Saturday, July 18, 2026

Gangrene "Forever" [VIDEO]


"Forever" is the second video from the already extensively covered *Better Than McDonald's* album by Gangrene (Alchemist & Oh No). Jason Goldwatch directs—a name associated with some of the strongest rap visuals of the past fifteen years (including work with Freddie Gibbs, Action Bronson, and Earl Sweatshirt). His involvement gives the video a quality exceeding typical underground budgets. Musically, everything remains consistent: Alchemist and Oh No at their dirtiest and most playful. Goldwatch's participation shows that Gangrene takes its visual presentation as seriously as its sound.

Bukue One x ParanormL "Worldly" [ALBUM]


Bukue One and ParanormL deliver *Worldly*—twelve tracks.

The Reverend Willy Burke feat. Killah Priest "Shaolin Thug" [VIDEO]


"Shaolin Thug" is the first chapter from the forthcoming double album *Shaolin Drunken Angel Kung*. Killah Priest's feature immediately supplies the Wu-Tang gravity the title promises. Shaka Amazulu The 7th produces and co-directs the animated video alongside Saïd Kanoun. The concept connects martial-arts philosophy, street wisdom, and the timeless spirit of classic Wu-Tang rap. The Reverend Willy Burke builds his own territory within the extended Wu universe through this release. The animated format fits the mythological ambition: instead of real street locations, there are ink drawings, fight sequences, and cosmic imagery. For a double album, this is an ambitious opening statement.

Gamblez, Stu Bangas feat. Gibby Stites, Jacc D. Frost & Ms. Laura Michelle "Still I Rise" [VIDEO]


Stu Bangas produces, Gibby Stites directs and handles mix/master duties—two underground veterans here serving Gamblez Tha Lucky Bastard. "Still I Rise" is the first statement from the forthcoming *80's Baby, 90's Kid*. Jacc D. Frost and Ms. Laura Michelle complete the lineup. Stu Bangas' boards give the record the necessary weight; Gibby Stites' dual role as director and engineer ensures visual and sonic cohesion. The title carries both Maya Angelou heritage and street resilience.

Mad1ne x Blazy Green "Inspired By Nightmares" [ALBUM]

 

Mad1ne and Blazy Green construct *Inspired By Nightmares* around a simple premise: the energy of bad dreams becomes raw material for beats and bars. Blazy Green produces the entire project, DJ Techneek provides cuts on "My Language," and Royal King Minus and Stormshadow appear as featured artists. Fourteen tracks, most under two minutes—the format is deliberately compressed. Mad1ne handles both verses and hooks; his method thrives on compression: short nightmares, quick images, no waking process between them.

T.F. & DJ Muggs "Poor Sports" [VIDEO]


DJ Muggs produces, co-mixes with Sam Kingston, and Brian "Big Bass" Gardner masters—the same signal chain as "Jesus Piece" with Heartbreak JC from an earlier round. T.F. is the MC on *Dont Call Me Lucky*, the new Soul Assassins album. NewHigh Filmz directs. Over recent years, Muggs has built a second career as an underground producer alongside Roc Marciano, Mach-Hommy, Eto, Rome Streetz, and Crimeapple—work that complements rather than replaces his Cypress Hill history. T.F. has to prove himself inside that lineage. "Poor Sports" sets the tone: losers complain, winners work. Muggs' beat signature remains as recognizable in 2026 as a fingerprint.

Cholo x Crown "Tas de cendre" [VIDEO]


Cholo and Crown deliver "Tas de cendre" (pile of ashes) as a visual. Crown produces, SoundSizer mixes and masters, Eon directs for BLUE. Recorded at Just Listen Records, filmed inside an auto garage in Le Teil. Just Listen Records and the overarching Kartier General structure carry a clear brand: B.B.Q.—Boom Bap Quality. Crown has built a reputation in the Francophone underground for heavy, soul-based production. The title suggests both destruction and the possibility of what might grow from ashes.

KAYDRON & The Biyn Crew "Thin Line (EP) [Deluxe Edition]" [ALBUM]

 

KAYDRON follows *Concrete Stories* (previously covered with The Roald Crew) with a new EP under a new crew name. *Thin Line* contains eight tracks, The Biyn Crew handles the performance, Thibault Wayaffe mixes, and Legacy Raw Entertainment distributes. The genre palette is deliberately wider than its boom-bap-heavy predecessor: Trap, Cloud Rap, Dirty South, Emo Rap, and Alternative Hip-Hop are cited as influences. Whether that range becomes a strength or a distraction is something the project itself must answer.

$KEER&BOO$ "Push Weight" [VIDEO]


$KEER&BOO$ deliver "Push Weight" as the next visual from the *MACKAVELI* album. Soulcatcher produces, Jessy James directs. The title is unambiguous: pushing weight, moving product, street economics. The 2Pac reference in the album title sets the frame; "Push Weight" fills it with the most direct language available. Short, hard, no detour.

