Wednesday, July 15, 2026

Reel Wolf feat. The Flatlinerz "Evil Deeds" [VIDEO]


Reel Wolf brings in a group for the Vicious Cycle lead single that literally helped invent the genre in 1994: The Flatlinerz. The New York trio led by Redrum (Jamel Simmons, nephew of Russell Simmons), Gravedigger, and Tempest was responsible for U.S.A. (Under Satan's Authority), the first major-label horrorcore album, released on Def Jam Recordings on September 6, 1994. The album, produced by Tempest, Rockwilder, and others, was designed according to Def Jam's strategy to create an alternative to gangsta rap. The controversy surrounding the videos for "Live Evil" and "Satanic Verses" Redrum rapping from a noose, Gravedigger from a crucifix resulted in the clips receiving minimal airplay. The album sold just under 200,000 copies before the group was dropped. The Flatlinerz are responsible for introducing the term "horrorcore" with their 1994 release *U.S.A. (Under Satan's Authority)*. In the current horrorcore landscape, they are not simply a reference they are the origin. Reel Wolf understands this precisely. With Tom Vujcic directing, Delaney Siren on cinematography, and Amir Radi as production manager, the clip was filmed in Buffalo, New York. The beat arrives as a collaboration between Portugal's Cotardz and Canada's Sentury Status, with Sentury Status also handling mix and master. *Vicious Cycle* now has an opening statement: not a horror-rap sound that ignores the scene's roots, but one that reaches directly back to them.

Shabaam Sahdeeq feat. Bad Seed "Show & Prove" [SINGLE]

 

Shabaam Sahdeeq is Marcus Vialva from Brooklyn one of the emcees who helped define the Rawkus Records era of the late 90s. His 1996 solo single "So Real" landed in record stores worldwide; placements on the Soundbombing compilation, the Lyricist Lounge universe, and the Pharoahe Monch "Simon Says" remix followed. A solo album was planned on Rawkus the label lost its distribution, the album never appeared. Shabaam asked for his release, moved to Raptivism Records, and recorded Never Say Never. Shortly before the release, a four-year prison sentence followed. After returning, the work continued: Polyrhythm Addicts with DJ Spinna, Mr. Complex, and Tiye Phoenix (Breaking Glass, 2007), then a long run of independent solo releases. In 2026, Outside the Lines with producer Es-K arrived an album HHHeadz described as a "non-skipper," featuring J-Live, General Steele, Ruste Juxx, and U.G. "Show & Prove" with Bad Seed is the next single. Castle Money Beats delivers cinematic production; Tone Spliff handles the turntable cuts. Bad Seed appears again in this coverage series a Brooklyn underground emcee whose reliability has been proven across countless features.

Dave East, Styles P & Harry Fraud "Alley Oop" [VIDEO]


Dave East and Harry Fraud announce Price of Pain (July 29) with the lead single "Alley Oop," featuring Styles P of The LOX, directed by The Infamous Oz. This is their first collaboration since Hoffa (2021), which brought in Curren$y, G Herbo, and French Montana. Price of Pain will run fourteen tracks with features including Benny The Butcher, 38 Spesh, Snoop Dogg, AZ, SUZI, and Cruch Calhoun alongside Styles P. Dave East had already released four projects in 2026 before Price of Pain was announced the Eastmix series plus For The Love 2.5. That is not the rhythm of an artist between cycles; it is active form maintenance. Harry Fraud, meanwhile, continues to operate in the cinematic luxury lane that has shifted his name from French Montana hit-making toward a point of contact between ambitious street rap and atmospheric production. "Alley Oop" as a title is deliberately sporting: the assist is Fraud's, the finish belongs to East and Styles P. Dave East and Styles P's gritty, street-tested storytelling meets Harry Fraud's signature cinematic production and with fourteen tracks and that feature list waiting, the album already has the framework for one of summer 2026's stronger street-rap statements.

Jay Royale x Anibal Beatz "Glory" [SINGLE]


Jay Royale and Anibal Beatz present "Glory" as a single. Jay Royale is a Long Island emcee with a carefully constructed underground catalog and the reputation of an MC who does not treat technical precision and personal storytelling as opposing disciplines. Anibal Beatz has built consistent chemistry with Jay Royale across several collaborations. "Glory" as a title is a classic boom bap motif recognition, persistence, arrival. No additional credits or feature information is available. The record stands on its own foundation.

