Tag: hip hop

Throwback: Happy 53rd Birthday, Roxanne Shanté!

JOVM’s William Ruben Helms celebrates hip-hop pioneer Roxanne Shanté’s 54th birthday.

New Video: Chicago’s Angry Blackmen Share Eerie and Unsettling “Stanley Kubrick”

Chicago-based hip-hop duo Angry Blackmen — Quentin Branch and Brian Warren — features members, who individually spent their time stretching their creative arms and tapping into different sounds for a couple of years, before Warren suggested that they collaborate together as a duo towards the end of the 2016.

The Chicago-based duo exploded into the underground and experimental hip-hop scenes with their debut single “OK!,” a track that showcased the pair’s adept ability to spit bars. Their second single “Riot!” was a near-complete shift in sound that remained tethered to the sonic foundation that they’d first built.

Their debut EP, 2019’s Talkshit! was released to attention and acclaim, before eventually catching the attention of Philadelphia-based progressive label Deathbomb Arc, known for its avant and eclectic roster featuring releases from Death Grips, JPEGMAFIA, JOVM mainstays clipping., Julia Holter, U.S. Girls and others.

Deathbomb Arc went on to release the duo’s full-length debut, 2020’s HEADSHOTS! and its follow-up EP, 2021’S REALITY!, both of which saw the duo expanding their range sonically while further honing their craft.

The Chicago-based duo’s highly-anticipated 11-song, Formants-produced sophomore album The Legend of ABM is slated for a January 26, 2024 release through Deathbomb Arc. The album reportedly sees Branch and Warren spinning tales of depression, existentialism, self-reflection, tragedy and survival that are unvarnished, lived-in and not always pretty paired with soundscapes that seem to come from a dystopian future — informed by our pre-apocalyptic world. The result is two emcees providing a passionate yet introspective look at the world-at-large, with their raw, pathos-infused lyrics educating the listener on our increasingly dystopian, apocalyptic world.

Clocking in at about 30-minutes, the album thematically is a coming of age narrative centered around Black men navigating America, inspired by Richard Matheson’s 1954 post-apocalyptic horror novel I Am Legend. “For us, this album is kinda like our villain origin story, a bedtime story and introduction to those who have and haven’t heard of us yet. Black men have historically been the boogie men of America, so I think it’s fitting that we tell our own legend.”

The Legend of ABM‘s first single “Stanley Kubrick” features Branch and Warren spitting dizzyingly fast, dexterous, braggadocio-filled bars and verses over Formants minimalist industrial production that pairs skittering trap-like beats with stormy bursts of feedback and distortion. The result is a song that seamlessly meshes elements of trap with the slow-burning dread and horror of There Existed an Addiction to Blood-era Clipping.

Directed by Jon Le Vert, the video features the duo in empty, dimly-lit, parking garage. The result is a video that captures the chaos, unease and apocalyptic panic of our current movement.

Live Footage: Cypress Hill Perform “Insane in the Brain” and “I Ain’t Goin’ Out LIke That” on Vevo, Celebrate 30th Anniversary of “Black Sunday”

Pioneering South Gate, CA-based hip-hop outfit Cypress Hill — B. Real, Sen Dog, DJ Muggs and Eric Bobo — have been instrumental in boldly pushing the genre in new directions both sonically and linguistically while shifting the overall culture: The members of Cypress Hill championed cannabis and cannabis culture — before it was fashionable. They were instrumental in pushing the sonic boundaries of the genre — on multiple occasions: Along with acts like Public Enemy, Run DMC, Boo-Ya T.R.I.B.E, De La Soul, Onyx, Ice-T and a lengthy list of others, Cypress Hill collaborated with metal and rock acts — on record and live, helping to usher in rap metal.

When hip-hop acts were having a difficult time getting booked for live gigs both nationally and internationally, Cypress Hill played thousands of shows both nationally and globally. And they helped pave the way for rappers to use Spanish — or spit rhymes entirely in Spanish.