Jo-DBL "Tar and Feathers" [VIDEO]


"Tar and Feathers" was already covered as part of the three-track *Liberty* EP. The new video gives the EP's darkest record its own space. DBL Family Film Production handles the visual. The title remains what it was: tarring and feathering as an act of collective punishment, a warning that carries a double edge inside the "Liberty" context. The visual should amplify that image without explaining it.

Sankofa x P-Ro x Tali Rodriguez "Broken Brake Cables" [SINGLE]


Sankofa, P-Ro, and Tali Rodriguez connect for "Broken Brake Cables." The title carries a strong image: broken brake cables mean forward motion without control, danger inside momentum. Sankofa brings his conscious, reflective lyricism; P-Ro (known from *Organic Crack*) his dry directness; Tali Rodriguez adds a third perspective. No additional credits are available. The single stands on its imagery and the combination of three voices connecting different underground corners.

Lakmann vs. Morlockko Plus feat. Morlockk Dilemma "Kein Palaver" [VIDEO]


Following "Soulmusik," "Kein Palaver" arrives as the second single from *Argus*. This time featuring Morlockk Dilemma—an MC widely regarded as one of the most technically accomplished rhyme architects in German underground rap. Lakmann writes, Morlockko Plus creates the music, Pretty.dirty shoots, and Morlockk Dilemma edits the video himself. The title "Kein Palaver" translates directly: no unnecessary commotion, no drama, no excuses. Lakmann and Dilemma share a beat without making each other redundant. Vinyl pre-orders run through kapitalismus-jetzt.com, with release shows in Bochum and Leipzig in October. *Argus*—named after the hundred-eyed giant of Greek mythology—promises an album that sees everything and sugarcoats nothing.

Nature "Crime Scene" [VIDEO]


Nature needs no introduction for listeners with memory, but context serves the record well. Anthony Best, aka Nature from Queens, was a founding member of The Firm alongside Nas, AZ, and Foxy Brown. The 1997 debut *The Album* (produced in part by Dr. Dre and The Trackmasters) carried real weight; the group dissolved, but each member retained individual gravity. Nature subsequently built a solo catalog that never matched the Firm era's reach but never dropped in technical quality. "Crime Scene," filmed by Fahargo Filmz, functions as a solo statement. The title is direct: a crime scene, no metaphorical misdirection. Nature raps with the calm of an emcee whose voice already carries context. Queens experience, Firm history, Nas proximity—it all resonates without the track needing to say it aloud.

DøøF "DOOF&ESCEE 3" [ALBUM]

 

DøøF delivers the third installment of the DOOF&ESCEE series—thirteen tracks, none exceeding three and a half minutes. The titles blend pop-culture references with personal codes: "SMACKDVDs" recalls the battle-rap DVD era, "SuperChillNRamen" captures everyday life between thrift and contentment, "4TH WALL" breaks the fourth wall and addresses the listener directly. Over three volumes, the series has established itself as a reliable platform for DøøF's compressed writing style. No features dominate; the voice stays central throughout.

Jamal Gasol & The Standouts "Aura Check" [VIDEO]


Following the *Stir The Pot* finale, Jamal Gasol launches the next chapter with "Aura Check." *Without Further Ado* is now available. The visual takes Gasol and The Standouts back to where the cooking started, preparing a new batch. Retro Filmz films, ToneyBoi mixes, Mixedby90 masters. Piff Music Empire 31 remains the base. The record shows Gasol in transition: the freestyle series is complete, the album is running, and his writing has to stand without the familiar serial framework.

Danny James aka Lil Dee "Bloody Noses" [VIDEO]


"Bloody Noses" is the title track of the EP and tells the life story of Danny James' grandfather—from broken dreams of becoming a singer in Italy, to emigrating to America, to passing that dream to his grandson. This is personal rap in its most direct form: not a concept-album costume but a genuine family portrait. Quan Deaux produces, 40 World Media films. The record speaks to anyone who has lost a loving family member. For a boom bap track, the emotional openness is unusual—and that is precisely where its power lies.

Chrome Waves & A-F-R-O "Chrome Sweet Chrome" [ALBUM]

 

A-F-R-O already appeared extensively in this series through *Frequencies*. *Chrome Sweet Chrome* is a different project: Chrome Waves handles the production while A-F-R-O provides the primary lyrical work. The album is constructed as a deliberate tribute to Golden Era East Coast underground hip-hop, with Wu-Tang Clan, Gang Starr, Black Moon, and Smif-N-Wessun cited as direct influences. The guest roster carries weight. Nine—the Bronx MC whose 1995 debut *Nine Livez* established one of the decade's hardest voices—appears on two tracks plus a Chrome Mix digital exclusive. MotionPlus, already familiar from *Frequencies*, contributes two appearances. Nowaah The Flood, 60 East, Gibby Stites, and Freddie Black extend the field. Physical formats include CD, cassette, MiniDisc, and lossless digital download—the MiniDisc choice in 2026 is a deliberate commitment to collector culture. Chrome Waves' production stays sample-driven and drum-centered throughout; A-F-R-O responds with the technical control he has developed since R.A. the Rugged Man discovered him. The album does not attempt to invent a new sound. It aims to execute an existing one cleanly enough that the execution itself becomes the statement.