Onyx "Body Ya" [VIDEO]


"Body Ya" has already received two full write-ups in this coverage series: as an audio track and as an earlier upload. This is the official music video. The content remains identical: produced by Fredro Starr, 100 MAD as label, Fredro Starr and Sticky Fingaz performing. The official video marks the end of the campaign cycle for this track.

Los Chicos Criollos x Onaje Jordan feat. Kingdom Kome & Che Uno "Views" [SINGLE]


Los Chicos Criollos and Onaje Jordan present "Views" featuring Kingdom Kome and Che Uno. Kingdom Kome appears for the third time in this coverage series first with "813 to 305" and the Tamiami Trail album, then in adjacent mentions, now here as a feature inside a Spanish-American collaborative axis. Che Uno is known from the Death Before Detox / Hella Treez world and brings the Canadian underground side to the feature combination. The name Los Chicos Criollos carries a specific cultural identity: criollo in Latin American culture refers to someone of European descent born in the New World a term that negotiates hybridity and belonging. Onaje Jordan as producer provides the sonic integration. No additional credits are available.

ethemadassassin & D.R.U.G.S. Beats "Conscious Shift / Superni**a" [VIDEO]


ethemadassassin and D.R.U.G.S. Beats the San Diego duo with a long shared history deliver the official video for "Conscious Shift / Superni**a" from the album Late Night With Dave Letterman. Visuals by The Resident People. D.R.U.G.S. Beats is not a newcomer in these circles: his production appeared in this coverage series earlier through the "Fist City" credit featuring Johnny Ciggs, and he carries a production aesthetic that combines live brass, raw drums, and cinematic arcs. ethemadassassin provides the lyrical counterpart: sharp wordplay, cultural critique, and the energy of an emcee who digs into the layers beneath pop-culture surfaces. The dual title signals the album's thematic center: consciousness shift as both personal and social process, without filtering out street reality. Released on Gritty City Records.

iNTeLL x Dom Archey x 2nd Generation Wu "Please Report to the Bomb Shelter" [EP]


iNTeLL son of U-God and frontman of 2nd Generation Wu delivers this five-track EP alongside Dom Archey. The "2nd Generation Wu" label is not a marketing construction: iNTeLL has inherited the family tree in the literal sense while simultaneously building an independent identity as an emcee. "Please Report to the Bomb Shelter" as a title carries a specific paranoia no concert hall, no gala, no comfort zone. It is an instruction to protect yourself. At five tracks, that is an ambitious frame requiring consistency in every cut. Dom Archey as co-architect gives the EP a second creative axis alongside iNTeLL. The earlier official video for "Shoot The Glass" was the first visual from this extended release cycle.

Slik Jack x Vincent Pryce feat. Daniel Son & Bub Styles "Block Raiderz" [VIDEO]


Slik Jack and Vincent Pryce continue their collaborative rollout with the second single "Block Raiderz." Features: Daniel Son from Hamilton, Ontario a consistent Griselda-adjacent voice who has appeared multiple times across this coverage series and Bub Styles, a Griselda member from the inner Westside Gunn circle. The 100MAD / SJXVP Records structure remains the platform. No change of producer is announced; Vincent Pryce most likely delivers the beat. The choice of features also signals the full album's direction: Slik Jack does not bring in Daniel Son and Bub Styles accidentally. Anyone seeking credibility inside the Griselda orbit needs the voices that carry that territory and both guests deliver the weight the track requires.

Silent Snipers x John Dutch "MK-ULTRA" [ALBUM]


Silent Snipers and John Dutch present MK-ULTRA eleven tracks. The title carries a precise weight: MK-Ultra was the CIA's classified mind control and interrogation experimentation program, operated under extreme secrecy from the 1950s into the 70s and only brought to public awareness through Congressional hearings in 1977. In hip-hop, MK-Ultra has been a lyrical tool for artists engaging with media control, consciousness manipulation, and state deception for years. Naming an album after it is a positioning statement. No additional credits are available, but the framework is clear: eleven tracks, critical perspective, nothing accidental in the branding.

