Friday, July 17, 2026

Spaceman drops "Cranky" [AUDIO]



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

Listen to “Cranky” here: Here

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

More info: https://cyberspace667.com/

Vale! ULB "Devórame " [VIDEO]

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

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

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

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


Speaking about the inspiration behind the single, Val explains:

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

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

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

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

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

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


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

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


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

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


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

Castor Pollux "Reflections" [SINGLE]

 

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

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


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

Coyote "Rehab" [VIDEO]


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

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

 

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

Crip Jesus "Blu Tang Forever" [ALBUM]


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

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


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

Invizible Handz "Community Service" [ALBUM]

 

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

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


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

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


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

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

 

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

M-Dot "Hold On" [SINGLE]


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

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


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

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

 

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

MC Bomber "Auf Speed" [ALBUM]


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

Knownaz EVIL "Not Da 1" [VIDEO]


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

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

 

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

Tone Spliff x Vic Monroe "Cuties" [SINGLE]


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

Pielroja feat. Penyair "La Moral" [VIDEO]


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

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

 

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

The Punchline Academy x Judah Priest "Judah Priest Freestyle" [SINGLE]


Judah Priest belongs to the extended Sunz of Man / Wu-Tang world — the same family that produced Heaven Razah (covered in an earlier round with The Black Dick Tracy). The Punchline Academy is Da Inphamus Amadeuz's radio show on Shade 45, which already appeared in an earlier round through the Copywrite collaboration "Copy My Style." A freestyle format in this setting means no elaborate studio production — just direct proof of technical skill in front of an audience. For Judah Priest, it's a chance to demonstrate his standing within the Wu family outside a full album context.

Logik Konstantine Drei Freestyles ("Drive by Finesse", "Loose Change", "Paris vs Buff") [VIDEO]


Three videos, one post, one clear concept: Logik Konstantine raps over already-existing, well-known US instrumentals — "Finesse" (Michael Prince, with violin), Alchemist's "Loose Change" (featuring Earl Sweatshirt), and Daringer's "Buff vs Wires" (Westside Gunn feat. Benny The Butcher & Boldy James). This is French freestyle rap as direct dialogue with the American Griselda/underground world — not imitation, but an independent voice riding foreign foundations. Recorded at Rekreasun Home Studio, mixed by Nayce Delanight at Delanight Studio, all videos shot and edited by Logik Konstantine himself for KEMPLOTIST/Rekreasun Vizyon. The tongue-in-cheek disclaimer about the "professional sock" handling all the stunts shows someone who doesn't take himself too seriously — while the bars stay serious regardless.

Leedz Edutainment "Hard To Learn" [ALBUM]

 

Hard To Learn is one of those albums where the feature list alone deserves its own writeup. Across 24 tracks, including skits, Leedz Edutainment assembles an ensemble stretching from Torae, Skyzoo, and Reks to Ill Bill, Sadat X, Murs, and Blueprint, to Akrobatik, M-Dot, Q-Unique, and Ruste Juxx. This isn't a randomly stacked feature fireworks display — it's a deliberate gathering of emcees rooted in different East Coast traditions, from Boot Camp Clik-adjacent voices to Rawkus-era veterans. But the actual concept runs deeper than the guest list. Hard To Learn explores divorce, addiction, grief, anxiety, working-class struggle, faith, and the long road toward acceptance. The Arcitype produces nearly everything himself, deliberately building bridges between gritty East Coast boom bap and rock, soul, and Americana influences — most audible on "Downbound Train," explicitly inspired by Bruce Springsteen, and the blue-collar anthem "The Working Man (Turn & Burn)." Lenny Lashley — known from Boston's punk/folk scene — appears on "Downbound Train," reinforcing that genre crossover further. What carries the album is its refusal to offer easy answers. Victories that still hurt; failures that become blessings — that's the central tension running through "Bear the Burden" (with Reef the Lost Cauze, Akrobatik, and M-Dot), the haunted reflection of "Living With a Ghost," and the closing "Penniless Kings." Rita Diaz contributes additional vocals, Jonathan Ulman plays drums on two tracks, DC The MIDI Alien and Tapeghost each handle one production credit. For an album placing this much weight on lived reality over genre posturing, it's a remarkably coherent production from a single creative hand.