Traffic, Saint Pat Beatz feat. Dreebo & Quincey White "Dreidel" [VIDEO]


Quincey White appears here as a feature rather than the primary artist—a role that demonstrates his versatility without pulling focus from Traffic and Saint Pat Beatz. "Dreidel" as a title evokes rotation, gambling, and a game where the landing side remains uncertain. Dreebo rounds out the lineup. West Side Traffic as a platform stays rooted in L.A. street rap. Quincey White brings his uncompromising South Central delivery even in a guest position, without commandeering the record.

Killah Dilla "Armani Cologne" [VIDEO]


Following "The Ward," Killah Dilla presents another *Muckleberry Finn* cut, again produced entirely by Frizzy Astro. "Armani Cologne" shifts the tone from the darker Ward setting toward luxury street rap: a designer name in the title, but the production likely stays grimy enough to avoid perfume-counter aesthetics. Killah Dilla's network within the Canadian underground (Chad Game, Raz Fresco, Daniel Son) provides the credibility such a title demands. The Frizzy Astro partnership keeps the album sonically unified.

Jordan Riewe Banks x OGD x Equivocal "Time" [SINGLE]


Jordan Riewe Banks, OGD, and Equivocal connect for "Time." No additional credits or context are available. The title is universal enough to carry any direction—reflection, urgency, transience. Without reliable detail, the single stands on its own substance.

B.A. Badd "Showtime" [VIDEO]


"Showtime" is the first official release from B.A. Badd's forthcoming collaborative album with producer Revenxnt. Filmed in Tribeca by Gee.cts. The record declares its lane: gritty lyricism, cinematic production, authentic East Coast underground hip-hop. B.A. Badd builds his platform through EBE Lifestyle—website, merchandise, and music distribution under one roof. "Showtime" as an opening sets the expectation: when the curtain rises, delivery is required.

Spectacular RGM "Fuk Who U R" [VIDEO]


Spectacular RGM consists of M7 and Japreme Magnetic—both Five Percenters. Their debut EP *Price is Incidental* is imminent; "Fuk Who U R" serves as the advance announcement. Jimmy Whispers produces. The title is a direct rejection of status hierarchy: regardless of who you are, only the microphone matters here. Knowledge of Self vocabulary meets raw underground attitude. Short, direct, no elaborate machinery behind it.

Columbo Black "You Weren't There" [ALBUM]

 

Thirty-eight tracks. This is not an album in the conventional sense—it is a decision. Columbo Black does not bother trimming to twelve or fifteen. Most cuts stay under two minutes; many titles read like journal entries, business memos, or observations from a moving car: "Wooden Nickel," "Pear Mimosa Dart," "Opening Vault Music," "Lumberjack as a Profession," "Imported Carpet Marketplace," "Gargoyle Insurance." The language is deliberately angled—not absurd for its own sake, but as a method of viewing familiar rap subjects through unusual windows. The strength of a project this size lies in density rather than track-by-track analysis. Nobody will evaluate all 38 pieces in isolation. The work functions more like a notebook: you flip through, pause at certain pages, skip others, and return. The closing stretch—"The Byproduct of a Byproduct," "The Lessons," "Remembering" (at four and a half minutes the longest piece)—suggests an ending that actually reflects rather than simply stops.

Smoke Mardeljano "Po Cigare Mali" [VIDEO]


Smoke Mardeljano is one of the most important names in Serbian hip-hop. His approach connects raw street perspective with precise writing and a delivery that communicates authority even without language comprehension. "Po Cigare Mali" was filmed in Amsterdam (camera: Boris Veselinović, editing: Siniša Lukić), with the beat by Goce Trpkov (DJ Goce), mix and master by Trilian. SMOKED Records releases, Kaseta Digital distributes. Smoke Mardeljano has built his catalog over years and belongs to a school of Southeastern European rap that does not copy American boom bap structures but translates them into native language and lived reality. Trilian already appeared as engineer on Smirbe La Bagra's "Izvini Boze" in an earlier round—the connection reveals an active Serbian underground network sharing infrastructure. For listeners who follow hip-hop beyond English-language borders, Smoke Mardeljano is essential.