The Grouch & Eligh feat. Eli-Mac "Like Water" [VIDEO]


The Grouch and Eligh are two of the central figures within Living Legends, the independent West Coast hip-hop collective that came together in the late 90s and brought together voices including Murs, Scarub, Bicasso, and Sunspot Jonz. The Grouch (Garrett Murawski) is rooted in Oakland; Eligh operates as both emcee and producer from California. Together they have released multiple collaborative albums including Monster, Glass Animals, and Say G&E, and they belong to a small group of artists from that era of alternative West Coast rap who have remained independent and consistent. "Like Water" features Eli-Mac with production from Dnae. Eli-Mac is a vocalist who has built recognition through her emotional register and her ability to open up rap structures. Dnae delivers a production that takes the title literally: movement without friction, depth without pressure. For a duo with decades of shared work behind them, a record like this functions less as proof of anything and more as a point of rest you know how the other person breathes, you don't have to explain anything. Visual by Evan Doheny.

D-Wiz "TRACK 11" [VIDEO]


BPos is a collective Bay Area music project where D-Wiz regularly appears as voice, engineer, and creative anchor. "Track 11" announces its own position inside an album through its title alone a number, not a name, no external positioning. The Architect produces the beat. D-Wiz records, mixes, and masters everything himself at BPos Studios. CameraMannzz shoots and edits the visual. Behind the title is a quietly managed independence: no label behind the mixing board, no trend in the tracklist. Earlier BPos releases show a clear affinity for Jeru the Damaja and Georgia Anne Muldrow as musical reference points that compass tells you enough. This is someone building a catalog without announcing it. The video is the image for a track that was already complete before a camera entered the room.

DJ Deadeye ft. Sean P, Termanology & Smif-N-Wessun "Bustelo" [SINGLE]

 

"Bustelo" is the 2nd Single off DJ Deadeye's third Album "InDependency". Droping late 2026, the song features one of the last Sean P verses recorded before he passed. Termanology pays homage to Sean throughout his verse as he flips some of Sean's old phrases. Tek & Steele drive the hook with their classic back & forth flow. Soundtrack provided by Fizzy Womack aka Fame of M.O.P. 

Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Onyx "Body Ya" [SINGLE]


“Body Ya” reveals the unexpectedly lighter side of Onyx’s current album It All Started in Brooklyn. Produced by Fredro Starr, it appears in the later section of a project that also brings in Lord Nez, DJ Audas, DFNS, and Quab Lab through the 100 MAD structure. Following the title track’s hard statement of origin, “Body Ya” demonstrates that Fredro Starr and Sticky Fingaz do not have to force every new record through the same hardcore template. The summer-party direction becomes more interesting precisely because neither voice has to perform relaxation. Onyx still sound like Onyx: angular projection, physical presence, and the sense that even a loose record could become confrontational without warning. Fredro’s production simply changes the objective. Instead of basement pressure and mosh-pit impact, the song prioritizes movement, hook energy, and immediate crowd response. It is not a reinvention of the group, but a different room inside an established personality. “Body Ya” also serves as a reminder that Onyx were never built exclusively from constant shouting. Even their hardest catalog depended on groove, call-and-response, and the ability to control a room. The new single brings those elements forward, allowing the wild duo to make a summer party record without sanding it into harmless seasonal content. Fewer steel-toe boots, perhaps—but the same Queens footprint remains.

Supreme Cerebral & The Beat Junkies "Supreme Junkies" [VIDEO]


“Supreme Junkies” and its parent album have already appeared on HHHeadz; the new element is Turtle’s official music video. The record remains a notable case. DJ Rhettmatic produces the lead single, while the full project brings together DJ Babu, D-Styles, J.Rocc, and Rhettmatic around one emcee. It is the first collective album in which four Beat Junkies members operate as a production unit for a single rapper across an entire project. Supreme Cerebral does not attempt to overpower that history. He understands that a Beat Junkies record is not designed for the emcee to erase the DJ. “Supreme Junkies” depends on equality between disciplines: writing, beat construction, cuts, and timing. Rhettmatic establishes the first official production marker, Jerry Dalalo handles the mix, and Rich One from the Almighty NASA Crew provides the album artwork. The visual keeps Supreme Cerebral at the center while respecting the deeper story—this is an emcee supported by a turntablism institution, not simply four famous producer credits. The Beat Junkies helped shape turntablism as performance, competition, and education. Crew members earned major individual and team honors before extending that legacy into formal instruction for mixing, scratching, beat juggling, and DJ musicianship. Their involvement gives Supreme Beat Junkies a depth beyond the standard multi-producer rap album. It connects Supreme Cerebral’s writing directly to a living school of DJ craft. 

