Sunday, May 10, 2026

DJ LOTMIX : LOTMIX SHOW - S7 Ep44 [Boombap Mixshow]

πŸ”ŠLOTMIX SHOW S7 Ep44 

by Dj LOTMIX aka LartistOnTheMix with Mixtape Addict x FRANCE FLEET DJS 

feat EDDIE KAINE & BHRAMABULL | INDIGO PHOENYX | PRINCE FELLAGA ft SLIM x BIG TWINS | FREDDIE BLACK | NAPOLEON DA LEGEND | DJ KING FLOW ft ISH-ONE &more

Prod by NASTEE LUVZ YOU | TONE SPLIFF | JUST MUSIC BEATS | DJ KING FLOW &more



BROADCASTED WORLDWIDE on

πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ πŸ‡«πŸ‡· πŸ‡©πŸ‡ͺ πŸ‡ΏπŸ‡¦ πŸ‡¬πŸ‡§ πŸ‡¦πŸ‡Ί πŸ‡¨πŸ‡΄ πŸ‡¬πŸ‡·

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TRACKLIST
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1- CHUBBS - Drugs [Prod FIVE EIGHT FEVER]
2- NOISY NEIGHBOUR - One Brick
3- REEK OSAMA & BEEN OFFICIAL LORD - No More [Prod BOP PHRASES] 
4- MAQFLAH ft RUSTE JUXXX - Parias [Prod DJ KING FLOW]
5- B1 THE ARCHITECT x WORDS - Move The Needle 
6- PRINCE FELLAGA ft SLIM C x BIG TWINS - Narcolanchas [Prod JUST MUSIC BEATS]
7- LONG JOHN - Bird Language [Prod LUCA MUSTACHES]
8- NAPOLEON DA LEGEND - Polonium
9- EDDIE KAINE & BHRAMABULL - Top of the World
10- ONESUN ft MOE SHMONEYY - Luck of the Draw [Prod JUST BACK BEATS]
11- MAD1NE - Loose it All
12- KONFLIK ft CRAIG G x A.PLUS - Let Me Be Me [Prod NASTEE LUVZ YOU]
13- DARKSIDE PREME ft TWITCH - NDSS Freestyle
14- INDIGO PHOENYX & VINZ VEGA - Carpe Diem
15- OSVN ft DV alias KHRYST x APANI B FLY - Gave Me Everything [Prod CHOP LUI]
16- FREDDIE BLACK - Kush Story [Prod TONE SPLIFF]
17- MARS HALL - My Sound [Prod HANDZ]
18- DJ KING FLOW ft ISH-ONE - The Movement
19- LOZEE ft BROKENFINGA - All Elements
20- BRONZE S-18 & KHEYZINE - Karma Incredible
21- SAUCE YIN x DEZINER DRUGZ - Deziner Yin [Prod WORK SCORCESE]


BROADCASTED WORLDWIDE 

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πŸ‡©πŸ‡ͺ DIGITAL MEDIAVERSE | PELIONE Radio 
πŸ‡ΏπŸ‡¦ UBUNTU FM HIPHOP
πŸ‡¬πŸ‡§ INTERNATIONAL FLEET RADIO | LWR Radio
πŸ‡¦πŸ‡Ί KLR RADIO | TUNE1OZ
πŸ‡¨πŸ‡΄ WARRIOR FAM
πŸ‡¬πŸ‡· GHOST12 Radio | DREAM CITY Radio

 

Saturday, May 9, 2026

Kakarot & Bare Beats "Starfish Lullabies" [VIDEO]


Kakarot is a British MC who has been building a reputation in the UK underground through what is described by those close to the scene as accomplished versemanship – technically dense lyricism delivered with a quality of attention that distinguishes him from less deliberate performers in the same space. Starfish Lullabies is produced by Bare Beats and is presented as a preview for the full album of the same name, arriving on Receptor Records and Hidden Identity Productions in the physical formats that matter most in this corner of the culture: CD, tape, and vinyl. Bare Beats provides a production environment that lets the lyrical content breathe without overwhelming it, and the visual for the single was handled by Kakarot himself – keeping the DIY thread consistent throughout. Receptor Records has established itself as a UK label that takes the physical release seriously, and this collaboration is a natural fit for both artists' sensibilities.

All City Anthom & The Architect "Unbalanced Equations" [ALBUM]

 

This album connects two generations of South Bay hip-hop in a way that carries real weight. The Architect is Gary Herd, one half of Homeliss Derilex – the Milpitas-formed duo whose early 90s work was so singular that Peanut Butter Wolf, then based in San Jose himself, made them the second release on Stones Throw Records when he founded it in 1996, with their Cash Money 12-inch. Herd has remained productive across the decades that followed, working under his own label and imprint, building collaborative albums with a rotating cast of MCs, and developing a reputation as a producer whose obscure sample instincts and gritty drum work have outlasted trends without requiring reinvention. All City Anthom brings the contemporary South Bay MC perspective – San Jose and Milpitas, an area whose hip-hop history is genuine but rarely amplified beyond its own geography. Unbalanced Equations is eleven tracks of picture-painting bars over loops that feel lifted from a very specific vinyl crate: obscure, textured, not trying to be anything other than functional and felt. Features include Noose, DJ Traps, Butch Swim, Thatfool AL, and Fathom Flows, each appearing briefly without disrupting the album's tone.

Dezert Eagle "Gold Flowers" [VIDEO]


Dezert Eagle has been one of South London's more understated but consistently capable MCs for well over a decade – a British-Ghanaian artist whose lyrical formation draws from the classic traditions of American hip-hop while operating with a distinctly UK sensibility in phrasing and perspective. Gold Flowers is a formal technical showcase: a single sixteen-minute song spanning fifty different instrumentals mixed by Ethan Hill, through which Dezert weaves references to artists, producers, podcasts, and labels into the wordplay itself, paying tribute to the history of the genre through the act of rapping over it. The exercise calls for real breath control, lyrical agility, and beat-switching fluidity that not every MC can sustain at this length without losing the thread. Gang Starr, DMX, and Immortal Technique are among the touchstones he engages. It's a demanding format – sixteen minutes of unbroken bars is as much stamina test as artistry exercise – and it reads as a genuine flowers-giving effort rather than a stunt.

Omega El CTM "Grotesco" ft. Jeff Turner & DJ Akrylik (prod. Cheterioways) [VIDEO]


Omega El CTM is a foundational figure in Chilean underground hip-hop – a veteran whose career stretches back to the early 2000s through the Hardcore Rap group Estrellas Del Porno, a formation he co-founded alongside Leviatan Zianlev, that helped establish a domestic aesthetic for raw, uncompromising Chilean rap with international reach. Grotesco is produced by Cheterioways and features Jeff Turner alongside DJ Akrylik – the latter a recurring collaborator in Omega's discography whose turntable work has been present across multiple projects. The track, which shares its title with what appears to be an upcoming full album concept, is a direct, abrasive entry point: Omega's delivery is confrontational and technically confident, rooted in a tradition that kept boom bap and hardcore rap values alive in the Southern Hemisphere while the format was evolving elsewhere. For an international underground audience, this is South American hip-hop that doesn't accommodate the listener – it demands engagement on its own terms.