Substantial "Black of All Trades (Original Version)" [VIDEO]


Substantial is Stan Robinson, an MC and producer from Silver Spring, Maryland, who has maintained one of the most consistent independent careers in American rap for over two decades. His international profile was established through collaboration with Japanese producer Nujabes, a pioneer of the lo-fi and jazz-rap sound; together they created music for the anime series *Samurai Champloo*, which continues to influence music and pop culture. But Substantial has never allowed himself to be reduced to that single connection. His catalog includes solo albums, collaborations with Marcus D (as Bop Alloy), producers including DJ Jazzy Jeff, Oddisee, and 9th Wonder, and work across TV, film, and advertising. "Black of All Trades" comes from the EP *Always*, produced by Allmos (formerly Algorythm). The record is not an abstract celebration of versatility but a visual journey through Black achievement rarely placed side by side inside a single rap video: Kehinde Wiley, Augusta Savage, Frederick Douglass, George Washington Carver, Neil deGrasse Tyson, Mae Jemison, Ida B. Wells, Shirley Chisholm, Harriet Tubman, Malcolm X, Paul Robeson, Rosa Parks, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. The photo selection in the video is not a random slideshow—it is a curatorial act. Substantial co-directs and edits alongside CamCamTV, with cameos from Jaigotti Amos, Julian Lytle, Kenneth Williams, DJ Jav, Mighty Joe of The Other Guys, and his daughter Serenity Robinson adding a personal dimension that extends beyond the historical portraits. The track functions as a bridge between past and present: Black excellence is not celebrated as exception, but presented as an unbroken line.

Johnny Ciggs & D.R.U.G.S. Beats "Glass Roses" [ALBUM]

 

After the "Fist City" clip, the full picture arrives. *Glass Roses* runs twelve tracks, produced entirely by D.R.U.G.S. Beats, recorded and mixed by Johnny Ciggs, mastered by Michael Millions, and executive produced by Ciggs himself. An earlier round already demonstrated how effectively the combination of live horns (Mark Ingraham), Big Sty's vocals, and Ciggs' own writing can work. Now it becomes clear that "Fist City" was only one corner of a larger room. The tracklist draws an album that refuses to treat hardness and fragility as opposites. "The Big Show" with Swerve 36 opens wide; "Life Moves On" brings Memphis veteran Project Pat into the fold, immediately expanding the album's geographic reach; "William Wallace" uses the historical freedom fighter as a figure for inevitable sacrifice; "Tuxedos & Tears" places elegance beside pain; "God is Smiling" turns the lens upward before "Broken Stems" uses botanical imagery for fractured beginnings. "Many Moons (Moonlight pt. 9)" reveals through its numbering alone that Ciggs maintains a continuing serial thread across his catalog. D.R.U.G.S. Beats sustains the balance between raw boom bap and cinematic expansion across all twelve tracks. The horn section on "Fist City" was not an isolated moment—the album lives on instrumentation that exceeds standard loop work without losing its grit. Ciggs' dual role as emcee and recording engineer gives him control over every detail. Artwork by Bigzoidy and layout by Escalera Studio complete a package released through Gritty City Records in physical and digital formats. The album title remains the strongest image: roses made of glass. Beautiful enough to admire, hard enough to cut, fragile enough to shatter under too much pressure.

Friday, July 17, 2026

Spaceman drops "Cranky" [AUDIO]



Beaming in from Strong Island, interstellar word-smith Spaceman is feeling “Cranky.” Utilizing a melodic delivery over a minimal synth laden instrumental (Produced by Manny McPlanes), Spaceman seethes with frustration and strong words for the fakers out there. As the artist states, “Cranky is a song about frustration with performative culture. People who claim identities that they don’t embody, whether that’s toughness, wisdom, status, or artistic originality, or as the track says, “These niggas don’t stand for what they say they stand for.”

Listen to “Cranky” here: Here

This is the first new single from Spaceman since his massive “Social Skills” series of singles which dropped throughout last year including tracks with Fatboi Sharif, ABGOHARD, Kyle Rapps and Jus-P.

More info: https://cyberspace667.com/

Vale! ULB "Devórame " [VIDEO]

 After building international momentum with chart success across Europe, the Americas and beyond, multicultural Latin collective Vale! ULB return with their most fearless release yet. Their explosive single, 'Devórame', is an energetic celebration of freedom, sensuality and musical adventure that showcases the band's unmistakable "Cabana Bounce" sound.

Fronted by vocalist Val, daughter of multiple Latin Grammy-winning producer and musician Dante Vargas, Vale! ULB brings together an extraordinary lineup of internationally acclaimed musicians. The band features three-time Grammy-winning producer Deezle (Lil Wayne, Drake, Nicki Minaj), Grammy-winning trumpeter Emiliano, celebrated Cuban percussionist Anier, and guitarist Friki, son of the founder of the Buena Vista Social Club. Together, they blend Latin pop, Cuban rhythms, hip-hop soul and New Orleans bounce into music designed to turn any moment into a celebration.