Caper "Walking Through the Smoke" [SINGLE]

 

“Walking Through the Smoke” approaches resilience without reducing it to a clean motivational phrase. The smoke represents a city where violence, corruption, self-doubt, and ordinary pressure obstruct vision at the same time. Caper does not lecture from outside that environment. He writes from inside the movement through it: continuing forward, recognizing patterns, and refusing to lose sight of purpose. Vici supplies a haunting foundation and hard drums; Caper’s role is to create direction inside the confusion. The record arrives through Darkstarz Records, a Bronx-based independent structure that has spent more than two decades creating space for raw hip-hop pushed aside by commercial radio priorities. Caper is not only an artist within that system but one of its driving forces. “Walking Through the Smoke” follows a continuing run of releases built around dense writing, dark imagery, and classic boom bap commitment. Its strongest distinction is between fire and smoke: survival is not the final achievement. The real challenge is recovering clear vision after the damage. 

Cali Agents "We Here Now" [VIDEO]


“We Here Now” is one of those titles that requires no complicated decoding. Rasco and Planet Asia are declaring the Cali Agents active again. From the beginning, the duo combined two distinct strengths: Rasco’s forceful, angular projection and Planet Asia’s more fluid, densely interlocked rhyme patterns. Their foundational work connected West Coast origin with a production language equally comfortable drawing from East Coast underground discipline. That history makes Marco Polo an ideal producer for the reunion single—not an outside visitor, but a natural bridge between the group’s two established poles. The track opens the road toward The Greatest Story Cali Told, the announced new Cali Agents album. The title carries confidence, but also historical responsibility. Rasco and Planet Asia do not have to invent a new reason for existing; they have to demonstrate what remains of their chemistry after long, productive solo careers. Marco Polo gives them a contemporary record that respects classic construction without sealing the reunion inside a museum display. The response surrounding their return suggests that this particular combination had been genuinely missed. “We Here Now” therefore avoids the feeling of a sentimental class reunion. Neither emcee attempts to impersonate a younger version of himself. The title means presence in the most literal sense: they are standing beside one another again, the contrast between their voices still holds, and the forthcoming album now has a credible first pillar.

XP The Marxman x No Games "Today" [SINGLE]


“Today” is not a first encounter. XP The Marxman and No Games already completed a full collaborative album with See How She Runs: beats and mixing by No Games in Lausanne, rhymes by XP, and physical editions across vinyl, cassette, and CD. The new three-minute single again arrives through Mijo Music, extending the transatlantic partnership rather than leaving it as a closed one-album experiment. XP combines Los Angeles street perspective with introspection, social commentary, and precise wordplay. No Games has worked as a DJ and record producer for more than two decades, connecting with artists including Blu, Guilty Simpson, and several established voices from French rap. That background helps the collaboration function as an actual emcee-producer unit rather than an American rapper placed over an exported European beat. Expanded credits for “Today” remain unavailable, so the most important detail is continuity: after a complete album, neither side appears finished with the conversation. 

Benny The Butcher "Can’t Be Much" [VIDEO]


“Can’t Be Much” has already appeared on HHHeadz both as a video and as the closing track on the six-song The Plugs I Met 2.5 EP. Produced by Harry Fraud, it leaves Benny alone at the microphone after a feature-heavy sequence that includes 38 Spesh, ElCamino, Bruiser Wolf, Fuego Base, and Raekwon. The wider project also brings in Daringer, DJ Shay, and Beat Butcha, but its central attraction remains Benny’s established chemistry with Fraud: cinematic luxury placed against Buffalo’s cold economic language. This upload is therefore not a separate release requiring a second full review, but another visual circulation of the same closer. 

Jaydar & Bad FX "Took Our Time" [ALBUM]

 

The title Took Our Time is reflected in the album’s architecture. Fourteen tracks provide considerably more room than the current micro-project standard, with two “Emphasize” interludes and a five-minute “This Thing Called Life” positioned near the closing stretch. Jaydar and Bad FX shape the record like a route rather than a file dump, moving from “Intro” through “Get Some Rest” and “Sailing” before reaching “Foggy Waters.” Mr Myki, Ray Vendetta, and Allstar Stacks appear selectively, adding different voices without overwhelming the core partnership. Jaydar belongs to London’s independent rap circuit and has demonstrated both hard, direct bar work and more personal writing across his catalog. Bad FX is not a new connection; the two have appeared together on previous records and wider crew collaborations. Took Our Time therefore feels like a deliberately developed next step. The title does not promise perfection so much as patience—music allowed to become complete rather than uploaded as soon as the first usable loop appears. Detailed production credits remain unavailable, limiting deeper technical analysis, but the sequencing, guest placement, and running times clearly indicate that this was conceived as an album, not a content package. 

