Time to "Blow Shit Up" is the next Unusual video invading the internet!!! Strapping up the boots and loading all the ammo. El Da Sensei and producer extraordinaire J Rawls bring you an arsenal of a song to download and cop.
Time to "Blow Shit Up" is the next Unusual video invading the internet!!! Strapping up the boots and loading all the ammo. El Da Sensei and producer extraordinaire J Rawls bring you an arsenal of a song to download and cop.
Hiero is back! Fresh off their international Hiero 360 Tour, the Oakland, CA super-crew has announced their first release in over thirteen years! All Said And Done will be released on 9/3/26 and the album’s first single “Drum Talk” is now available on all streaming platforms.
“Drum Talk” features an all-out lyrical smoke session from Casual, Souls Of Mischief members Phesto Dee and Tajai as well as Del The Funky Homosapien.
Listen to “Drum Talk”: https://promo.
Speaking on the forthcoming album (the first official Hieroglyphics release since 2013 mixtape The Kitchen) Del beamed “It’s like the best-case scenario, the way it’s working. I love it! It's working better than I even could have imagined.”
Formed out of the Bay Area, Hiero includes Casual, Souls Of Mischief (a quartet composed of A-Plus, Opio, Phesto and Tajai), Del The Funky Homosapien, Domino, DJ Toure and Pep Love. The crew announced their presence to the world on the track "Burnt", the B-Side to Del The Funky Homosapien's 1991 single "Mistadobalina." However, it was the 1993 release of Del’s sophomore album, No Need For Alarm, Souls Of Mischief’s debut album, 93’ Til Infinity and Casual's 1994 debut, Fear Itself that solidified their skills to hip-hop fanatics worldwide. Label frustrations and politics spurred the formation of their own label, Hiero Imperium. In 1998 Hieroglyphics released their debut album Third Eye Vision. This was followed by 2003’s offering, Full Circle.
More Info: https://hieroglyphics.

Sonnyjim – Birmingham, UK's most prolific underground export – links with Brainorchestra for "Politic Ditto," featuring The Musalini. Sonnyjim's catalog is vast and his ability to bridge the Atlantic through seamless collaborations with US-based artists remains one of his defining qualities. The Musalini adds his own weight to the track. Brainorchestra provides the canvas.

Twelve tracks of deliberately hazy hip-hop – JFliz writes and records, DJ Lump handles all production and cuts, with mixing and mastering from Hilltop Productions and Tali Rodriguez. The project description is refreshingly honest: this isn't about tight concepts or overthinking bars – it's about vibe. The kind of album meant for incense, open windows, and letting the mind wander. Track titles like "Diary Entry," "Spaced Out," and "Rhythm Of Your Heart" reinforce the mood. DJ Lump's cuts provide the hip-hop anchor while the production breathes freely. Not every project needs to be a lyrical assault – sometimes the most honest approach is to simply let the moment exist.

Tone Chop and producer Frost Gamble celebrate three decades of working together with the release of "Beautiful Foundations" on New Dawn Records. This is a landmark project in every sense. Frost Gamble, a respected producer in underground hip-hop, has impacted mixshows globally for over a decade, achieving international distribution of vinyl and CD releases, charting in several countries, earning a Juno nomination, and having his music selected for inclusion in the official Archives & Library of Canada. Fourteen tracks, all produced, mixed, and mastered by Frost. DJ Eclipse, Pa Pa Fresh, and DJ J Smooth contribute cuts – an acknowledgment of years of support. The feature list reads like a family reunion: Will K, Myne Frame, The Bad Seed, Yasha, Pf Cuttin, Doc Holiday, Decon Blu, Pa Pa Fresh, Grea8gawd, Fresh I.E., and Carmela Marie. Frost's entry into hip-hop came in the early '80s through breaking, later MC-ing, graff, and beatdigging – Binghamton close enough to NYC that the tapes would arrive a few months after dropping. The album captures the essence of building something real from nothing – basement sessions, four-track recorders, and an unbreakable bond.
Specials 2 is the result of a couple years of work, and results matter. Imagine being whisked away to a far off world filled with similarity and anomaly all together. Over-filled ashtrays and smokey gear. Smoke makes it sound better. Is it a concoction of brilliance? Why do we continue to create? The children thought the chips were delicious. It’s like if graffiti was music. Feel blessed to live in this simultaneously best and worst timeline even with all of the crazy shit going on in the world. Buy that piece of wax you’ve had your eye on, or that new sampler that just came out even though you have five already. Hop in we’re going for a rizz-ide. And here is the soundtrack.
Produced by Pasquale

The cover art pays direct homage to Action Bronson's "Rare Chandeliers" – The Alchemist's fully-produced 2012 project that helped establish both artists. Ralphy Red delivers a pack of unreleased remixes from that classic, filtered through his own lens. Six tracks, exclusively digital. The project description speaks to chasing that sound, hunting for "uncut gems" in the underground. Whether the remixes live up to the source material is for listeners to decide – but the intent is clear.