Meaning "devour me," 'Devórame' is a bold, flirtatious anthem built around infectious rhythms and undeniable chemistry. Bursting with vibrant percussion, irresistible hooks and dancefloor-ready energy, the single captures the exhilaration of confidence, desire and living completely in the moment.

The track began with a Brazilian funk-inspired beat created by Deezle before Val crafted its instantly memorable vocal melodies and lyrics. Cuban percussion virtuoso Anier added dynamic live rhythms that gave the song its infectious pulse, while Grammy Award-winning Latin producer Mr. Sonic helped elevate the production into a genre-defying fusion of Latin pop, Brazilian funk, hip-hop and New Orleans bounce. 


Speaking about the inspiration behind the single, Val explains:

"'Devórame' means to devour me. It's a song that expresses freedom, sensuality and creates an atmosphere to feel wanted and desired."

That spirit has become the defining characteristic of Vale! ULB. Their music evokes sun-soaked beaches, carefree nights and spontaneous celebrations, transporting listeners whether they're driving, dancing, cleaning the house or simply looking to escape everyday life. As the band likes to say: Anywhere is a fiesta with Vale! ULB.

The group's infectious approach continues to resonate with audiences worldwide. Previous releases have reached No. 6 on the Independent Airplay Chart, Top 10 on the UK Music Week Commercial Pop and Upfront Charts, debuted at No. 1 on Amazon Music's Movers & Shakers and International New Releases charts, while also charting across iTunes in Spain, Portugal, Germany, Italy, France, Sweden, the Netherlands and New Zealand, alongside placements on global Deezer and international airplay charts.

With 'Devórame', Vale! ULB raise the temperature once again, delivering a vibrant, genre-crossing anthem that celebrates musical collaboration, Latin culture and the universal joy of movement. Bold, playful and impossible to sit still to, the single further establishes the collective as one of the most exciting crossover acts bringing contemporary Latin music to global audiences. 

For more information on Vale! ULB:
https://www.instagram.com/valeulb
https://www.youtube.com/@valeulb

D.V. Alias Khryst "NXXXX SHXT" [VIDEO]


This record and its visualizer have already been covered in this series. The repeated upload does not change the credits: JP The Producer builds the beat, The Bigger Picture Buda directs, M.I.N.G handles the mix, and Batcave Studios completes the mastering. Several structures support the release, including Soulspazm, Teamwork Records, DGSUP, and ICW. The historical context remains significant. D.V. Alias Khryst comes from Brownsville and was present within Smoothe da Hustler’s environment when “Broken Language” established a new form of interlocked street lyricism. Further connections followed through Lyricist Lounge, soundtrack work, and records involving De La Soul, Method Man, Ice-T, and other established figures. D.V.’s distinctive quality has always been the movement between rugged rap and melodic lines—a method existing somewhere between hook work and conventional verse construction. The “Flip Phone Rap” format places that history inside a deliberately reduced frame. No luxury device, no overproduced short film—one veteran, one freestyle, and a visual language built around technical and aesthetic minimalism. As a repeated upload, “NXXXX SHXT” does not require another large campaign. Its value is archival: D.V. remains present, and his voice contains more history than the phone inside the image.

The Alchemist x Oh No x Gangrene "Better Than McDonald's" [ALBUM]


Gangrene is the joint project of The Alchemist and Oh No — two producers who also perform as emcees, whose combined sound has stood for a particularly grimy, psychedelically warped strain of underground hip-hop since their 2010 debut Vodka & Ayahuasca. Better Than McDonald's arrives as part of a densely packed release day on July 17, 2026 — alongside Rome Streetz' Sock It 2 My Pocket, making the day a significant moment for the independent East/West Coast underground. The title is classic Gangrene: deliberately irreverent, with a touch of self-deprecating humor suggesting that even the most banal comparison — fast food — beats whatever the competition is offering. Eleven tracks, distributed via Empire. As a duo, Alchemist and Oh No bring a rare double role: both produce, both rap, and the result sounds correspondingly balanced between two equal creative poles rather than an emcee riding someone else's beat.

Deziner Yin "Sauce Yin X Deziner Drugz" [VIDEO]


Deziner Yin delivers "Sauce Yin X Deziner Drugz" from the Super Villains Files project, produced by Work Scorsese — the same producer heard on "Chicagospel" (feat. Ju Jilla, covered in an earlier round). The announcement itself is notably informal and direct: explicit permission for anyone to download or otherwise use the video, paired with a warm message to the community. It's a DIY posture that prioritizes distribution over control — unusual in a culture often deeply concerned with rights management.