Throughout their 30-plus year history, their accomplishments place them as among one of the most successful hip-hop acts ever:

  • 1991’s self-titled full-length debut sold over two-million copies
  • 1993’s Black Sunday, which featured two of their most commercially successful hits “Insane in the Brain” and “I Ain’t Goin’ Out Like That” sold over three-million copies.
  • Overall, they’ve sold over nine-million units — globally.
  • They’ve received three Grammy Award nominations.
  • They’ve released ten albums, including their self-titled debut, 1993’s Black Sunday and last year’s Back in Black.
  • And they have a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

So if you were a child of the late 70s and early 80s, as I was, I have to mention something that will make you feel old: Cypress Hill’s sophomore album Black Sunday celebrates the 30th anniversary of its release today –that’s right 30 years ago, today — with the release of a deluxe edition of the album.

And to celebrate the occasion, Vevo invited the pioneering hip-hop act to perform “Insane in the Brain” and “I Ain’t Going Out Like That.” We may be all getting older and a bit more gray, but the live footage is a reminder that in every way, those two songs still hold up — and are still hard.

New Video: JOVM Mainstay Genesis Owusu Shares Funky and Anthemic “Tied Up!”

Over the past couple of years, I’ve managed to spill quite a bit of virtual ink covering the acclaimed and rapidly rising Ghanian-born, Canberra-based JOVM mainstay Genesis Owusu.

With the release of his debut EP, 2017’s Cardrive, Owusu — born Kofi Owusu-Anash — quickly established a reputation for being a restless, genre-blurring chameleon, whose work is rooted in powerful and deeply personal storytelling. 

Owusu-Anash’s critically applauded full-length debut, 2021’s Smiling With No Teeth as the acclaimed Ghanian-Aussie JOVM mainstay explained was essentially about “performing what the world wants to see, even if you don’t have the capacity to do so honestly. Slathering honey on your demons to make them palatable to people, who only want to know if you’re okay, if the answer is yes. That’s the idea, turned into beautiful, youthful, ugly, timeless and strange music.”

Building upon the momentum of Smiling With No Teeth, Owusu released the Missing Molars EP in July 2021. The five-track EP served as an accompaniment to his full-length debut. Recorded during the Smiling With No Teeth sessions, the Missing Molars EP hit the cutting floor and didn’t make the album, but they manage to further continue the soul-baring narrative of its predecessor. “Missing Molars is an extension of Smiling With No Teeth,” Owusu-Anash explained. “A small collection of tracks from the SWNT sessions that take the already established world-building groundwork of the album, and expand that universe into new and unexplored places. These are all tracks that I felt were special in their own right and needed to be shared. This is music without boundaries.” 

Adding to a breakthrough year, Owusu-Anash made his Stateside late night TV debut and went on several sold-out tours to support both SWNT and Missing Molars EPSWNT landed on a number of Best of Lists across the globe — with  triple j naming it their album of the year. The album also earned four ARIA Awards. including Album of the Year, Hip Hop Release, Artwork and Independent Release. 

Building upon a rapidly growing profile both nationally and internationally, last year was an even busier year for the JOVM mainstay: He spent much of last year on the road, making stops across the global festival circuit, with sets at Lollapalooza, Osheaga and others. He also made his headlining Stateside debut, which included a high-energy, captivating stop at Bowery Ballroom, which I covered for my friends at Musicology.xyz.

The JOVM mainstay also opened for a serious of internationally acclaimed and renowned artists including KhraungbinThundercat, and Tame Impala back in Australia. Adding to a remarkably busy period, the acclaimed and rapidly rising Aussie artist then released two standalone singles over that same period:

  • GTFO,” a woozy and anthemic song featuring a looped, warbling choir and wobbling bass serving as an eerie yet soaring bed for Owusu-Anash’s rapid-fire flow, military beats, explosive cymbal crashes and a shout-along-worthy chorus. While further cementing his reputation for being a restlessly experimental artist, the song also finds the listener thrown even deeper into the Ghanian-Aussie artist’s innermost world with an unvarnished, unsettling honesty. 
  • Get Inspired,” a Dann Hume and Andrew Klippel co-produced seamless synthesis of elements of New Wave, EDM, punk and hip-hop centered around an angular and propulsive bass line, a relentless mootrik groove, distorted guitars and the JOVM’s punchily delivered lyrical jabs and uppercuts. Continuing Owusu-Anash’s reputation for boldly defying and mashing genres, there’s even a falsetto delivered breakdown roughly halfway through the song. (A portion of “Get Inspired” was used in an Apple Fitness+ ad campaign. So you’ve probably heard it without realizing it.)