JOHNNYTRA$H & Jazzy Lion Man "Kill 2 Eat" [EP]

 

Jazzy Lion Man has built one of the more prolific and self-sufficient catalogs in the American underground – a Delaware-based producer who operates at an output level that would be unsustainable without genuine consistency of quality, treating the album format as a continuous log rather than a periodic statement event. Kill 2 Eat pairs him with JOHNNYTRA$H, an MC who has appeared in his extended circle across recent releases including the Just Trying To Get By project, making this collab a formalization of a working relationship already in motion. Nine tracks, direct and economical, rooted in the kind of MPC-textured abstract hip-hop that trades in feel, grain, and mood rather than pop architecture. The Kill 2 Eat title positions the project in a corner of the underground that values rawness and survival-mode energy over comfort – a framing consistent with both artists' broader aesthetic. Independent, no overhead.

Big Twins "Grime Out" (prod. DJ Woool) [VIDEO]


Big Twins is one of the most reliably grounded MCs in the Queensbridge tradition – raised in the Queensbridge Houses, debuting in 1996 on Mobb Deep's extended circle, and building a working catalog through associations with The Alchemist, from whom he drew production early on for tracks that became cornerstones of his identity. Grime Out is produced by DJ Woool, a producer he has worked with extensively since the TG1 mixtape era, and the pairing remains one of the more natural fits in the underground: Woool's blechern, paranoia-adjacent boom bap pressure meeting the raspy, lived-in delivery of an MC who has never sounded anything other than exactly himself. Big Twins doesn't update his sound for market conditions; he simply continues to inhabit it, and that consistency is its own kind of statement. The video, filmed and edited by Hostage Media, keeps the visual language matched to the music's no-nonsense character.

Dave East "Brick By Brick" (EASTMIX) [VIDEO]


Dave East has maintained one of the most productive release cadences in New York rap over the past several years, and the EASTMIX series functions as the connective tissue between larger project rollouts – a format that keeps his audience close without requiring the full apparatus of an album campaign. Brick By Brick is the latest entry in that ongoing series, directed by Watch The Screen, and sits alongside the recent For The Love 2.5 and Karma 4 Deluxe as part of a release strategy that's as deliberate about pacing as it is about content. East's particular gift remains his ability to deliver Harlem-rooted narrative with consistent technical discipline – the delivery is never casual, even when the context is looser than a formal single. The EASTMIX format suits his strengths precisely because it removes the pressure of statement-making and allows the pen to work without ceremony.

D-Stallone & Arkin "Par Excellence" [ALBUM]

 

Par Excellence is the first official collaborative album from D-Stallone and Arkin, eleven tracks presenting a producer-MC partnership built for the long form. Arkin handles all production, and the project description situates the work somewhere between tonal range and thematic coherence – a balance that's harder to achieve than it sounds on a debut full-length. Features arrive from Triipout Wood and D. Goynz, both appearing briefly without distracting from the core duo. The album title positions the project with confidence, inviting comparison to what they see as their best possible work. For a debut joint album this kind of self-assurance is either earned or premature – the production and lyrical substance together will determine which. Independent release, direct to Bandcamp.

RHYMRCKA "The Introduction" [VIDEO]


RHYMRCKA has been a consistent presence in New York's independent underground through DCM Entertainment – a label with a real track record in quality-controlled releases, whose roster includes artists who operate in the serious, craft-focused end of the genre. The Introduction is his first solo release tied to the forthcoming project ASG, self-produced under the credit Prod. By Rcka, and distributed through Sony/The Orchard. The single does exactly what its title suggests: it establishes position, sets tone, and functions as a formal entry point rather than a hype play. DCM's approach to releasing music – deliberate, controlled, without overstating the moment – suits this kind of track. For those familiar with RHYMRCKA through his previous DCM work including The Frequency album, ASG represents the continuation of a solo catalog that has been building steadily.

SoulFu "Calculated Risk" (prod. Lethal Needle) [VIDEO]


SoulFu is a Bronx-born duo comprising Shao Dre and Curt Lamont, presenting Calculated Risk as the lead visual from their debut full-length DaToGoPlateTape Vol. 1. Produced by Lethal Needle and directed by J. Kobena, the video is clean and minimal – the music carrying the weight without elaborate production design. The Bronx origin matters here: SoulFu aren't wearing it as a credential, they're operating from it, and the directness of the track reflects that grounding. For a debut project the approach is confident – no hedging, no chasing trends, just a duo presenting themselves on their own terms. The DaToGo framing in the project title suggests a DIY, to-go format aesthetic that fits the no-frills presentation of the single.

Tha 4orce "March On" [SINGLE]

 

March On arrives as a 20th anniversary marker for Tha 4orce's Mind The Gap Anthems V2, and the London-based producer-artist brings the weight of that occasion without making it feel commemorative in a heavy-handed way. The track is co-produced with Nash, with Pete Cherry adding live bass – an organic element that enriches the sound and keeps it from feeling overly digital or template-driven. Thematically, March On is about exactly what the title suggests: keeping forward momentum through loss, change, and the difficulty of uncertain periods. Tha 4orce has built Mind The Gap Recordings as a label precisely on this kind of independence – a long-term body of work built outside commercial frameworks, sustained by craft and conviction. The live instrumentation element is worth noting; not many independent UK hip-hop artists are still routing their records through that kind of organic production approach, and it gives March On a warmth that distinguishes it from harder-edged contemporaries.

De La Soul "A Quick 16 for Mama" ft. Killer Mike [VIDEO]


Cabin In The Sky, released on Mass Appeal Records as part of the label's ambitious Legend Has It... series, is De La Soul's most emotionally weighted project in decades – a record made in the shadow of Dave Jolicoeur's death, yet grounded in exactly the musical values that defined the group from the start: warmth, craft, tonal range, and an undiminished capacity for connecting with the human detail inside a song. A Quick 16 for Mama, featuring Killer Mike, is one of the project's more focused and deliberate moments – lyrically direct, with the feature appearing briefly alongside the group's own verse work. The production on Cabin In The Sky draws on a remarkable roster including DJ Premier, Pete Rock, Jake One, and Nottz, while features range from Q-Tip and Nas to Common, Black Thought, Slick Rick, and Bilal – a guest list that reflects De La's standing across every generation of the culture. The album is not a comeback record; it is a continuation, and a document of what it means to carry a legacy forward while still making the music personal.

Norman Sann "The Monsters They Made" [ALBUM][VIDEO]

 

Norman Sann is a Houston-based rapper, producer, and multi-instrumentalist who operates almost entirely self-sufficiently – writing, producing, and recording most of his material independently, with J Patz as a recurring production collaborator. The Monsters They Made is a 14-track mixtape made available early to his community ahead of its wider rollout. The project title frames what Sann has been doing across his catalog: examining the environment, the pressures, and the systems that produce both the person and the performer. His production sensibility reaches beyond boom bap into a broader nostalgic territory that draws on church music, soul, and organic instrumentation, and his delivery ranges from technically focused rapping to melodic hooks depending on what the track demands. How Do I Move Forward, the lead visual produced by Noire, is a clear entry point – introspective, grounded, undecorated. For a Texas artist whose rise came partly through social media, the music itself is more rooted and traditional than the platform might suggest.





