attack – a green or red spray shot directly into opponents' faces. The metaphor fits: the track is toxic, unpredictable, and hits you right between the eyes. Stu Bangas has built a quality guarantee through work with Recognize Ali, Army of the Pharaohs, Vinnie Paz, and Gamblez Tha Lucky Bastard.
P-Ro and Crack Sizzlack deliver their fourth collaborative project with "7 Forms of Love" – the natural follow-up to "7 Signs of Stupidity." Seven tracks, each a different facet: Lust (featuring G Fam Black), Friendship, Universal, Failed, Enduring, Familial, Self. Crack Sizzlack handles full production, while P-Ro performs, mixes, masters, and designs the artwork. Total creative control in one hand. The structure is conceptually deliberate – no title is arbitrary, every track serves a function within the arc. P-Ro treats love not as a single romantic incident but as a spectrum ranging from failure to self-discovery.
Terror Van Poo and Vinny Idol connect on "The Dictator" from the "VANPUTIN" album – the title alone is an ironic fusion of Van and Putin. Reemo Filmed It directs the visual. Vinny Idol brings Yonkers DNA into the production: hard drums, dark textures, zero compromise. The track feels like political metaphor dressed in street-rap garb: dictatorship, control, resistance. Terrorvanpoo doesn't use the beat as a stage; he uses it as a battlefield.
Sankofa from Fort Wayne, P-RO, and Tali Rodriguez on a shared single. The collaboration works because all three operate from the same DIY ecosystem: Sankofa writes with high technical density, P-RO grounds the track with direct street perspective, and Tali Rodriguez engineers and keeps the sound clean. The title "Everyone's Favorite Tattoos" reads multiple ways – the ink everyone wears, the scars everyone sees, the signs that signal belonging. A track clean enough to need no radio edits.
Tay Da Crown and Dephchyld perform "American Gothic" as a live studio session at Tribe Ave on the outskirts of Phoenix, Arizona. The track comes from the album "Street Poison" – a title that leaves no room for misinterpretation. The strength lies in the live energy: one mic, two voices, no post-production rescue. The title "American Gothic" references Grant Wood's iconic painting – rural severity, rigid faces, hidden tension. Phoenix as a hip-hop location remains underrated, but acts like these prove the Southwest carries its own frequency.
Hannibal Stax made his worldwide major-label debut on "Itz a Set Up" from Gang Starr's classic album "Moment of Truth." He rose under the tutelage of the late Guru and DJ Premier, appearing on high-profile projects from Gang Starr, Afu-Ra, Baldhead Slick, and Big Shug, before unveiling his debut solo LP "Seize The Day" produced entirely by Marco Polo in May 2013. Born in 1973, Stax describes hip-hop as his lifeline – not a career choice but a spiritual practice. PF Cuttin (real name Felix Rovira) is one half of Blahzay Blahzay, the East Coast hip-hop duo from Brooklyn formed in 1985. Their breakthrough came with "Danger" in 1995, spurred by a catchy sample from Jeru Da Damaja's "Come Clean." PF Cuttin's polished production earmarked the album with a distinctly clean-crafted sound that rivaled such established beat sculptors as Pete Rock and Premier. He's released 100+ mixtapes since 1994 and has DJ'd all over the world. "Omega Supreme" brings these two Brooklyn lineages together: five tracks, features from Sadat X and Rasheed Chappell. This isn't nostalgia; it's earned chemistry between two veterans who've maintained their craft without interruption. Stax's rough-hewn voice over Cuttin's dusty, precise production carries a weight that only decades of shared history can provide.
The Rap Factory reaches its fifth chapter: Alotta Bills, Iz Hoffa, Haddy Racks, and Maury Haze share the room. The format stays classic – cypher, no cuts, no autotune, no safety net. Haddy Racks carries Bronx veteran weight, and the other three have to keep pace or get buried. Sessions like these reveal who delivers under pressure and who only works behind studio walls. The Rap Factory documents what's actually happening in New York's street-level scene – unfiltered and in real time.
SOO DO KOO opens "gary" with a 39-second existential question: "what is my purpose here on earth." No answer provided – just the frame for what follows. Six tracks, the shortest under a minute, the longest barely past two. Cise Greeny of Red Lotus Klan delivers his feature on "chris carter," a title that reads multiple ways. SINAI produces "old ironsides," shifting the sonic horizon slightly. SOO DO KOO has already appeared on LYNC LONE's "Life Is... Fleeting" and Cise Greeny's "Klairvoyance" – a dense network of Queens-affiliated lo-fi underground. The music sounds like a damaged signal from a basement nobody officially knows about: fragmented loops, dusty drums, voices disappearing into fog.
KOGZ, born Drew Marciniak, is a Perth emcee from the Armadale Train Line – a corridor known for its raw energy in the Australian hip-hop landscape. His origin story traces back to a competition organized by Syllabolix (SBX) member Mr. Grevis for emerging rappers, where KOGZ won a week's studio time with producer Rob Shaker – a partnership that has defined his career ever since. He later formed the group SMOG alongside Melbourne emcee Maggot Mouf and Perth producers Rob Shaker and Mat Rafle, releasing their collaborative debut album in 2015 through Broken Tooth Entertainment. "Dead Ends" serves as the lead single from the forthcoming "KOGZ IS DEAD" LP – a title that signals deliberate rebirth rather than retirement. The Shaker connection remains the cornerstone: cuts that anchor the track in classic turntablist tradition while KOGZ pushes his delivery into sharper, more focused territory. His self-funding model through YouTube memberships speaks to a DIY ethic that refuses to compromise artistic control for industry convenience.
Young Zee and Psych Major return with new single “MINE” this morning. While the track is head-nod maximum boom-bap the single cover and video is meant to raise the hackles on your neck. Featuring puppetry by BroadcastKing the emcee’s avatars and possessed landscape reside somewhere between The Blair Witch’s territory and Amityville.