Charles Herron X The Uncanny Saga "Sal's Pizza Shop" [SINGLE]


 Str8 Paper feat. Kingdom Kome, Keytalife, Polo Baby Flako & Block Forever "U.S. Open"

Str8 Paper feat. Kingdom Kome, Keytalife, Polo Baby Flako & Block Forever "U.S. Open" [SINGLE]


Five emcees on one beat is a gamble usually the message dilutes when too many voices fight for the same punchline real estate. "U.S. Open" avoids that trap because Str8 Paper frames it as competition rather than collaboration: a tournament, not a hangout. Kingdom Kome already a recurring feature name across this coverage series goes up against Keytalife, Polo Baby Flako, and Block Forever, all riding Polo Priest's angular production. Enter the iLLomanati itself runs a lean 26 minutes and brings in Thirstin Howl The 3rd and Whata Mess alongside the names listed here placing Str8 Paper clearly inside the Lo-Life/Polo Ground network, which has cultivated its own street aesthetic around Ralph Lauren codes and New York block history since the 90s. The title plays with competitive language, but without softening it into sports-casual fun. This is pure lyrical precision, no seasonal ease.

Thursday, July 16, 2026

TheHiddenCharacter "THEFIRSTSUPPER" [ALBUM]


TheHiddenCharacter has been working with an aesthetic of refusal for years. The name itself tells you the method: the figure is central, but never fully revealed. THEFIRSTSUPPER contains eleven tracks in twenty-six minutes and is released through 5087626 Records DK. Very little additional official information is available, which almost fits too well. The catalog already speaks through titles like THEHIDDENSPLASH, THEHIDDENMASKTHEORY, FACE II FACE, RAPMONEY, and THEHIDDENCHARACTER: identity, surface, mask, money, confrontation. The title THEFIRSTSUPPER clearly twists one of the most recognizable religious images. Not the Last Supper, but the First Supper—less a farewell table than the beginning of a private mythology. Without tracklist details or credits, it would be dishonest to claim the album fully develops that inversion. But the frame is strong: a shared meal, a hidden figure, a beginning that sounds like an ending. TheHiddenCharacter operates in the modern grimey underground where short projects, masked identities, and visual codes can matter as much as traditional press copy. The power of this kind of release lies partly in the riddle. Not everything is explained. The listener has to find out how much substance lives behind the mask.

The 17th Cypher feat. Earn Dinero, Bogustice & Spoda "The Shift" [VIDEO]


“The Shift” comes from Harmoni Equality Presents... The 17th Cypher. The track features The 17th Cypher, Earn Dinero, Bogustice, and Spoda, with production by Flip Jackson. The spelling itself is worth noting: an earlier round included “The 17th Cipher” through the T.H.R.O.N.E. EP; here the form appears as “Cypher.” Whether that is platform variation or intentional naming remains unclear. What matters is that the cypher idea sits at the center. A record with several emcees and a title like “The Shift” needs movement. Not simply four verses placed in sequence, but a shift in tone, perspective, or pressure. Bogustice brings a name associated with battle and cypher energy; Spoda adds a rough East Coast edge; Earn Dinero completes the circle. Flip Jackson’s job is not only to provide a beat, but to create a field where those transitions can happen. At just over two minutes, the song operates more like an exchange than a traditional extended posse cut.

Miskeen Haleem aka K. Unlimited x Sabio Dub "Pure Form 4" [ALBUM]


Pure Form 4 is not an isolated album title. It is part of an ongoing series. Miskeen Haleem aka K. Unlimited and Sabio Dub have already built a line through Pure Form, Pure Form 2, and Pure Form 3; the fourth installment brings twelve tracks in just over half an hour. That is enough space for an album, but still tight enough to discourage detours. Rare Form Unlimited / One Dub appears in the release information, and the name itself makes the priority clear: form, not effect. Because detailed track credits and feature information are not publicly available, it would be wrong to overstate specifics. But the series logic matters. When artists build four releases under the same title, they are not merely assembling songs; they are refining a method. Pure Form sounds like a self-imposed rule: rap without unnecessary decoration, sound without extra packaging, repetition not as limitation but as sharpening. Miskeen Haleem has remained active through recent singles including “Domination,” “Time Passin,” and “Restless,” while Sabio Dub remains the constant counterweight in this series. The fourth volume is therefore less a restart than a test: does the formula still hold? Across twelve tracks, it has to. Strong series do not survive by becoming entirely different each time; they survive by tightening their own language.