Castor Pollux "Reflections" [SINGLE]

 

Reflections is a collage of meditation insights, journal entries, hard-earned realizations, and deeply personal moments. It's an attempt to pull the dark mud from the bottom of the mind and use it as paint — to create something honest from the parts of ourselves we often hide. Stepping back to look at the finished piece reveals what's really being seen: oneself. Every layer, every crack, every color is a reflection. The final verse is especially personal. It gives voice to the parts once labeled as shadows — depression, self-loathing, fear, and survival instincts. Rather than condemning them, Castor Pollux lets them speak. They remind him that, however imperfectly, they were trying to protect him. They showed up when he felt lost, frightened, or unable to respond to life. They weren't the enemy; they were adaptations born from pain. This song isn't about glorifying darkness. It's about meeting it honestly, listening to it with compassion, and allowing it to become part of a larger picture of healing. Sometimes the deepest reflections aren't found in the light, but in the courage to look into the places we've spent years avoiding. Produced, mixed, and mastered by Dustin Hodges, lyrics and recording by Robert Incitti, artwork by Adam "Awaxx" Caputo.

Rome Streetz "Sock It 2 My Pocket" [ALBUM]


This album deserves the most extensive treatment on this entire list because it marks one of the most significant moments in Rome Streetz' career. Sock It 2 My Pocket is his first solo album under Nas' Mass Appeal Records and arrives at a pivotal moment in the Queens lyricist's career. Widely regarded as one of hip hop's elite lyricists, Rome Streetz has earned praise from critics and peers alike throughout his rise. Reviewing his last acclaimed album with Conductor Williams, Trainspotting, Pitchfork hailed him as "the best bar-for-bar rhymer to come out of New York City in a half-decade" — a distinction that continues to follow him as he enters this defining new chapter. The title itself comes from one of his ad-libs and carries a clear message: everything you do in life is for somebody to sock it to your pocket. Whether you're going to work or whatever you do, at the end of it, you're trying to get compensated for your work. Time is money, so your energy isn't free. Rome describes the album itself as his "crystal clear arrival moment" — the feeling of having truly arrived and now demanding his just due as an emcee from the city. Recording began in October/November, was finished by March, and roughly 30 recorded songs were narrowed down to 15. The producer list reads like a who's-who of boom bap elite: The Alchemist, 9th Wonder, Conductor Williams, Havoc, Pete Rock, Denny LaFlare, GreyMatter, Heycam, Ssllahi, Matt To The Future, Karbine, V Don, and Sovren. Features come from Styles P, Lloyd Banks, Westside Gunn, IDK, and Chyna Streetz (on "Taylor Made Wave," produced by V Don). Reviews show an album full of dense, unrelenting narratives: "Yellow Brick Road" processes a family memory of maternal discipline over a dirty GreyMatter loop; "Son of a Gun" lets Pete Rock's clean beat carry Rome building his entire identity through imagery like a scorpion spinning like a revolver's cylinder; "Cocaine Coltrane" cooks over Denny LaFlare's tight loop; Havoc squeezes him into an even tighter pocket on ".22." Styles P calls his Porsche a "kale coupe" on "'95 Mega on Shrooms"; Lloyd Banks answers with measured pause on "Prada in the Polaroid"; Westside Gunn puts on the luchador mask on "Marathon or Race." Rome himself calls out "Time & Place" with IDK as a deliberate stylistic break — something fans have never heard from him before. Following Smuggled Narratives and the Boldy James collaborative project, which some listeners found somewhat lackluster, Rome delivers on all fronts here — uncompromising in his rapping, brutal in his lyricism. For many, this already stands as his best work since Kiss the Ring.

Coyote "Rehab" [VIDEO]


An unusually open moment: Coyote gets vulnerable here, talking about the struggle with addiction and how it has affected personal life. No title is given in the available information, but the frame is clear. Produced by G.O.K.B., Rich Squire, and The Watche, directed and edited by Marmo Films under the Coyote For Hire Production banner. Songs about addiction work best when they don't build distance between narrator and experience — the description points exactly toward this direct, unfiltered approach.

Eddie Word feat. Borvoe McMidnite "Teal Hydrant" [SINGLE]

 

"Teal Hydrant" finds Eddie Word and Borvoe McMidnite locking into a late-night jazz groove built on dusty textures, loose drums, and a pocket that never rushes. The production moves with understated grit while Borvoe — the self-proclaimed "Silky Line Author" — slides through the beat with smooth delivery, sharp imagery, and carefully placed bars. It's boom bap hip-hop with patience and precision: smoky, soulful, and made for listeners who still appreciate the chemistry between a producer who leaves room to breathe and an MC who knows exactly what to do with that space. Eddie Word produces himself under The Almighty NRP banner; artwork by ΔMofNRP, released via Corrigendum Records/Nite Crusaders.