Vocab Slick "Golden Brush" (prod. Surebert) [VIDEO]


Vocab Slick has been one of the most consistent voices out of California's northern Bay Area – Santa Rosa, 707, a region that doesn't carry the commercial gravity of the Bay's more recognized corridors but has produced committed, technically focused hip-hop for decades. Golden Brush is the title track from his Dreaming In Overtime EP, produced by Surebert, a longtime creative partner whose bass-heavy, textured production has provided the backdrop for some of Slick's sharpest work including tracks off his Language LP. The connection between these two is not incidental – Slick has explicitly acknowledged Surebert as central to his sound, and that rapport is audible in how comfortably the rapper occupies the production's space. Mixed and mastered by Starski, the track is a clean showcase for what Vocab Slick does best: internal rhyme architecture, no-nonsense delivery, and lyrical construction that rewards close listening. The video, directed by Will Rushton, keeps the visual presentation matched to the music's directness.

Ben Shorr "From The Inside" ft. Ghost Dog (prod. Madrock) [VIDEO]


From The Inside is a track from Ben Shorr's 2017 album Pyrokinesis – produced by Madrock and featuring Ghost Dog, now receiving renewed visual exposure through the Snowgoons platform, which makes sense given that Shorr appears on their 2026 release Black Snow 3, reinforcing a real working relationship with the German production outfit. Shorr is a Philadelphia-based MC whose approach favors quick wit, gritty delivery, and narrative-driven bars over abstract posturing – a style that translates cleanly to the Snowgoons sonic template of heavy drums and orchestral pressure. The Pyrokinesis album represented his second full-length, executive produced alongside Darren Elder and Jake Wertman, and positioned him as a technician with range. The video recontextualization makes this feel current without overstating its own reach.

SΓ€ge, The 64th Wonder "Meal Ticket 5" [EP]

 

Sage The 64th Wonder has built a quietly significant catalog out of Chicago without much noise – a rapper-producer who self-releases at his own rhythm and maintains near-total control over how his work reaches the audience, including limiting public streaming previews to protect the creative integrity of the full projects. Meal Ticket 5 is the latest in that ongoing series, seven tracks running tight and efficient with SolarFive as the sole feature. The Meal Ticket series has operated as a recurring format within a larger discography that also includes the Sagewav instrumental runs, Supreme Order of Slump projects, and collaborative work – a body of work that rewards sustained attention over casual grazing. The Chicago underground has produced artists who work this way – deliberate, independent, indifferent to the cycle – and Sage represents that ethos clearly.

Rahiem Supreme "Microdosing" [VIDEO]


Rahiem Supreme remains one of the most interesting MCs currently working out of Washington D.C. – a self-contained creative force whose flow and lyricism operate in a register that borrows from Slick Rick's storytelling craft and Sadat X's conversational ease while arriving somewhere entirely his own. Microdosing is the latest visual from a catalog that has grown at a pace that would be staggering if it weren't consistently substantive: multiple projects per year, cross-continental vinyl collaborations including recent work with Long Beach's Wun Two on Sichtexot Records, and an aesthetic that resists easy categorization. His lyrical gift is for stacking imagery – scenes that feel specific, autobiographical, and oddly cinematic without ever leaning into performance. Microdosing sits within that tradition, offering another episode in a catalog that keeps building.

Nowaah The Flood "Sunbeams" (prod. Get Large) [VIDEO]


Sunbeams functions as a standalone visual entry point into the Iron Decree project, produced by Get Large and presenting Flood in his most stripped-down mode: no features, no excess, the MC and the production in direct dialogue. Get Large builds a foundation that is clean without being sterile, leaving room for Flood's narrative style to land on its own terms. For those encountering this record for the first time through the visual, it's a clean representation of what the full project offers.

Friday, May 8, 2026

Meeco & DJ Access feat. Benny The Butcher & Rick Hyde "Boss Thing"

 

Boss Thing” is a heavyweight collaboration by established producer team Meeco and DJ Access, featuring Benny the Butcher and Rick Hyde.


Benny the Butcher is one of the most respected voices in modern rap, known for his sharp lyricism, acclaimed releases, and key role in the rise of Griselda Records. Rick Hyde, a standout artist from Black Soprano Family, brings gritty charisma and undeniable presence to the track.


Centered around the theme of success, confidence, and boss mentality, the song delivers raw street energy and elite bars throughout, providing real hip-hop authenticity.



G Fam Black x SPGBamm "Loud Sounds In Dark Rooms" [ALBUM]

 

Loud Sounds In Dark Rooms is the project Butcha marked as today's highlight, and the reasoning is clear once you engage with it. G Fam Black out of Brockton, Massachusetts — a city with its own specific Northeast street history that's distinct from Boston's more glamorized scene — operates with an intensity and lyrical seriousness that demands attention. SPGBamm's production across all ten tracks has the atmospheric density the title promises: these are beats built for a certain kind of listening, dark and layered, creating the rooms the album describes. The feature roster reflects a considered curation: Tali Rodriguez brings her established underground presence, B1 the Architect adds his architectural precision, Kingdom Kome carries the weight of his catalog, P-Ro contributes from his New England base, and Mad1ne rounds out a guest list that is entirely underground and entirely credible. Crack Sizzlack's mix and mastering keeps the energy tight across the runtime. G Fam Black designed the artwork himself — a detail that speaks to the self-contained nature of this operation. Ten tracks, no filler, a focused statement from an artist who has clearly been building toward this.

Termanology & Royal Flush "Legendary Blocks" (feat. TEK & UFO Fev) [VIDEO]


"Legendary Blocks" places four MCs on a single track whose individual credibilities combine into something that feels earned rather than assembled. Termanology, out of Lawrence, Massachusetts — one of the Northeast underground's most respected producers and MCs across a catalog that spans decades and dozens of collaborations — handles co-production alongside Melks, building a piano-driven, percussion-heavy framework that demands lyricism rather than atmosphere. Royal Flush has been a Queens presence since the mid-1990s, his Crime Rap cadence and measured delivery a consistent quality that has never required hype to sustain. TEK, as one half of Smif-N-Wessun alongside Steele, brings the Boot Camp Clik lineage in — a specific strand of Brooklyn militancy that goes back to Black Moon and the early '90s. UFO Fev has been a consistent underground presence with prolific output that has earned him a place among the current generation of serious lyricists. The four voices share enough aesthetic language that the track has internal logic rather than just feature-slot mathematics. Shot at Uptown Shots in New York City, the visual is appropriately no-frills.