Boxguts, the emcee from Brooklyn, links with DJ Akoza – producer and DJ from Houston, Texas, founder of EastDownToTheSouth Records and former member of Sixset and Doomshop Records. "Metal Head Space" arrives as a six-track statement with all artwork and rhymes by Boxguts, beats and scratches by Akoza. The aesthetic leans industrial – track titles like "Jagged Jaws," "Cyborg's Revenge," and "MechaGutzilla" telegraph the mechanical, dystopian energy. At the center is Boxguts' commanding presence – his delivery carries the confidence of an artist comfortable in his own creative lane, leaning into pure lyrical performance with tight cadences and vivid wordplay. It's the type of performance that reminds listeners why Hip-Hop's core has always been about voice, conviction, and presence on the mic.

Big Twins first appeared on Mobb Deep's 1996 album "Hell on Earth" on the track "Animal Instinct" and later appeared on the Fat Beats Vol. 2 compilation alongside Atmosphere, J-Zone, and Quasimoto. In 2002 he joined Mobb producer The Alchemist on Slum Village's Dirty District mixtape, and in 2004 appeared on Alchemist's "1st Infantry" as official MC for the supporting tour. The "Grimey Life Remixes" revisit his ambitious, focused 2018 album – longtime collaborator The Alchemist provided the haunting "Phantom of the Opera", while Knxwledge crafted "Memories" with its angelic, percussion-heavy production. DJ Mickey Knox now retrofits five cuts with fresh production while stacking verses from Mav, Eto, Flee Lord, Rob Banks, Ransom, Mooch, and Rigz. The QB legacy continues.

Killer Ben is a Gold Chain Music affiliate whose sharp lyricism has consistently been backed by DirtyDiggs' quality sample-based production. The fifth installment of their Vince Carter series doesn't deviate from the formula that works. Diggs' beats carry that dusty warmth – chopped loops with serious low-end weight, drums that knock without oversaturating. Ben rides them with the confidence of an MC who knows his lane. Features from Planet Asia, Montage One, and Styliztik Jones round out the project without overshadowing the core partnership. Eight tracks, under twenty-four minutes – the kind of concise execution that respects your time while delivering substance.

2Mex — born Alejandro Ocana in Los Angeles, member of The Visionaries, Project Blowed alumnus, fixture at the Good Life Cafe since 1992 — has always operated with the conviction that underground hip-hop is both a craft and a community responsibility. "Take Cover" is a covers project in the truest sense: a veteran MC running back underground classics and old-school touchstones through his own filter, the track listing alone carrying enough weight to anchor serious listening. In 2016, he had a leg amputated due to diabetes complications — a moment he addressed on 2017's "Lospital" — and has remained active since. The five-track runtime is deliberate: no padding, no gesture toward a broader audience. Title choices like "Downtown Science" and "Sometimes I Rhyme Slow" signal exactly what kind of listener this is made for. For those who know, it's a reaffirmation. For those who don't, it's an introduction to a lineage that shaped much of what the independent scene is today.

"Saint Lux Vol. 1" is Blac Kami's intentional warm-up before his full-length BRNDN — a four-track EP with a different producer on each cut: AWSMEJ, B0NDS, Talen Ted, and NOIRE. What could feel scattered holds together through the specificity of Kami's perspective: police brutality and the footage that documents it, intimacy under pressure, the weight of personal history delivered without theater. He raps with patience and conviction, trusting the listener to meet him where the words actually land. "The Corner" features T.E.E. and functions as the EP's most grounded moment, a scene so detailed it reads like testimony. No staging, no overreach — just a MC establishing terms before the main event.

Voice Over Gold is a debut LP from a duo whose combined experience adds weight to its central thesis: that the spoken word — its precision, its purpose, its impact — carries more lasting value than any signifier of material success. Mississauga emcee Es, at 50 years old, brings the kind of seasoned perspective that only comes from decades inside the culture, and his reference points are clear — Public Enemy's urgency, KRS-One's didacticism, translated into his own measured voice. Toronto's Nec Nymbl handles the full production load, drawing from his background in Scarborough's late-90s Hip-Hop scene to build a sound that prioritizes atmosphere and groove over contemporary trend-chasing. The result is cohesive and assured. DJ K-Flip cuts throughout; J Wyze, Solar-C, Athena K and Unknown Mizery contribute features. The record is available on vinyl.

Jacksonville MC Eclyse has been one of the most prolific voices in independent Hip-Hop for nearly a decade, consistently pairing with international producers to build a catalog that now exceeds 40 albums under his Hypogeal Sounds imprint. The Shadow That Drank The Fire represents a deliberate lean into the darker frequencies of his output — a 13-track project built around three distinct production voices: SMG (Johannesburg), Omar Glomar, and Someone, whose combined work creates a cinematic, shadow-heavy atmosphere that matches Eclyse's stated intent. His writing throughout positions the album as both personal excavation and a kind of psychographic self-portrait — the oddities, the obscurities, the textures that define his inner world externalized into sound. Manage and Grim Moses appear as features. For listeners new to his catalog, this is an accessible entry point into what Eclyse calls his "darker and grittier side."