Crip Jesus "Blu Tang Forever" [ALBUM]


This is one of the more significant presentations in this coverage series, connecting a Wu-Tang lineage to an entirely distinct geographic and cultural imprint. Coming straight out of South Central's famous Leimert Park, Crip Jesus is the newest member of Killah Priest's ROYAL PRIESTHOOD clique. His content is heavily influenced by the Five Percent Nation of Gods and Earths — the same doctrine running through large parts of the classic Wu-Tang cosmos — combined with strong gang ties. Songs like "Blacc Africa" sound like a gangsta version of Killah Priest's own B.I.B.L.E. (Basic Instructions Before Leaving Earth). The first official single and video, "Watts Prophet," draws heavily on the Watts Prophets and their member Amde Hamilton — one of the most important spoken-word and proto-rap predecessor formations from the late 60s. The track frames the blocks of L.A. through the lens of ancient history and street sermons; the beat carries that dark, sinister undertone common throughout the project. Most of the production is handled by DeKay Slaps, who has also worked with Rugged Monk, a key member of Black Knights (Westcoast Killa Beez). Additional beats come from The Beat Kollectorz, known for their work with Black Knights, Ras Kass, and Wu-Syndicate. That production lineage firmly anchors the album within the West Coast Wu-affiliated network. Particularly notable is Crip Jesus' feature selection: he inspires his homies to swing their lyrical swords in true Wu-Tang fashion while staying gangster throughout. The esoteric Crip slang used by the rappers deliberately echoes the Five Percenter lingo of classic Wu albums. Whether gangsta rap, conscious rap, or lyrical rap — this album covers all three registers at once.

Lengthwave (L.I.F.E. Long & DJ Emmo) "The Length" [VIDEO]


Lengthwave is the new duo of L.I.F.E. Long and DJ Emmo, "straight outta NYC." DJ Emmo cooks the beat with help from the elusive Sir Skltr, while L.I.F.E. rides the production with vocals that set the tone. Harold Urena shoots on the streets of New York — specifically at Wallie Lu & Safe LO$'s North Face Bubble Coat Event and the Mass Appeal Records pop-up. No filters, just the city, the culture, and the music, as the announcement itself puts it. The track is available exclusively on Bandcamp — a deliberate counter-move to pure streaming exploitation, fitting for a debut single that prioritizes documentary street authenticity over gloss.

Invizible Handz "Community Service" [ALBUM]

 

Community Service runs 18 tracks with production spread across multiple hands: C.Scott, Dust Bake, Chriss G (with three contributions), Farma G, Grimey Chops, D Zero, and Joe Wit Sauce. Chriss G also appears as a feature on "Da Authentic"; Eloh Kush shows up on "Yuck," J. Scott Da Illest on "Gourmet Garments," AOS on "A Zip," and Seven Allah on the closer "Magnificient 7." Titles like "Da Heist," "Grimey Handz," "T.H.C.," and "Trouble Shootin" paint a clear picture: the album title "Community Service" doesn't function as a claim to social virtue, but as bitter irony — the kind of "service to the community" performed after a court order, not volunteered. Across 18 tracks and seven different producer hands, sonic range is naturally wide, but the core posture — raw, street-rooted, unsentimental — carries through consistently.

Superior & Let The Dirt Say Amen "J.O.N.A.H." [SINGLE]


"J.O.N.A.H." is the second single from the forthcoming album The Saint, The Servant, The Sinner, which Superior himself describes as his most personal project to date — a tribute to Ka, who passed in 2024 and whose influence on introspective, densely written underground rap can hardly be overstated. Let The Dirt Say Amen as collaborative partner brings a similarly earthy, spiritually charged soundscape fitting for a Ka tribute. The biblical Jonah reference — swallowed, in darkness, forced toward reckoning — fits thematically into an album explicitly dedicated to the poles of saint, servant, and sinner. Superior himself asks for support on the single in preparation for the full album release.

The Musalini & 9th Wonder "Salt Box" [VIDEO]


The Musalini appears for the second time in this coverage series — previously with "GiMME" via Jamla Records. "Salt Box" confirms that label connection and takes it a step further: 9th Wonder himself produces, and the track is part of the rollout for the forthcoming joint album The Don & Eye. 9th Wonder's production style — soul-drenched loops, warm drums, meticulous sample craft — gives The Musalini's smooth Bronx flow a classic Jamla frame. For an emcee who has recently moved between Khrysis, Statik Selektah, and DJ Fresh, the direct 9th Wonder collaboration marks a significant step within that producer network.

outta'luck & 1longman "spin the globe | july16" [SINGLE]

 

A single track, 91 seconds long, with a date burned into the title: "july16." The format feels less like a traditional release and more like a dated diary entry — outta'luck and 1longman appear to be running an ongoing series where each entry captures a moment rather than developing a full concept. Without further credits, the context remains open, but the brevity itself is the statement: a quick note, not an elaborate declaration.