100GrandRoyce "No Stress" [VIDEO]


100GrandRoyce releases “No Stress” through a deliberately direct platform strategy, with full video access and additional material placed inside his own membership system. That approach is more than a paywall. It fits a Harlem emcee who has organized his catalog independently through ALLHUNDOS and does not treat music as a shortcut toward visibility. Royce describes himself as a representative for underdogs, grinders, music obsessives, and people who escaped street life before it closed around them. His writing is rooted in lived experience but consistently aims toward forward motion. “No Stress” therefore reads less like a carefree wellness slogan than a form of earned calm. Across full-length partnerships with producers including 183rd and Dame Grease, Royce has repeatedly favored sustained chemistry over random beat collecting. With no public production credit attached to this song, it would be dishonest to force it into one of those established sonic boxes. What is clear is that the controlled rollout, direct audience relationship, and self-owned platform all reinforce the title’s position: fewer outside gatekeepers, less unnecessary noise, more command over the work. 

Dun Dealy x DeevoDaGenius "Zingtones" [ALBUM]


Zingtones runs thirteen tracks in roughly thirty minutes and arrives through Feed The Family and E11evation Records. Its title language creates a recurring identity immediately: “Zing Emotionless,” “Zing Spirits,” and “Life of Zing” turn the central phrase into more than an album name. Dun Dealy remains the main voice, while BeenOfficialLord, Flames Dot Malik, BoriRock, Daniel Son, BLUEHILLBILL, and TEGA reveal the network surrounding DeevoDaGenius. “Northside of Brockton” gives that network a direct geographical anchor. DeevoDaGenius operates not only as a producer but as the builder of his own release and collector infrastructure through E11evation. Dun Dealy is not a temporary visitor inside that world; the two have already appeared together across earlier projects. Zingtones therefore feels like the expansion of established chemistry rather than a newly assembled collaboration. Its short running times also fit Deevo’s broader catalog, which favors compact scenes, fast transitions, and recurring voices that gradually turn separate records into one regional universe. 

Gustavo Louis "Ole’ Lefty" [VIDEO]


“Ole’ Lefty,” produced by Projectporter, comes from Gustavo Louis’ Oven Lord. Detailed track credits remain limited, but Louis has already built enough context around his catalog to place the record correctly. He describes his sound as a familiar yet altered blend of hip-hop and narco rap. The discography supports that language: ovens, shipments, wrestling figures, Knicks imagery, designer materials, and underworld identities recur across multiple projects. His Grappler persona is not a disposable social-media alias; it belongs to a catalog that structures rap like a combination of wrestling territory, street kitchen, and crime cinema. Louis identifies an early RUN-DMC record as a formative musical memory and Raekwon’s Only Built 4 Cuban Linx… as an album that changed the way he understood both hip-hop and the life surrounding it. That lineage explains his work more accurately than any type-beat label could: coded commerce, cinematic narration, recurring characters, and a world extended through constant releases. “Ole’ Lefty” is another piece of that architecture—effective as an individual visual, but clearly connected to Oven Lord and the wider Gustavo Louis mythology.

AJ Suede "Atomic Justice" [ALBUM]

 

Atomic Justice is an AJ Suede record at every level. He wrote, performed, produced, mixed, mastered, and designed the entire project inside a small room in Seattle. The album also carries earlier identities—Napalm Def and Nuclear Heat—as though Suede is documenting different evolutionary stages of the same radioactive material. None of the twelve tracks reaches three minutes. Rather than building around traditional extended verse-hook structures, the project moves through precise impacts, compressed thoughts, and tightly engineered bursts of language. The titles carry Suede’s signature instinct for mutation: “Billed Gates,” “Gol D. Rajah,” “Able to be Kane,” “A$AP Baki,” and “Thrilla Bark” twist public names, anime language, and pop-cultural memory into new forms. Figerson, Phiik, and Mary Sue are distributed carefully across three tracks, each belonging naturally inside Suede’s wider world of abstraction, dark humor, and dense image-making. Across a prolific catalog, he has refined a staccato delivery capable of sounding raw and meticulously controlled at once. On Atomic Justice, the production does not interpret the writing from outside; both originate in the same nervous system. The physical edition is limited to one hundred vinyl copies, reinforcing the album’s handmade character. This is not a large-scale release dressed in artificial prestige. It is a fully controlled object from Suede’s own workshop. Its brevity encourages repetition rather than disposal, allowing titles, internal references, and short lines to form new connections with every return. 