Taiyamo Denku & Urban Legend "Before The Display Vol. 1" [ALBUM]

 

Taiyamo Denku is a Milwaukee institution — a 22-year veteran MC with a catalog dense enough to have placed tracks alongside KRS-One, Kool G Rap, Busta Rhymes, and Jadakiss, and a collaborative history with Urban Legend that stretches across multiple projects beginning at least with the Milwaukee Monstaz era. Before The Display Vol. 1 is presented as throwback material — archive recordings given a proper release — which explains the "various producers" credit and the sense of variety across the seven tracks. Urban Legend, connected through the Cypha Den Music network, has been Denku's primary creative partner for years, and the rapport between them is audible in the ease of their exchanges. The feature roster on this volume is credible: Marv Won, Reef The Lost Cauze, and Ron Noodles are all established underground figures who bring real weight to the collaboration, not just name recognition. J. Miller handles production in Denku's own Milwaukee studio, keeping the operation local. The cassette plus T-Shirt bundle signals a physical-first distribution ethos that aligns with the project's throwback identity. Vol. 1 suggests there is more archive material to come.

DJ Crypt "Hardcore" (feat. Raid Kyu & DJ Robert Smith) from TALES FROM THE CRYPT [VIDEO]


DJ Crypt's new album Tales From The Crypt comes from a German underground that has been producing internationally credible Boom Bap for decades. The "Hardcore" video brings in Raid Kyu and DJ Robert Smith — the latter a German-Serbian presence in the European underground DJ circuit — and the track demonstrates the kind of heavy, uncompromising production approach that has made the Snowgoons school a reference point for this strain of European hip-hop. Crypt operates as both producer and graffiti artist, combining two foundational pillars of hip-hop culture in a way that is increasingly rare as the artforms have become professionally specialized. The album itself represents a significant investment in physical media: Double Gatefold Clear Vinyl with a limited Silver OBI edition following shortly after — two formats designed for collectors who take the material seriously. The feature roster spans Germany, Serbia, and beyond, reflecting the genuinely international character of the European underground scene that connects through shared aesthetic values rather than national geography. For heads who know the Snowgoons catalog and the broader German Boom Bap output, this debut is arriving from a recognized context.

OT The Real "Villain" [ALBUM]


OT The Real comes out of Kensington, Philadelphia, with a track record that has been building steadily since he began appearing on Black Soprano Family projects. Villain, his solo album, arrives alongside his contributions to the Benny the Butcher and Fuego Base collaboration — a doubling of presence across multiple releases in the same cycle that signals an artist operating at high output and consistent quality. OT's strength has always been the grit of his delivery and the credibility of his writing: Kensington is one of Philadelphia's hardest neighborhoods, and the specificity of that background grounds his street narratives in a way that goes beyond aesthetic posturing. His career trajectory — a period of incarceration that became the source of sustained writing discipline, followed by co-signs from within the Philly community and eventually the BSF connection — is the context that makes Villain's title make sense. This is an MC who has lived enough to have a villain's perspective, and who writes with the precision of someone who knows the value of every bar.

MRKBH x Rico James "Lingchi" (from RIGHTEOUS GEMSTONES PART 3) [VIDEO]


MRKBH and Rico James have built the Righteous Gemstones series with a methodical patience that rewards the listener who tracks the arc rather than coming in at any single entry point. Part 1, released in January 2025, brought Killah Priest into the catalog; Part 2 in August placed Sadat X in the guest position; Part 3 continues with "Lingchi" as its video single, the title itself referencing the historical Chinese practice of slow execution as an extended metaphor for MRKBH's lyrical approach — patient, deliberate, accumulating weight with each verse. Rico James's production occupies a dark, jazz-inflected pocket that gives the series its atmospheric consistency, menacing without becoming generic. MRKBH, operating through the Indiana-based Dark Ages Music Group, writes with a density and structural seriousness that belongs to the same tradition as his featured guests — MCs who understand lyricism as a practice of sustained construction rather than performance. The three-part series now represents a significant body of connected work, and the consistency of the execution across all three installments is its own argument.

BloodShed Redd "When Adults Swim" [EP]

 

When Adults Swim lands as a four-track statement from BloodShed Redd, its title inverting the Adult Swim network association to position the work as something more serious, more deliberate — when adults swim, they mean business. The EP includes a video for "Can't Call It," suggesting at least partial visual infrastructure to support the release. Without an extensive prior discography trail in the available metadata, this functions as a direct document: four tracks carrying the weight of a focused creative session. The tone, signaled by the album title and the song sequencing, points toward street-oriented, lyrically committed rap that doesn't position itself within any particular collective or scene framework but stands on its own terms. That kind of independence, without institutional backing or network infrastructure, is its own form of credibility in the underground.

Legit & HostileProd "Dreamz On Reset" (feat. DJ Uncle Fester) Remix [VIDEO]


The international Legit x HostileProd collaborative series continues with this remix of "Dreamz On Reset," and the track's central coup is DJ Uncle Fester's scratch chorus, which lifts the defining line from Adam Bomb's "Wasted Talent" — produced by Sproxx — as its hook. That choice is both a lyrical statement and a scene signal: Adam Bomb is a genuine underground figure, and using his catalog as a scratch source tells you exactly where Legit and HostileProd locate themselves in the tradition. Legit operates out of Canada with a delivery that is raw and precise, street realism delivered without affectation. HostileProd, based in Algeria, stays true to what he has called classic formulas while building original compositions that give the collaboration its sonic grounding. The original "Dreamz On Reset" came from the Born Inside A Dream album with Rex Seshunz, and this remix extends that material into a second life. The video was directed and edited by Legit himself, keeping everything within a tight D.I.Y. framework that suits the project's values. This is the kind of international underground rap relationship that functions entirely outside promotional machinery.

Lil Dee "Bloody Noses" [EP]


Lil Dee arrives with the Bloody Noses EP as part of an orbit that connects to Black Soprano Family without being formally labeled as such. The project title and the aesthetic context place it in familiar territory — gritty, street-centered rap aligned with the BSF and Griselda adjacent sound that has defined a broad swath of the current underground. As an EP without a detailed promotional rollout, Bloody Noses functions as a direct document: whatever is in the grooves is the argument. For listeners already inside the BSF ecosystem, Lil Dee's output has been consistent enough to warrant attention. For those encountering him here for the first time, the short format is a low-commitment entry point.

Megapowers (J-Bux & Jimmy Zo) "Bendix" (from BERGIN HUNT AND FISH) [VIDEO]


Megapowers — J-Bux and Jimmy Zo — take their name and their debut album's title, Bergin Hunt and Fish, directly from New Jersey's documented organized crime geography: the Bergin Hunt and Fish Club in Ozone Park was John Gotti's home base. That reference point is not incidental; it sets the thematic and atmospheric framework for a project that positions the duo within a long tradition of New Jersey and New York underground rap that uses mob iconography as both stylistic shorthand and genuine cultural history. "Bendix" is their first visual, shot and edited by Scrape The Plate Films, and it functions as an introduction to a project already available across all platforms. J-Bux and Jimmy Zo operate with a confidence that suggests they've been developing this material for longer than the release date indicates, and the production on "Bendix" supports the mob-adjacent Boom Bap aesthetic without becoming a parody of its own references. This is a New Jersey debut worth tracking.