Along with that, Grammy-nominated musician and producer ZHU remixed “Get Inspired” turning the menacing hybrid punk song into a grimy, club track centered around glistening synth arpeggios, skittering, trap triplets paired with tweeter and woofer rattling beats while retaining Owusu-Anash’s rapid staccato lyrical jabs and uppercuts. ZHU also contributed a couple of auto-tuned, swaggering bars that helps to step up the original’s world-dominating swagger.

The acclaimed Aussie artist’s highly-anticipated sophomore album STRUGGLER is slated for an August 16, 2023 release through OURNESS/AWAL. Where Smiling With No Teeth thematically uncovered one Black man’s battles against — and with — depression and racism, STRUGGLER is reportedly an exploration of the chaos and absurdity of life, our ability to endure and how to get through it all. The album’s material is deeply inspired by a close friend hitting the brink and coming through the other side, along with questions of life and beauty that he found himself contemplating during readings of Samuel Beckett’s Waiting for Godot and Franz Kafka’s Metamorphosis

Recorded between the States and Australia, STRUGGLER‘s producers traverse musical genres — and includes Jason Evigan, who has worked with RUFUS DU SOL and SZA; Mikey Freedom Hart, who worked on Jon Batiste’s 2021 Grammy of the Year Album, We AreSol Was, who worked on Beyoncé’Renaissance; and his long-time collaborators and producers Andrew Klippel and Dave Hammer.

Additionally, Owusu has collaborated with acclaimed Kiwi-based Lisa Reihana on the album’s complete visual identity. Reihana’s work has been showcased in elite institutions throughout the States and the EU, including the Venice Biennale for her critically-acclaimed video installation, In Pursuit of Venus [Infected]. Her work spans across a diverse of media — including film, costume and body adornment and video installation, and as a result she has earned a reputation as a world-renowned artist and producer, who engages in thought-provoking dialogues around the concert of culture. 

Earlier this year, Owusu-Anash shared STRUGGLER‘s first single, the urgent “Leaving the Light.” Beginning with a spine-crawling run of bass notes before quickly morphing into a breakneck Freedom of Choice-era DEVO-like anthem paired with the JOVM’s swaggering, larger-than-life presence and his unerring knack for rousing, shout along worthy choruses. “Leaving the Light” is a cathartic song about survival and perseverance that feels necessary in a mad, mad, mad world.

STRUGGLER‘s second and latest single, the Sol Was-produced “Tied Up!” is swaggering and funky bop built around a propulsive stomp, a swirling and warping bit of funk guitar, wobbling bass synths paired the JOVM mainstay’s forceful delivery, which speaks of the struggle of getting by in an uneasy, insane world and desperaetly holding onto oneself as best as you can in the process. Much like all of his previously released work, the song seems fueled by personal experience, deep introspection.

The accompanying video for “Tied Up!” continues the JOVM mainstay’s ongoing collaboration with Reihana, and sees Owusu as a blindfolded boxer, who throughout the course of the video runs from and his chased by his demons through a dystopian landscape. At other points, he’s fighting himself in an endless battle for his soul and sanity.

New Video: Nonô and Baby Tate Share Playful Visual for Swaggering Feminist Anthem “ATM”

Rising Rio de Janeiro-born, London-based artist Nonô has quickly made a name for herself for a unique brand of pop that pairs Brazilian rhythms with topical lyrics and catchy melodies. She was dubbed “the UK’s freshest talent” by Notion and was selected as one of NMEs “100” artists last year. She also released two singles through Helix Records, “Lovesick” and “Good Times,” and played headlining shows at The Grace, Colours, and Victorious Festival.

Nonô also hosts the Controversia radio show with Brazilian DJ Alok, and their collaboration together “Sky High” has amassed over 14 million streams. Collectively, the rising Rio de Janeiro-born, London-based artist’s discography has racked up over 200 million streams all the DSPs. 