Gold On The Mixer's GOTM082 continues the London collective's trademark approach: no intros, no padding, no features that don't pull weight. Zatoichi's Ears handles production and mixing throughout, building a sound that sits somewhere between Blah Records minimalism and classic East Coast Boom Bap — drums dry and punchy, samples treated with restraint. Bearserker (Raz Ghoul), Deeq, EF Knows and Jaroo share mic duties across four tracks, each bringing a distinct voice without disrupting the record's internal consistency. Deeq rounds out the package with the artwork. GOTM082 is a tight, functional release from a collective that understands economy as a craft principle.
Veteran NY emcee El Gant and Brooklyn producer Maticulous have joined forces with the legendary Brother Ali to bring "Wordle", a powerful single that tackles socioeconomic inequality that exists in our country and how the nature of humans attached to devices plays a part in society being numb to it all.
Sharp, intelligent lyricism is displayed along with booming/head nodding production by maticulous truly make this track memorable. This is the first single from the El Gant and maticulous album "House of Cards" out this July.

Diction Uno is a Portland-based MC with roots going back to his 2010 debut Truth Serum and a track record that includes collaboration with Oldominion's Smoke M2D6 as full producer on a project, as well as connections to Rob Sonic and Apathy. Loosey's Vol. 2 is exactly what the name suggests: a collection of tracks that didn't fit a single-project framework but warranted release on their own terms. Ten cuts, ten collaborators spread across the tracklist – Blackheart, Panama Red, SonTavo, Silas1Wolf, Emiliano Raps, and others – creating a portrait of an MC who maintains a wide network of creative relationships across the Pacific Northwest and beyond. The loosie format has a specific function in independent hip-hop: it keeps an artist's name in rotation between major projects, documents ongoing creative activity, and gives collaborators a vehicle. For listeners following Diction Uno's discography, this sits alongside its predecessor as a document of the Portland underground's connective tissue.

Sage The 64th Wonder operates at the intersection of boom bap craftsmanship and manga mythology from Chicago's south suburbs, and The Standard Deviation is his latest project in a year that has seen him release consistently – the Sagewav instrumental series, Wonder Tapes, and now this. The ten-track format features Danny Barz, B.A.M Remy, and Roy French in supporting capacities, with Sage himself as the primary architect across production and lyrics. His framework is built from MF DOOM's blueprint in its structural logic – the mask as symbol of transformation, the multi-series release approach, the total creative control – but executed through his own "sage~wav" aesthetic: boom bap foundations, lo-fi soul textures, and a lyrical vocabulary that draws on ancestral language and cassette-era mysticism. The Standard Deviation continues to demonstrate that Chicago's underground extends far beyond the visibility of its more commercial names, and Sage's refusal to position himself within any established scene framework is by design.

Bottom Feeders is the working unit of Cap Jones and Jay Fehrman, a Minnesota-based MC-producer partnership operating fully outside the industry infrastructure – everything mixed and mastered by Cap Jones himself, artwork by Czarheel, released into the Dead World Radio and Loop City Slums network. Fehrman out of Saint Paul brings a sample-excavation approach to his beats that prioritizes texture over shine, and Cap Jones has spent years developing a lyrical catalog that includes work with Killah Priest and Shabaam Sahdeeq, demonstrating he can hold his own in serious company. Kings of Style at four tracks is a compact release in a series of them – Heavy Set and Sad Eyes preceded this earlier in the year – suggesting a consistent drip model that keeps the Bottom Feeders name circulating without the need for a major project drop. The project's self-sufficiency, from production through mastering to distribution, is the de facto political statement for this kind of artist.

BloodShed Redd arrives with West Coast Cosmos as a three-track self-contained statement. The track sequencing – Redd Alert, Redd Spoke Is Clout, Redd a Nometry – reads as a deliberate self-introduction, each title embedding the artist's name as a structural anchor. Running roughly thirteen minutes across three full-length tracks, this is not a quick loosie but a focused creative package. The West Coast geography is in the title and presumably in the sonic orientation, though the project stands independently of any established collective infrastructure. For an artist without an extensive public-facing discography, releasing something this intentionally shaped speaks to someone working with a clear vision of how they want to enter a room. hhheadz covered his When Adults Swim EP earlier, which means Redd is building momentum release by release in the right direction.

DMH operates out of California under a single principle – keep everything raw – and BEERRUN 3 delivers exactly that. The third installment in a series that started on cassette alongside ALL SALES FINAL, this fifteen-track project runs under thirty minutes with tracks clocking between one and two minutes apiece, each one a tight unit with no room for fat. Recorded at Lost Colinas, mixed by Estimate, and mastered by Comfygod – the same circle of collaborators who have helped shape DMH's increasingly coherent lo-fi universe. The tracklist itself signals an artist whose reference points stretch past hip-hop into cultural criticism, internet folklore, and game culture: "BILLYWITCHDOCTOR.COM" and "NEUROTOMIC PROTOCORE" sit alongside "NO SUCH THING AS ETHICAL CONSUMPTION UNDER LATE STAGE CAPITALISM" without irony, because irony requires distance DMH doesn't bother with. The BEERRUN series across its three chapters forms a distinct discographic statement: short, dense, self-contained, deliberately outside any trend.