Jamal Gasol & The Standouts "Stir The Pot Freestyle Part 36 Os" [VIDEO]


“Stir The Pot Freestyle Part 36 Os” is more than the final installment of a series. It closes a long-form working relationship built around one durable equation: Jamal Gasol on the microphone, A.Dot and C.Dot of The Standouts behind the boards, thirty-six separate opportunities to prove that consistency does not have to become repetition. The series thrived on soulfully selected loops, concise arrangements, and Gasol’s ability to combine piff language, dry humor, and Rust Belt realism. Spread across multiple chapters of The CookUp, it gradually turned discipline itself into part of the narrative. Gasol comes from the side of Niagara Falls that tourists never encounter. His influences include Lloyd Banks, Cassidy, and Max B—artists who understood that technical control, street reporting, and personality should not occupy separate rooms. That background helps explain the longevity of Stir The Pot. The recurring kitchen framework was never the complete subject; it became a container for ambition, family responsibility, neighborhood detail, and the slow construction of an independent career. The finale therefore feels less like cancellation than completion. One body of work has reached its final plate, while Without Further Ado prepares to move him beyond the kitchen. 

The Musalini "GiMME" [SINGLE]


“GiMME” arrives without detailed production or feature credits, but its framework still says plenty: a two-minute solo single released through Jamla Records. That compact format fits The Musalini’s current mode—player music built to establish atmosphere quickly rather than stretching a clean idea past its natural limit. The Bronx emcee’s recent catalog has placed his smooth, streetwise delivery inside several distinct production worlds, including work connected to Khrysis, 9th Wonder, Statik Selektah, and DJ Fresh. Each partnership has revealed a different shade of the same voice: relaxed without becoming passive, luxurious without disconnecting from the pavement. “GiMME” is best understood as a concise continuation of that run. No inflated concept is necessary; the short form is part of the discipline. 

Emerg_Da_Mc "UNDERGROUND LORD" [EP]

 

Emerg_Da_Mc continues his remarkably high-volume catalog with UNDERGROUND LORD, a seven-track project produced by Wilderness and completed in just under sixteen minutes. King Bobo appears twice, reinforcing a recurring partnership without distracting from Emerg’s central voice. The sequencing creates a spiritual vocabulary of its own: “Gebb and Tehuti,” “Eye See,” “Reveal Your Cloth,” and “Manifest” point toward perception, identity, and self-creation, while “Grim Reaper” brings death imagery into the same chamber. Wilderness keeps the setting unified, allowing each cut to operate like a compact transmission rather than a conventionally extended song. With a catalog now stretching well beyond one hundred releases, Emerg has developed an economy of expression—ideas arrive, make contact, and leave before repetition can weaken them.

Monday, July 13, 2026

Frank N Dank Live @ Samy Deluxe Blockparty Deluxe, Heidelberg [VIDEO]


This is the heaviest moment on this entire list. Frank N Dank real names Frank Bush and Derrick Harvey are an American hip-hop duo from Detroit, Michigan. They are best known for their many collaborations with the late J Dilla and first came to public attention as guests on his album *Welcome 2 Detroit* in 2001. Frank Bush, Derrick Harvey, and J Dilla grew up together in Detroit's Conant Gardens area, were friends since the mid-80s, and even had a preliminary rap group where Dilla was the MC, Frank the DJ, and Dank the breakdancer. The Frank-N-Dank partnership came to fruition in 1995 as both began seriously sharpening their rhyme skills. In the initial stages of the duo, Frank-N-Dank were produced entirely by Jay Dee, even while the producer was a full-time member of another Conant Gardens-bred group, Slum Village. The group signed a recording deal with MCA Records, but their *48 Hours* album was first rejected by the label, reworked with new production, and ultimately shelved entirely. The album had been entirely produced by J Dilla. Bootlegs of the reworked version eventually surfaced in the underground. The weight of that story never fully lifts: a complete Dilla-produced album that never got an official release because a major label couldn't see its value. The 2007 *European Vacation* CD and DVD documented the last performances of J Dilla and Frank N Dank together. Nearly twenty years later, Frank and Dank stand on a German stage, at a blockparty organized by a German-American rap veteran, backed by Samy Deluxe himself. This is not a comeback stunt. This is a duo that never stopped, playing for an audience that never forgot.