JFliz x DJ Lump "Spaced Out" (from SPLOOFS & NAG CHAMPA) [SINGLE]

 

JFliz and DJ Lump have been building toward Sploofs & Nag Champa, which drops next week on all platforms. "Spaced Out" is the project's second single, and it delivers exactly what the album title promises: a late-night, slow-burn sensibility where the production doesn't push, it settles. DJ Lump handles all beats, cuts, and the sonic environment throughout, with mix and mastering credits going to Hilltop Productions and Tali Rodriguez — the latter a recurring name in the underground collaborative economy. JFliz' writing leans introspective and honest, his delivery unhurried and comfortable within the spacious production. There's no bravado performance here, no structural showmanship — the MC seems to trust the atmosphere to carry the emotional weight, and on "Spaced Out" that trust is earned. The Sploofs & Nag Champa project describes itself as music for when the world gets quiet, and this single is a credible advance proof of concept. Keep an eye on the full album next week.

Pee.Tzu "Human Cheat Code" (prod. Tony Tone) [VIDEO]


"Human Cheat Code" is a stand-alone single and video from Pee.Tzu, produced by Tony Tone, presented as a 2026 release without an attached album campaign. The title frames itself as a declaration of ability — the idea of an MC who operates at a higher processing level — and Pee.Tzu's delivery on the track carries that confidence without requiring the listener to take the claim on faith. Tony Tone's production gives the single functional momentum. For an emerging artist with limited available context, a single video-backed track like this functions as both introduction and invitation: enough to assess the MC's tool set without demanding an extended commitment. The visual is direct, the beat works, the bars are present.

AZ "Doe Or Die III" [ALBUM]


Doe Or Die III arrives today as the conclusion of a trilogy that began in 1995 when Anthony Cruz, as AZ, stepped onto Nas' Illmatic as its sole feature — the first voice heard on what would become one of the defining albums in hip-hop history. The thirty years between that debut and this release tell the story of a career defined by consistency, technical precision, and a refusal to compromise the aesthetic intelligence that made Doe Or Die an instant landmark. Mass Appeal Records — the label co-founded by Nas — serves as both the distribution vehicle and the symbolic completion of a decades-long alignment between two of Brooklyn and Queens' most respected lyricists. "Surprise," the track pairing AZ and Nas directly, is the obvious reference point for those who have been waiting. The production roster — Bink!, Buckwild, K-Def, Large Professor, Mike N Keys, N.O. Joe — is a roll call of veteran beatmakers who understand how to frame AZ without competing with him. Jadakiss contributes on "Gimme The World," Mumu Fresh on "So High," and Amar Noir, AZ's own son, appears on "Winners Win," a detail that extends the album's full-circle geometry. AZ's multi-syllabic approach and his unhurried, silky delivery have never needed external validation. This album is the documentation of an artist who simply kept his craft intact.

Verb T "Alien Concept" (prod. Vic Grimes) from TO LOVE A PHANTOM [VIDEO]


Verb T's To Love A Phantom represents a genuine statement of ambition from an artist who has spent thirty years in the independent underground without ever needing a commercial validation to continue. Fourteen albums in, his partnership with Canadian producer Vic Grimes — which began with The Tower Where The Phantom Lives in 2023 — has reached a new register with this 26-track double album released through High Focus Records. The project builds on the first installment's conceptual framework: a low fantasy world where the supernatural and the everyday intersect, and where the protagonist, having exited the tower of the previous album, extends his arc across two discs. Vic Grimes's production is the backbone of the project's ambition — his sound design is dense and atmospheric without becoming abstract, grounded enough to support the vocal weight while expansive enough to suggest the kind of unseen world the lyrics describe. "Alien Concept" sits in the middle of Disc One as one of the project's more introspective moments, Verb T's understated delivery carrying the weight that the track's layered production provides. The guest roster pulls entirely from the UK underground: Leaf Dog, Fliptrix, TrueMendous, JayaHadADream, and the other three Four Owls members — Jehst, Kashmere, and Fliptrix — whose presence gives the project an internal coherence that goes beyond cameo culture. The physical release — available in multiple vinyl configurations at strictly limited quantities — demonstrates High Focus's commitment to the format as a primary delivery mechanism.

Slowpace "The Hard Times EP" [EP]

 

The Hard Times EP from Milwaukee's Slowpace and Sime Gezus is exactly as advertised: four tracks, just over ten minutes of runtime, a clear aesthetic commitment, and an announcement that 7-inch vinyl is forthcoming for those who want something to hold. Sime Gezus handles production throughout, his beats carrying a raw, sample-based approach that suits the EP's no-frills ethos. JD Ultra Slick provides scratches, adding texture without overloading the space. Slowpace's delivery is understated — the focus is on the writing rather than performance spectacle. The closing track, "Kool G. Rap," names its own reference point without apology, and in doing so tells you exactly where this project is coming from and who it's made for. Beat Behemoth handled recording, mixing, and mastering, keeping the entire operation within the Milwaukee circle. The limited 7-inch format for a four-track EP is a statement about how these artists understand the relationship between music and physical media — a choice that belongs to an older tradition of treating the small format as the legitimate one.

CRIMEAPPLE "Fireworks" (prod. LOMAN) from BEEMER ON BROADWAY [VIDEO]


CRIMEAPPLE has built one of the more distinctive identities in the current underground by staying precisely where he is — Northern New Jersey, a Colombian-American perspective, and a delivery that toggles between a slow drawl and sudden bursts of acceleration that catch you between two thoughts. Beemer On Broadway takes that established identity and runs it through seven different production rooms, each giving him a different kind of floor to work on. Preservation's contribution on the opening "Blue Angel" sets a cinematic tone, his sampling approach building atmosphere around CRIMEAPPLE's layered wordplay. LOMAN's three tracks — including "Fireworks" — hit with the most kinetic energy, his drums leaving pocket and space that CRIMEAPPLE fills with the ease of someone who has internalized the producer's language. Comma Uno goes sparser and meaner, DJ Skizz settles into slow boom bap, Wino Willy and Cuffedgod round out the terrain. Features from Estee Nack, Jay Worthy, Seafood Sam, and Mir Nicolas add voices without competing for the center. Eleven tracks, 34 minutes, no wasted motion. The Manteca Music operation continues to function as its own self-contained world.

Q-Unique & DJ Rhettmatic "Comic Con Nerd Sh*t" (feat. Pharoahe Monch) [SINGLE]


The QR Code has been building with intent — Rhettmatic and Q-Unique have already released "Cypha Up," "Fire Vision" with Visionaries MC LMNO, and "It Only Leads the Way" before landing this, their most significant cosign yet. Pharoahe Monch is one of the great technical MCs in hip-hop history, a Queens native whose work with Organized Konfusion, particularly Stress: The Extinction Agenda, defined a benchmark for complexity and lyrical density, and whose 1999 solo debut Internal Affairs cemented a solo legacy that 2025's External Affairs extended. His presence on a Q-Unique and Rhettmatic track is not surprising in terms of aesthetic alignment — all three operate from the same foundational values — but it signals that the album is being built to a specific standard. DJ Rhettmatic's credentials need no argument: Beat Junkies co-founder, ITF Team World Champion twice over, the DJ and production backbone of the Visionaries. Q-Unique handles the Arsonists lineage from the Bronx. The title "Comic Con Nerd Sh*t" is a knowing wink at their collective enthusiasm for the culture that most serious heads share without advertizing. The QR Code is shaping up as one of the more carefully assembled MC-DJ collaborations of the current cycle.

