Tuesday, July 14, 2026
Onyx "Body Ya" [SINGLE]
Supreme Cerebral & The Beat Junkies "Supreme Junkies" [VIDEO]
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]
XP The Marxman x No Games "Today" [SINGLE]
Benny The Butcher "Can’t Be Much" [VIDEO]
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]
Dun Dealy x DeevoDaGenius "Zingtones" [ALBUM]
Gustavo Louis "Ole’ Lefty" [VIDEO]
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]
The Musalini "GiMME" [SINGLE]
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]
Nuchal feat. ETO "No Weapon" [VIDEO]
Doza The Drum Dealer x Kaeson Skrilla "A.N.T.M.S." [SINGLE]
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]
Northside Lord "THE LORDS WORK" [EP]
Bad Lungz "I Ain't Average" [VIDEO]
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]
Skanks the Rap Martyr "53" (The New York Knicks Anthem) [VIDEO]
GALV & Figub Brazlevič Live @ Samy Deluxe Blockparty Deluxe 2026, Heidelberg [VIDEO]
Alpha Centori & Shyste Chronkyte "Concrete Scriptures" [EP]
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]
Novatore feat. Merkules "Machines" [VIDEO]
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]
Figerson x BhramaBull "Revenge of the Manji Clan" [VIDEO]
Saturday, July 11, 2026
THE TANGIERS FEAT. IAMPROFIT "WEAPONS OF WAR" [VIDEO]
T.F & DJ MUGGS "100 DOLLAR BILL" [VIDEO]
TRUECIPHER FEAT. ESTEE NACK "S.E.T.U." [ALBUM]
RON BROWZ "FIEND" [VIDEO]
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]
FEL SWEETENBERG x DJ BRANS x DJ DJAZ "THE CHEF'S KISS" [SINGLE]
CHARLIE BEATZ & AL FRESCO "STRAPPED" FEAT. NOBODY FROM NOWHERE [VIDEO]
JIZZM HIGH DEFINITION x JAHS ONE "COPACETIC" [SINGLE]

Jizzm High Definition is one of the most prolific beatmakers in the LA underground north of 70 Bandcamp releases deep, spanning instrumental full-lengths and collaborations with names like Chino XL and Tash of Tha Alkaholiks. "Copacetic" keeps it lean: a three-track pack pairing the vocal cut with instrumental and acapella versions, the kind of DJ-ready format built for cutting and battling rather than streaming numbers.
APAKALYPSE "DEMON SLAYER" [VIDEO]
Friday, July 10, 2026
ONYX Live in München 2026 | Strom Club [VIDEO]
Stick around toward the end of the video for a bonus moment: every artist on the bill linked up for an impromptu freestyle cypher — raw, unplanned, real hip-hop.
Lineup:
– ONYX
– Special guest: Ben Shorr
– Sick Boy Simon (Italy)
– Support: M-Dot (USA), El9Six, Exit Fame (USA)
– DJ: Ice Cap
Organized by: Cypher Sound Nation & Rap Legends Live
Venue: Strom, Munich
Big Twins "God Said It" prod. DJ Woool [VIDEO]
O.G.C. "3:30" [EP]
PlunderDawgMusik x Veteran Eye feat. Poncho The Honcho "W.O.R.K" [VIDEO]
Shark & Hi-Q "Every Villain Has A Story" [ALBUM]

Shark and Hi-Q construct the album as a descent narrative. An ordinary man moves gradually toward his darker personality until “villain” becomes less a role than a condition. Hi-Q produces, mixes, and masters every track, while Shark writes and performs the core material. That arrangement keeps the transformation sonically unified across thirteen pieces. “Hurt People,” “The Devil’s Got a Day Job,” “Halo Made of Razorwire,” “Circle of Salt,” and “Nothing’s Sacred” mark different stages of collapse. The imagery moves from psychological injury toward occult symbolism without reducing the album to horror decoration. Es, Jake Haw, Words, and B1 the Architect appear selectively. The real focus remains Shark’s internal monologue and Hi-Q’s task of making that monologue sound increasingly unstable.
Mic Bles x Avant Garde "From The Westside With Love" [VIDEO]
Buckshot "The Package" [ALBUM]
Trigger tha Gambler "Rob Boys" [VIDEO]
Killy Shoot x Chuck Chan "The Schooling" [ALBUM]

Chuck Chan produces *The Schooling* in full, giving Killy Shoot a unified foundation across fifteen tracks. Most of the songs remain brief, allowing ideas to end before they become trapped inside standard structures. Titles including “Backpack Full of Crack,” “All City,” “Eastpak,” and “Winter in Worcester” combine graffiti, street, and backpack imagery within a clearly defined East Coast frame. Supreme Cerebral, DJ Grazzhoppa, Substance, and Deuce Hennessy appear briefly, but Killy Shoot remains both student and teacher throughout the project. “Schooling” is not treated as academic knowledge. It is information acquired through blocks, loss, observation, and repetition. Lord Sarin keeps the mix and master dry enough for Chuck Chan’s loops to remain exposed. Hometeam Records provides the appropriate setting: family-organized, but never soft.