Ricky Lix & Brother Tom Sos "Belladonna" [VIDEO]


“Belladonna” is the third cut from The Elysian Fields, the four-track EP by Ricky Lix and Brother Tom Sos. In an earlier round, the focus was on “Theophany,” produced by Micall Parknsun. “Belladonna” shifts the energy. Lieu produces this one, after already appearing in the visual orbit of the previous release. The title is strong: belladonna is a poisonous plant, beautiful in name and dangerous in effect. A record with that title should not threaten loudly. It should enter the bloodstream slowly. Across the EP, Ricky Lix and Brother Tom Sos work with a mythological language: divine manifestation, Elysian fields, Belladonna, Moneta. This is not a simple street tape with random names attached. The titles create a world between raw rap, spiritual imagery, and dark elegance. Gangsta Hippy as the surrounding frame makes sense: contradiction built into the name, street and transcendence standing beside each other. “Belladonna” therefore feels designed less as a frontal banger than as controlled poisoning. The beat does not need to kick the door down; it needs to create a state. Ricky and Tom do not move like two random features placed together, but like a duo shaping the EP as one small chamber. Four tracks, sixteen minutes—no space for sprawl. Each title has to leave its own image behind.

Heaven’s Tank feat. Solomon Childs, GEKIBOT & Wuchick Suu "Trifecta" [SINGLE]


“Trifecta” states its structure immediately: three minutes, three featured voices, one compact strike. Heaven’s Tank brings together Solomon Childs, GEKIBOT, and Wuchick Suu. The key name for context is Solomon Childs. Staten Island, Wu-Tang affiliated, connected to Theodore Unit, with family ties to Cappadonna and Ghostface Killah—this is not an artist merely inspired by the Wu orbit, but someone who comes from the extended family tree. A track like “Trifecta” is less about a broad concept than position. When three emcees are placed inside a three-minute frame, the aim is not panorama but sequence. Heaven’s Tank has already been moving through titles with spiritual and martial weight: “Holycore,” “The Abbot Chamber,” “Secret Warz.” “Trifecta” fits that language. It feels like a chamber cut: not an extended narrative, but three blades laid on the same table.

Ramson Badbonez x Illinformed "Animos City" [VIDEO]


“Welcome to Animos City” does not sound like an invitation. It sounds like a warning. Ramson Badbonez is not a visitor in the UK underground anymore; he is part of its working structure, a long-running High Focus presence with the kind of technical control that does not need to announce itself loudly. Illinformed produces, and the pairing makes immediate sense. Badbonez needs beats with body, dust, and a certain hostility. Illinformed gives him pavement, fog, and cold air between buildings rather than polish. The record plays like a city map where every street has a reputation. Ramson does not rap in a rush. He moves with the confidence of an emcee who knows where his syllables land. The rhymes arrive dry, precise, and controlled, with that distinctly British way of letting punchlines drop rather than framing them in lights. DJ Jazz T’s cuts matter here. They are not just nostalgic decoration; they slice the surface and give the track its hip-hop spine. High Focus has always understood the value of that.

G Fam Black x Cloaqxdagger "The Wicked Feast First" [ALBUM]


G Fam Black and Cloaqxdagger are not new to each other. Follow G Fam’s Bandcamp trail and the connection is already there: Gorilla Grip, Blick Tracy Returns, “Lords Of War,” and other Knuckle Dragguz-adjacent links show a working relationship that has been built over time. The Wicked Feast First sounds like a table where nobody eats clean. Ten tracks, tight runtime, no inflated ceremony. G Fam Black comes out of Brockton, Massachusetts, and has spent years sharpening a voice built on dry menace, black humor, and basement-room energy. Cloaqxdagger gives him the right kind of underground: beats that do not want to shine, but cast shadows. The title works because it gives you abundance and discomfort at once. “Feast” suggests plenty; “Wicked” removes any comfort from the meal. This is not a banquet. It is something served after midnight. G Fam is strongest when he moves through filthy loops like he is standing in a room with one working bulb. Cloaqxdagger understands that frequency. The production does not need to make grand gestures; it only needs to leave enough dirt under G Fam’s boots for the bars to land with weight. If The Wicked Feast First is truly the opening course, the tone is set: raw, focused, and eaten without silverware.

Wednesday, July 15, 2026

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


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

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

 

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

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


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

Jay Royale x Anibal Beatz "Glory" [SINGLE]


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

Onyx "Body Ya" [VIDEO]


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

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


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

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


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

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


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

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


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

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


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

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


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

D-Wiz "TRACK 11" [VIDEO]


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

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

 

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

Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Onyx "Body Ya" [SINGLE]


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