Nuchal feat. ETO "No Weapon" [VIDEO]


"No Weapon" operates on two levels simultaneously: the biblical verse (Isaiah 54:17 no weapon formed against you shall prosper) and the street code that converts that scripture into a statement about being untouchable. ETO is present twice: as producer and as featured emcee. ETO is a veteran of the current grimy underground with a massive output catalog and a production signature built around dark, soul-drenched loops and hard New York rhythm. The "A Mercenary Film" tag signals a cinematic aesthetic ETO has pursued across several projects. Nuchal holds the emcee position on his own side of the record. The 4K format and the deliberate film classification make clear that the visual is treated as conceptually serious here, not merely a YouTube obligation.

Doza The Drum Dealer x Kaeson Skrilla "A.N.T.M.S." [SINGLE]


Doza The Drum Dealer and Kaeson Skrilla present "A.N.T.M.S." as a single. The acronym title arrives without an official explanation the ambiguity appears intentional. Doza The Drum Dealer appeared briefly in an earlier round (with Narcotechs / "EA4E" minimal info, short entry). This new single connects him with Kaeson Skrilla. The name Drum Dealer states the priority: drums, rhythm, groove first.

The 17th Cipher, Rufus Sims & IAMGAWD "Chicagospel" feat. Ju Jilla [SINGLE]

 

The lineup for this project reveals itself through accumulated context: The 17th Cipher from an earlier round (*T.H.R.O.N.E.* EP), Rufus Sims who also appeared on AWOL's *NOW LOADING* featuring Vic Spencer, and IAMGAWD an emcee who already demonstrated his weight on Doc Da Mindbenda's "House Money." Together they form the core of the forthcoming album *Chicagospel*. The title track featuring Ju Jilla serves as the first official single. Work Scorsese produces. The title speaks directly: Chicago and Gospel. Not gospel in the conventional church sense, but gospel as truth you hear and carry. Chicago's lyrically-focused underground has its own tradition rarely named in the same breath as drill Vic Spencer, IAMGAWD, Chris Crack, and others. *Chicagospel* positions itself inside that lineage. Ju Jilla's feature adds weight to the title track. The album is forthcoming; the single already delivers substance as an entry point.

93' "Vet" [VIDEO]


93' delivers "Vet" as an official visual. The artist name carries a year as identity 1993, golden era, fixed reference point. "Vet" as a title means veteran: someone who has been through it, who has seen it, who knows. This is not a nostalgia record; it is a record about respect earned through experience. No label, no feature, no elaborate apparatus. The visual is direct and grounded.

Northside Lord "THE LORDS WORK" [EP]


Northside Lord presents *THE LORDS WORK* a five-track EP. The title carries both religious gravity and a practical claim. Lord's work is work done because it must be done not for applause, but out of conviction. 

Bad Lungz "I Ain't Average" [VIDEO]


The official video for "I Ain't Average" gives the record its own visual space. Bad Lungz remains exactly what he is: a Paterson, New Jersey emcee with a rough vocal texture and a sound deliberately positioned in the luxury-grime lane. Dr. Juan produces, MummyThumbz directs. This is not an elaborate production it is a direct, honest image that matches the track's attitude. No distraction, just the emcee and the statement.

PF Cuttin, Labba & John Jigg$ "Badman Nah Deal Wit Supa Hero" [SINGLE]

 

This record earns its weight immediately through its DJ credit. PF Cuttin is not simply a turntablist; he is one of the most respected scratch artists and mixing engineers in the New York underground. His name already appeared on Skanks' Knicks anthem earlier in this list, and he regularly functions as a connective thread across different pockets of the same underground. Labba and John Jigg$ handle the emcee side. John Jigg$ comes from the Mxnxpxly Family network, which appeared in an earlier round with "Day of the Wolves." The title is direct and unflinching: Badman doesn't deal with Superheroes. No compromise, no franchise rap just boom bap and conviction. An instrumental is included in the package, signaling DJ-ready intent from the beginning.