Orion & DJ Proof "Keep It 1Hunnit" (feat. King Tetrus) [VIDEO]


Orion and DJ Proof are operating out of South Florida's 305 scene with Trolling Mahi, an album that positions the pair as a unified MC-DJ unit rather than a featured collaboration. The lead single "Keep It 1Hunnit" with King Tetrus, produced by Proof, was debuted at a live event in Delray Beach and the video captures that energy — less polished performance, more documentation of a real moment. Orion's delivery has the directness of South Florida street rap, comfortable in its own geography without reaching beyond it. DJ Proof's production on the single keeps things functional rather than elaborate. King Tetrus adds a contrasting voice without competing for the center. The album title itself — Trolling Mahi — references the local fishing culture of the region, which signals that this project is deliberately planted in its scene rather than coded for outside consumption. That kind of local rootedness, increasingly rare in an era of algorithmic optimization, tends to produce the most honest rap.

Cookin Soul & Estee Nack "AL-ANDALUS" [ALBUM]

 

AL-ANDALUS is a producer-MC pairing that makes complete sense once you hear it but wouldn't have been obvious on paper. Cookin Soul — born in Valencia, based in Amsterdam, Latin Grammy winner for his work on Mala RodrΓ­guez's Bruja, and the producer behind 25-plus vinyl LPs spanning Conway the Machine, Tha God Fahim, and a years-long collaborative run with Ankhlejohn — brings the kind of dusty, soul-drenched boom bap that demands a particular type of lyricist. Estee Nack, a first-generation Dominican-American from Lynn, Massachusetts, is exactly that lyricist. His approach since his 2015 debut 14 Forms has been consistent: granular narcotics accounting, operational specificity over mythology, street realism delivered with the confidence of someone who has earned his credibility in the underground through prolific output and collaborations with Sadhugold, Giallo Point, V Don, and Conductor Williams before the Griselda co-sign arrived with Nacksaw Jim Duggan. AL-ANDALUS keeps things strictly between the two architects, with brief appearances from Yung Beef — Cookin's longtime collaborator from the Los Papasitos project — Lil Supa, and Planet Asia. The production shifts register across the eleven tracks without losing coherence, and Nack fills every pocket Cookin Soul leaves open with bars that reward a third listen. This is the kind of international underground collaboration that defines what the current moment does best.

Benny The Butcher & Fuego Base "The Fighting Irish" (from ASHES IN THE SAFE) [VIDEO]


Ashes In The Safe is exactly the kind of collaborative project that Black Soprano Family has been quietly building toward — two MCs from within the same ecosystem who have earned the full-length treatment through years of consistent featured appearances. Fuego Base established himself as more than a supporting player with his 2023 Biggest Since Camby, and this album extends that claim. His phrasing carries a resemblance to Jadakiss in tone, controlled and unhurried, his punchlines landing with the weight of someone who has been writing seriously for a long time. Benny anchors with the veteran precision that has defined his output since the Griselda run — commanding without excess. The production across the nine tracks is cold and mob-inflected, built on eerie loops and heavy drums that serve the survivalist theme without overselling it. "The Fighting Irish" sits at the album's middle as a demonstration of what both MCs do when they stop showing off and just rap. The accompanying short film directed by Third Eye Raz adds cinematic context to material that already earns it.

El Gant, Maticulous & Brother Ali "Wordle" [SINGLE]


"Wordle" is an unlikely convergence that works precisely because all three MCs arrive with legitimate credentials and no shared ego problem. El Gant has been building a reputation in the New York underground through technically dense albums, most recently O.S.L.O., where DJ Premier contributed production — a co-sign that carries real weight. Maticulous operates out of Brooklyn as both a producer and an MC, with a discography that has drawn in MF DOOM, Masta Ace, Your Old Droog, and Guilty Simpson, and with DJ Premier on record as a fan of his production. Brother Ali brings the Minneapolis underground's tradition through Rhymesayers, a catalog defined by forceful delivery and lyrical commitment going back to Shadows on the Sun. Dropping these three voices onto one track without a wider album campaign suggests a one-off rather than a rollout, and that kind of spontaneity often produces the tightest work. The name itself — Wordle — is a nod toward wordplay and construction that all three have built careers on.

Planet Asia "Hung Jewelry" (feat. Shah Leezy) [VIDEO]


Planet Asia remains one of the more quietly consistent figures in West Coast underground rap — a Fresno MC with a catalog stretching back to the late '90s who has never needed a mainstream moment to stay relevant. THUGTERRANEAN, available directly through his own platform, fits within his leaner output mode: street-focused, lyrically direct, produced without excess. "Hung Jewelry" brings Shah Leezy in for a feature, and the track sits in the same pocket Asia has maintained for years — measured delivery, confident phrasing, an MC who has simply never stopped putting in the work. The visual was shot by Shah Leezy himself, keeping everything close to the source. A 2026 collaboration with Phil A is also listed in his discography this year, which suggests he is spreading effort across multiple fronts simultaneously. THUGTERRANEAN is the rawer, more stripped lane.

WordChemist x Mr. J "Midnight Aura EP" [EP]

 

WordChemist has been operating deep in the Florida underground for over a decade, but his creative home has always been the tight-knit Orlando Ozone circuit alongside Shinobi Stalin, DJ Stranger, and the broader Beer Money UNLTD network. The Midnight Aura EP places him alongside producer Mr. J across five tracks that commit to a single aesthetic and hold it without deviation: dry, raw boom bap where the drums knock and the bars carry the full weight. DJ Stranger's contributions on "Alchemy" and "Legion of Doom" function exactly as turntablism should in this format — punctuation, not decoration — and Shinobi Stalin's appearance on "Prisma" reinforces the family logic of the project. WordChemist's technical command is the constant throughout, his rhyme construction thoughtful and unhurried. A cassette press is forthcoming for the physical adherents. This is craft-first underground work that asks nothing from you except attention.

Thursday, May 7, 2026

GAWDS "No Condolences" [VIDEO]

Baltimore quartet GAWDS are offering “No Condolences” on their new single (with accompanying video).  Darkly personal and raw, the track is perhaps the most emotional in the group’s extensive catalog. The track is bolstered by L3’s (singer/emcee) vocal melodies as well as additional bars from the group’s other two emcees Regulus and Pinpoint.

Speaking on the track L3 and Regulus said “it depicts the harsh reality of leaving a loved one.  It’s one of our most personal tracks and it doesn’t get more direct than this.”