The rising artist’s latest single “ATM” features Baby Tate a hip-hop and R&B wunderkind, who since the age of 13 has honed her skills as a singer/songwriter, emcee, producer and engineer. Baby Tate exploded into the mainstream with 2019’s Girls. Now. a VMA-nominated artist. she has toured with Ashnikko and Charlie XCX. Her work has appeared on Netflix and HBO Max, and as a result has amassed over 88 million streams. Her 2016 hit “Hey Mickey” has recently enjoyed a resurgence in popularity after going viral again on TIkTok. Beginning with tweeter and woofer rattling bass, skittering trap triplets and woozy synths., “ATM” is a club friendly vehicle for Nonô to effortlessly switch between spitting bars and crooning in English, Spanish and Brazilian Portuguese. Baby Tate joins in after the seductive and infectious chorus to spit some fire self-assured fire. 

The end result is a banger that’s also a defiant yet playfully feminist anthem delivered with a sultry self-assuredness of two artists, who seem set to take over the world right now. “ATM is about being a provider and sharing your material and non-material wealth with your loved ones,” Nonô explains. “It represents what I’ve learned from my family, especially from the women, taking care of each other in every way we can.”Baby Tate adds:“When I heard ‘ATM,’ I was so excited because it’s such a dope song. I know I have a lot of fans in Brazil and to collaborate with a Brazilian artist is exciting. I’m grateful Nonô thought of me and I was able to add my energy to it!”

Directed by Christian D.K. Long, the accompanying video for “ATM” features a stylish and swaggering performance from the rising artists, set at a backyard family birthday party. The video’s cast is populated by several generations of women — mothers, grandmothers, sisters, cousins, friends — engaged in the things that happen at every single backyard, birthday party. But the video’s protagonists ensure that fun — and a helluva lot of money is brought to the festivities. And it’s made obvious that they did it through their own pluck, moxie and determination — without the assistance of a man.

New Audio: Nonô Teams Up with Baby Tate on a Swaggering Feminist Anthem

Rising Rio de Janeiro-born, London-based artist Nonô has quickly made a name for herself for a unique brand of pop that pairs Brazilian rhythms with topical lyrics and catchy melodies. She was dubbed “the UK’s freshest talent” by Notion and was selected as one of NME‘s “100” artists last year. She also released two singles through Helix Records, “Lovesick” and “Good Times,” and played headlining shows at The Grace, Colours, and Victorious Festival.

Nonô also hosts the Controversia radio show with Brazilian DJ Alok, and their collaboration together “Sky High” has amassed over 14 million streams. Collectively, the rising Rio de Janeiro-born, London-based artist’s discography has racked up over 200 million streams all the DSPs.

The rising artist’s latest single “ATM” features Baby Tate a hip-hop and R&B wunderkind, who since the age of 13 has honed her skills as a singer/songwriter, emcee, producer and engineer. Baby Tate exploded into the mainstream with 2019’s Girls. Now. a VMA-nominated artist. she has toured with Ashnikko and Charlie XCX. Her work has appeared on Netflix and HBO Max, and as a result has amassed over 88 million streams. Her 2016 hit “Hey Mickey” has recently enjoyed a resurgence in popularity after going viral again on TIkTok. Beginning with tweeter and woofer rattling bass, skittering trap triplets and woozy synths., “ATM” is a club friendly vehicle for Nonô to effortlessly switch between spitting bars and crooning in English, Spanish and Brazilian Portuguese. Baby Tate joins in after the seductive and infectious chorus to spit some fire self-assured fire.

The end result is a banger that’s also a defiant yet playfully feminist anthem delivered with a sultry self-assuredness of two artists, who seem set to take over the world right now. “ATM is about being a provider and sharing your material and non-material wealth with your loved ones,” Nonô explains. “It represents what I’ve learned from my family, especially from the women, taking care of each other in every way we can.”Baby Tate adds:“When I heard ‘ATM,’ I was so excited because it’s such a dope song. I know I have a lot of fans in Brazil and to collaborate with a Brazilian artist is exciting. I’m grateful Nonô thought of me and I was able to add my energy to it!”

New Audio: Harrison Teams Up with Nanna B. on Soulful and Ethereal “Blue Sky”

Harrison Robinson, best known as the mononymic Harrison is a 27-year-old, acclaimed Toronto-based jazz and R&B composer, musician and producer got his start making beats and uploading sample-heavy songs on SoundCloud, where he found a following and global community of like-minded producers and collaborators including Ryan HemsworthStar Slinger, and a list of others. 