WRD Life x Planetary "The Gods Almighty" feat. Jamalski [VIDEO]


The official visual for "The Gods Almighty" provides a visual frame for a single that already ran on HHHeadz. Planetary one half of OuterSpace alongside Crypt The Warchild, Philadelphia-rooted, active in the Jedi Mind Tricks-adjacent underground for over two decades connects with WRD Life for the Lords of the Fly collaboration. Jamalski's feature carries reggae/dancehall gravity; the Jamaican MC has been active since the early 90s with credits alongside KRS-One, Redman, and others. Directed by Elemxnt. The album drops July 17. This visual is the final statement before the starting gun.

Skanks the Rap Martyr "53" (The New York Knicks Anthem) [VIDEO]


Skanks the Rap Martyr is an emcee out of Crown Heights, Brooklyn. He is the co-founding member of the supergroup Bankai Fam and CEO of Anarchy Records. With over 26 releases on Bandcamp, a long-running creative bond with Ruste Juxx, and a nickname "The Flowfessional" that describes both his work ethic and his lyrical approach, Skanks has been a consistent underground presence across decades of New York rap. "53" is a Knicks championship anthem built around a specific number: the 53-year drought the New York Knicks finally ended in 2026. BK Dudda produces, PF Cuttin mixes and masters PF Cuttin also handled mastering duties on the Ruste Juxx and Skanks *Live From Crow Hill* project, making this another chapter in a long-standing creative partnership. Ruste Juxx directs the visual. Shot in front of Spike Lee's Joint restaurant, the location is deliberate. Spike Lee is the Knicks' most visible superfan, front-row fixture, and more than any celebrity presence could manufacture an actual New Yorker who waited 53 years just like everybody else. Skanks picks the right corner to plant a city anthem: not an empty arena, but a real Brooklyn sidewalk.

GALV & Figub Brazlevič Live @ Samy Deluxe Blockparty Deluxe 2026, Heidelberg [VIDEO]


Galv and Figub Brazlevič take the stage at Samy Deluxe's third Blockparty Deluxe in Heidelberg, held at the Metropolink Commissary inside the former Patrick Henry Village. The location alone carries significance. The former US military site became a refuge for displaced persons and has since transformed into a creative zone. Hosting the Blockparty Deluxe there for the third time, Samy Deluxe is making a point about space, history, and what hip-hop culture is supposed to feel like when it isn't chasing a trend. Figub Brazlevič is a Berlin-based producer, CEO and founder of Krekpek Records, one third of Man Of Booom, and a founding member of the Olschool Future Tribe East-West Sessions. His reputation is built on uncompromising boom bap, deep sample work, and a creative philosophy that consistently refuses to place volume above craft. The *Transrapid* album with Galv features Torch, Morlockk Dilemma, and Samy Deluxe which tells you this live set is not coincidence but the product of a network developed over years. The connection between Figub and Galv traces back to early Booth Brothers sessions; for that series, Figub invites his favorite emcees from around the world into his space, agrees on a tempo, and builds the beat from a raw drum loop in real time. That trust in spontaneity is a philosophy, not a technique. Guests on the night include Toni-L of Advanced Chemistry whose 1992 record "Fremd im eigenen Land" gave German rap its political backbone alongside Lupara Versato and Jan Faati, before Samy Deluxe closes the show himself. This is German hip-hop that treats its own history not as a costume but as working material.

Alpha Centori & Shyste Chronkyte "Concrete Scriptures" [EP]


New York’s lyrical weapon, Shyste, and Montreal’s premier producer, Alpha Centori, have just dropped a 3 song EP for the Summer called, “Concrete Scriptures”. Three audible shots to the head for the fans of gritty, underground Hip Hop.

Topping the EP is the incredible “Sunny Daze”. The feel of the song is perfect for riding or walking around on a glorious summer day. Shyste spits flames over trippy vocal samples and hard drums. The musical heat Alpha Centori provides keeps the listener’s head nodding thru the entire track. 

Sunday, July 12, 2026

Buckshot "Good Day" [VIDEO]


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

Novatore feat. Merkules "Machines" [VIDEO]


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

Black Silver x HardMoney "All Gas" [SINGLE]

 

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

Perso & JustMusicBeats "Quelques Grammes" [VIDEO]


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

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


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

Saturday, July 11, 2026

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


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

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


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

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


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

RON BROWZ "FIEND" [VIDEO]


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

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

 

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

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


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