Watch official video for "No Condolences" here: https://youtu.be/DFV0sHO5AVE?si=nLewBF21bGOHhGbJ  

Listen to “No Condolences” here: https://youtu.be/ou1inZS_iEw?si=2tGj7tcwQvPgJqTm

“No Condolences” appears on the group’s recent album The Care Package. While the quartet are long known for their prowess in the Boom-Bap arena, this project incorporates R&B and Soul sensibilities upon the existing foundation.  In addition, the group has a lot more personal issues to air out within the album including divorce, family issues and of course ethering backstabbers and suckers.

Mostly a family affair, album guests include Baltimore Brethren including Clif Love, Briana La Barz, Pete The Dark Truth, Richard Cranium and Kardo The Don.  However, the album also welcomes two San Antonio, Texas artists Spy MC and Blazy Green that the group built with last summer while on tour. As Regulus recalls “the track ‘Change Up’ feat Spy MC was written and recorded right after we got off the plane.  The recording session was from 1am-4am.”

More Info: https://www.instagram.com/gawds_410/

Wednesday, May 6, 2026

UllNevaNo x Philth Spector "Stephon Barbury" [ALBUM]

 

UllNevaNo has been operating Baltimore's underground with quiet persistence for over a decade – his concept-driven catalog, which includes Kev Brown and Evidence instrumentals mixtapes and albums with producers like MANHE (Shammgod, 2018), has always prioritized craft over visibility. On Stephon Barbury, he connects with Philth Spector, a Philadelphia producer and co-founder of that city's Flip-A-Beat Club chapter whose methodology is rooted in meticulous crate archaeology – he has spent years working chronologically through the Philadelphia International Records catalog as a discipline in sample literacy. The alliance works because both parties share the same foundational principles: no shortcuts, no filler, drums that breathe and samples that ache. Lead single "Yellow Jackets," complete with surgical cuts from Maryland's own DJ IllMEASURED, channels the aggressive multi-MC energy of Wu-Tang's "Triumph" and frames UllNevaNo's position in the culture plainly – his time and pen come at a premium. "Flowers Given" operates on a different frequency, pulling the listener inward with a reflective look at Baltimore roots, old friendships, and the debts you carry from early days in the scene. The project title itself speaks a larger language: Stephon Marbury, like UllNevaNo, represents the kind of talent that operates on fundamentals when spectacle would have been easier. This album is eleven tracks of exactly that.

Vstylez x NaztyWrk "My Prime" [VIDEO]


Detroit has a particular relationship with lyricism that other hip-hop cities often discuss in abstract terms – Vstylez is a concrete example of how that relationship functions in practice. His catalog runs through nearly every meaningful node in Detroit's underground network: sessions and features with Royce Da 5'9, Kid Vishis, Elzhi, Phat Kat, Fat Ray, Guilty Simpson, Boog Brown, Ty Farris, and appearances on Apollo Brown productions place him firmly within the Motor City's lyricist community. "My Prime," produced by NaztyWrk, lands in the tradition Vstylez has always represented – an MC asserting continued presence and quality, no preamble needed. The visual is Detroit without apology: honest, direct, and built around bars rather than concept. For those familiar with his deeper catalog, this functions as a confirmation of continued form; for newcomers, it's an accessible entry point into a discography worth exploring.

Cookin Soul & Estee Nack "Telex Free Trap" (feat. Yung Beef) [VIDEO]


Cookin Soul has built one of the more unusual and comprehensive portfolios in contemporary hip-hop production – a Valencia-born, Amsterdam-based producer and DJ who has maneuvered between the American underground boom bap circuit and Spain's rap ecosystem with equal fluency. His Latin Grammy win for work on Mala RodrΓ­guez's album Bruja established credibility in the Spanish-language world, while his prolific output of 25-plus vinyl LPs and multiple collaborative projects with artists like Conway the Machine and Tha God Fahim cemented his position in the underground boom bap canon. Estee Nack brings his signature Hartford density to the Al-Andalus project, and "Telex Free Trap" introduces Yung Beef – Cookin's longtime collaborator from their Los Papasitos duo – as a third voice that shifts the energy entirely. The cut demonstrates what makes this album worth watching: Cookin Soul doesn't flatten these different styles onto a single template, he builds terrain that each artist can work naturally. Al-Andalus drops May 7.

ANKHLEJOHN x V Don "No Specifics" [VIDEO]


ANKHLEJOHN has built one of the more remarkable independent catalogs in contemporary underground hip-hop by treating his own Shaap Records infrastructure as a complete creative machine – he writes, produces, mixes, masters, and directs, releasing music at a pace that would compromise most artists but somehow doesn't compromise him. His Southeast DC roots carry real weight in his lyricism, as he draws on both the city's revolutionary political geography and its street reality without conflating the two. V Don's role in the creative chemistry behind Everything Beautiful Died Early is significant: his production philosophy leans toward haunting, stripped-down instrumentals that leave significant space for an MC's delivery and bar construction to carry the load, and ANKHLEJOHN is one of the few working artists capable of filling that space effectively. The first single "King, Pawn & Rook" featured CrimeApple as a third voice; "No Specifics" is a two-party affair that shows the core dynamic without ornament. The album title – Everything Beautiful Died Early – sets a thematic frame the production and delivery both honor.

Siberian Bear Suits (Charles Herron x Chuck Chan) "Siberian Bear Suits" [ALBUM]

 

Charles Herron and Chuck Chan have been building their collaborative identity through a series of singles and sessions before committing it fully to album form with Siberian Bear Suits. Chuck Chan's affiliation with the DITC.com infrastructure places this squarely within an extended lineage of crate-based New York underground hip-hop – his recent collaborative LP with Staten Island's Squeegie Oblong was released through Apple Dizzle and DITC.com, and his production approach reflects the dusty-drums-and-vocal-chops tradition that DITC built its reputation on. Herron provides the primary lyrical voice, and the interplay between the two creates the kind of mutual accountability that marks the best MC-producer partnerships. The CD bonus EP "The Gulag" extends the project with seven additional tracks for committed listeners. The cast of supporting voices – Kil Ripkin, Dynas aka The AlumNY, Boogz Tha Architect, General BackPain, among others – forms a tight underground network rather than a cameo parade, each voice adding weight without diluting the project's identity.

AZ "Uniqueness" [VIDEO]


AZ's position in hip-hop history is secured by multiple vectors: the first voice heard on Illmatic, the sole guest feature on what became one of the genre's foundational documents, and a solo career built entirely on precision and longevity rather than commercial accommodation. Doe Or Die, his 1995 debut on EMI, established his blueprint – intricate rhyme schemes, philosophical undertones, mafioso aesthetics grounded in lived experience, and production from Buckwild, Pete Rock, and L.E.S. that set a standard for luxurious New York boom bap. The II installment in 2015 extended the legacy. Doe Or Die III, scheduled for Mass Appeal, brings the trilogy to its conclusion with AZ still operating at full capacity. "Uniqueness," produced by Mike N Keys, is the pre-album single that functions exactly as it should: a reminder of what made him singular, delivered without effort or strain. The line "Rhyme Culture, Whole Aura, Still MC Ultra" isn't a boast – it's a resume. A European tour follows the release.