M-Dot "Hold On" [SINGLE]


M-Dot was already covered extensively in this series with A Notebook With No Light — his seventh album featuring Method Man, Big Shug, 38 Spesh, Che Noir, and ElCamino. "Hold On" arrives here as a standalone single, possibly another preview or follow-up from the same creative period. Without further credits, it's unclear whether the track belongs to the Notebook album or signals a separate project. The title itself fits M-Dot's known blend of perseverance and introspective reflection.

Caballero Iguazo (Kazu) "El Último Eslabón" [VIDEO]


Kazu, here under the alter ego Caballero Iguazo, delivers "El Último Eslabón" ("The Last Link [of the Chain]") from the project Inmundo. Beat by NN Producciones, filmed by Azteka Prod., recorded at Paradox Music Company, mixed and mastered by Klip Sound. The title suggests a chain metaphor — last link, final stop, final connection within a larger structure. The complete production chain (beat, film, recording, mix) across different specialized houses shows a professionally organized release structure within the Spanish-language underground.

Bullet Brak x Mike Martinez "So Close Yet So Far" [EP]

 

The title here isn't just mood — it's origin story. For over a year, Bullet Brak and producer Mike Martinez traded ideas, built records, and pushed the sound forward. Every time the finish line came into view, another tour, release, or business commitment pulled one of them in a different direction. Rather than forcing the process, they let the songs develop naturally. The result is a six-track collaboration built on patience, chemistry, and the understanding that some of the best records can't be rushed. The track titles consistently follow a driving metaphor: "Toll Booth" as intro, "Morning Drive," "Rearview Confessions," "Road Rage," "Cruise Control," "Home Stretch" as closer. Written by Bullet Brak, produced entirely by Mike Martinez, mixed and mastered by Matthew Brock. So Close Yet So Far captures exactly the feeling of chasing something worth waiting for — sometimes the longest road leads to the right destination.

MC Bomber "Auf Speed" [ALBUM]


"Auf Speed" was covered in an earlier round as a standalone single with video (Ferdinand Klotzky, mix by BeatsByA). Now the complete ten-track album is available. MC Bomber remains true to his unpolished, often absurdly humorous Kreuzberg attitude — the title track was already clearly positioned as a herald: fast, unfiltered, no detour. The full album likely sustains that stance across its entire runtime without bending toward a smoother product.

Knownaz EVIL "Not Da 1" [VIDEO]


Knownaz EVIL operates within the God Division Entertainment / UVA Side Records network, explicitly representing Rhode Island hip-hop — hashtags like #RhodeIslandHipHop, #UVASIDE, and #GME make the regional affiliation unmistakable. Gibby Stites produces an energetic, cinematic foundation; Knownaz EVIL delivers a cold, uncompromising performance with a horror-inflected edge. The description positions the track explicitly at the intersection of East Coast authenticity, modern influences, and dark, cinematic production — an approach that marks Rhode Island as its own scene alongside its larger New England neighbor, Massachusetts.

Tres Aurland & Johnny B Smooth "Locked In EP" [EP]

 

Locked In runs six tracks between two and four and a half minutes. The most notable name is Rittz on "Lessons" — the Gastonia/Georgia rapper known for technically dense Southern flow, established through his Strange Music years under Tech N9ne. Boss Wood appears on "Kick It Wit The Homies." Tres Aurland and Johnny B Smooth build an EP format clearly oriented toward Southern/independent rap collaboration, with Rittz as the voice securing broader regional attention.

Tone Spliff x Vic Monroe "Cuties" [SINGLE]


Tone Spliff appeared in an earlier round as the cuts specialist on Shabaam Sahdeeq's "Show & Prove" — there in a supporting role, turntablism backup for a Brooklyn veteran. Here, alongside Vic Monroe, he stands at the center of his own release. "Cuties" as a title breaks from the often darker grimey tonality of this coverage series — a lighter, possibly more playful approach. Without further credits, the exact direction remains open, but the context (Tone Spliff's role as a cutmaster in the New York underground) gives the pairing weight.

Pielroja feat. Penyair "La Moral" [VIDEO]


Pielroja has already appeared twice in this coverage series — with "Poltergeist" (feat. Kazu) and in a broader mention of his Colombian boom bap catalog. "La Moral" with Penyair continues that line, again produced by Alka (DJ Alkalina). The title — "The Moral" / "Morality" — suggests socially critical or introspective content, consistent with Pielroja's previous output ("Entre Líneas," "Fugitivo," "Modo Avión"). The continuity with the same producer shows a stable working relationship rather than one-off beat requests.

Al duMaurier feat. Geenuistick "Microphones Melt" [SINGLE]

 

A single track, just under three minutes, released July 13, 2026. Al duMaurier and Geenuistick share the mic, Globeats produces. The title "Microphones Melt" is classic battle-rap language — heat, superiority, the microphone destroyed through sheer intensity. No further context is available on Bamboo Shack Music as a platform.