Benny the Butcher & Fuego Base "Big Shirley" [VIDEO]


Ashes In The Safe represents the full realization of a creative partnership that had been developing across individual releases and features for several years. Benny the Butcher's position in the current Buffalo-rooted landscape needs no introduction; Fuego Base, from Hartford, Connecticut, has grown from a promising BSF signee on Biggest Since Camby to a genuine co-lead who holds weight on every track he appears on. The album functions as a proper document of their chemistry rather than a loose collection of sessions – the production, which spans haunting and rugged cuts with collaborative cohesion, gives both MCs the structural support for their brand of street-level reflection. "Big Shirley" lands as one of the more triumphant moments on the project: where other tracks operate in grimy or dark registers, this one opens up into something that feels earned. Supporting appearances from OT The Real, Rick Hyde, and Sule keep the BSF circle tight. This is the kind of album that functions as a label statement as much as an artistic one.

Rogue Gallery (Columbo Black) "Next 12 Summers" [ALBUM]

 

Columbo Black has been building a catalog of considerable density with minimal external attention, which is arguably how he prefers it. Born in Hollywood and raised in Compton, his work combines a West Coast sensibility with a lyrical approach that values precision, wit, and philosophical grounding over trap-era conventions. Next 12 Summers, at 52 tracks, is an ambitious statement of sustained creative output – each track averaging around 90 seconds to two minutes, the album functioning more like a collection of sharp portraits than a traditional long-player. His 2024 project Rouge Gallery (note the intentional spelling) demonstrated similar ambitions with a 33-track structure. The title's time horizon is the key statement: this is an artist thinking in cycles, not in singles. The Compton origin is audible throughout – a ground-level realism that doesn't romanticize its source but doesn't apologize for it either.

Nowaah The Flood "Iron Decree" [ALBUM]

 

Nowaah The Flood's output is, by any measurable standard, extraordinary: eleven studio albums in 2024 alone, each maintaining a specific identity while building on a larger thematic architecture that mixes street realism with biblical imagery and philosophical weight. Iron Decree, a nine-track project, demonstrates the depth of his production relationships – Stu Bangas, whose boom bap-forward approach has found a natural home in Flood's catalog through multiple prior collaborative albums, leads alongside The Mali Empire, who anchors three tracks here and brings a cinematic quality that complements Flood's storytelling. Names like The Custodian of Records, Circa 97, and Stinky J round out a roster of underground producers who have built real rapport with this MC over multiple projects. Flood's gift is for narrative specificity – he raps about people, events, and places with enough detail to make the world feel populated and real, without reducing it to clichΓ©. Iron Decree operates in that same mode.

Lil Supa "Lince" / "Jungle" ft. Big Noyd [VIDEO]


Lil Supa's Animal is one of the better arguments for the irrelevance of geography in current underground hip-hop. The Venezuelan MC, who moves between Caracas, New York, and Miami under the creative umbrella of his Yo! Yo! Dojo label and his production alias Dakota Codename, built a 15-track album with a roster that stretches from Cookin Soul to Big Noyd and proves that New York's sonic vocabulary has been truly absorbed and internally processed rather than merely imitated. "Jungle," produced by DJ Skizz, is the hardest evidence: Big Noyd, who built his reputation in Mobb Deep's shadow before carving his own lane, steps in and meets Supa entirely on even ground. Skizz's beat is unambiguous boom bap built for this specific exchange. "Lince," produced by Barcelona-based Doktor Rheal, works a different angle – darker, more European in texture, with Supa's Spanish-language bars carrying the same precision he deploys in English. The double visual, directed by Esteban ChacΓ­n and shot in the NY-MIA corridor, is as clean as the production.

Benny Watts & Fuego Base "Band Chasing" [VIDEO]


Benny Watts came home from a 17-year stretch and immediately went to work – two full albums, multiple features, and a developing network of underground collaborations built through his Car-Mafia collective and studio partnership with Pete Twist at The Boiler Room Studios in Virginia. Fuego Base has been climbing steadily through the Black Soprano Family ranks since his Biggest Since Camby debut and has now co-headlined a full album with Benny the Butcher through BSF. "Band Chasing," pulled from Benny Watts' forthcoming 1000 Watts album, works because neither MC is coasting. The production from Sypooda is built for momentum, and both artists treat the beat like real estate to be claimed. The BSF-Car-Mafia alliance reflects a genuine functional overlap between two collectives that operate on similar principles: street-level authenticity, zero compromise on craft, loyalty to the independent model. The "Avengers meets Justice League" framing from the promotional copy is a bit much, but the result on tape doesn't need that selling point.

Wych Hazle x Watkinz Da General "Microphonology 2" [ALBUM]

 

Wych Hazle occupies a specific and largely unoccupied corner of underground hip-hop – a Tucson-based MC, fiction writer, and cultural visionary whose approach he has described as thematic avant-garde boom bap, and whose catalog refuses to repeat itself from project to project. His collaboration with North Carolina producer Watkinz Da General, who developed his craft in the Raleigh housing project environment before building out his Gift of Life Studios operation, traces back to the original Microphonology EP and the mixtape that followed. The sequel deepens the framework. Hazle's stated influences run from Rakim and Kool G Rap through Nas to Divine Styler – the last name is instructive, pointing toward the kind of left-of-field conceptual ambition that drives Microphonology 2 beyond genre convention. Watkinz's ASR-X production provides the sonic architecture: dense, textured, rooted in boom bap but not flattened by it. The Inspiration credit to Dr. James Allen and executive production under the BLKWIZFLIX banner signal that this is a complete creative ecosystem operating entirely outside the mainstream pipeline.

Bobby J From Rockaway "Ungrateful" ft. Haile Supreme (Prod. Statik Selektah) [VIDEO]


Bobby J From Rockaway represents a strand of Queens hip-hop that draws from the same well as Tribe, Pharcyde, and the Rockaway Beach neighborhood's particular sense of place. His working relationship with Statik Selektah, which solidified on the Endless Summer EP where the Boston-based producer and Mass Appeal/Roc Nation affiliate handled all primary production, is one of those underground pairings where the fit is immediately audible. "Ungrateful" featuring Haile Supreme comes from that same project and holds up as a standalone document of what happens when a neighborhood MC with real roots finds a producer whose drums and sample architecture are built to last. Statik's production doesn't impose itself – it frames Bobby J's delivery and gives it the room it needs to land. Shot by Llama, the visual keeps it street-level and clean, consistent with everything Bobby J has built out of Rockaway.

Myrts Son x Sean Wrekless "Day Trip 2026" [VIDEO]


The partnership between North Carolina emcee Myrts Son and Georgia producer Sean Wrekless has developed organically since their debut on Remount Classics. The Interstate Soul series is built on a simple but disciplined premise: real rap over real production, both parties contributing at the level their catalog demands. The "Day Trip 2026" visual connects to Interstate Soul 2 and shows the duo haven't lost a step in their collaborative rhythm – Myrts Son's delivery remains economical and precise, landing bars without reaching for effect, while Wrekless holds down a production approach that owes as much to soul and jazz-inflected sample work as to any contemporary template. Regional rap partnerships that stay independent and consistent over multiple releases are rare. This one has earned its continuity.