His first two critically applauded albums, 2016’s Juno Award-nominated Checkpoint Titanium and 2018’s Juno Award-nominated Apricity, which revealed his versatility as a musician and producer, led to him producing some of Canada’s most forward-thinking, boundary-pushing artists including al l i eDaniela AndradeDijahSBSean Leon and Juno Award-winning artist TOBi, and others.

Over the past couple of years, the Toronto-based musician, composer and producer has been busy: He has released a string of standout songs, including last year’s “Outta This World” with TOBi. He also released a couple of instrumental singles, “Around You’ and “Like When We Were Kids,” which amassed over 3 million combined streams globally. The acclaimed Torontonian has also been busy with compositional work with Nintendo Switch’s LOUD and commercials for NERF and Play-Doh.

The Canadian producer, composer and musician’s highly-anticipated, self-produced, third album Birds, Bees, The Clouds & The Trees, which is slated for an April 28, 2023 release through Last Gang Records, will reportedly continuing to demonstrate the evolution of his sound and approach over the past couple of years. Drawing from his artistic roots, love of old cartoon and musical influences ranging from instrumental hip-hop beat tapes to American jazz piano, like Vince Guaraldi’s Charlie Brown scores, the album is reportedly a nostalgic ode to the music that Harrison dreamed about making as a kid. But much like his previously released work, the forthcoming album sees a collection of guests seamlessly stepping into the acclaimed Canadian producer”s technicolored world. 

I’ve managed to write about four singles off the album:

  • Float,” feat. Kahdja Bonet, a slow-burning, Quiet Storm-meets-throbbing funk number built around tweeter and woofer rattling boom bap-like beats, a sinuous bass line, glistening synths paired with Bonet’s ethereal and sultry cooing. Fittingly, “Float” is a seemingly effortless love song that captures the dizzy swooning of new love but while subtly acknowledging the inherent uncertainty and fear we all feel. 
  • “A View From The Sky,” a  J. Dilla beat-tape-meets-bop jazz instrumental rooted in a swinging arrangement of twinkling keys, stuttering yet propulsive drumming, fluttering synths that’s simultaneously meditative and head banging. 
  • Bump,” a funky pimp strut built around twinkling Rhodes, a soulful and strutting bass line and stuttering boom bap that’s roomy enough for MED and one of my favorite emcees Guilty Simpson to trade coolly swaggering bars focusing on the endless hustle, keeping hackstabberrs and deceitful people out of your life, and so on. 
  • “Inthecoupe” is strutting and funky bop with a playful air. Rooted in layers of fluttering and brassy synth arpeggios and twinkling keys, “Inthecoupe” recalls Dam-Funk and Cy Gorman‘s Carmen.”

“Blue Sky,” featuring Nanna B. is the fifth and latest single off Birds, Bees, The Clouds & The Trees is an ethereal and slow-burning neo-soul bop built around lush, twinkling Rhodes, strutting seemingly reggae-influenced rhythms paired with Nanna B.’s soulful, jazz-tinged delivery. Informed by the weirdness and uncertainty of the past couple of years, “Blue Sky” manages to evoke a complex array of emotions — isolation, longing, despair, unease and hope with a lived-in specificity.

“Nanna captured the vibe of the instrumental for this one,” Harrison says of the collaboration with an artist known for her work with Raphael Saaddiq, Hodgy Beats, and Mndsgn. “Nanna and I chatted earlier last year over Zoom about the effects on the pandemic and how we got through it. I think she captures the solitude of the situation while also floating across the beat.”

New Audio: Nashville’s LOC SLEEPY Shares Swaggering “John Wayne”

LOC SLEEPY is an emerging Nashville-based emcee. His latest track “John Wayne” pairs his dexterous and densely worded bars referencing random pop culture ephemera, including King Kong, Jersey Shore‘s GEICO, The Mighty Ducks, and John Wayne, and street shit with a menacing, yet hook-driven production featuring skittering, tweeter and woofer rattling trap triplets, eerily twinkling keys.

What caught my immediate attention was this: “John Wayne” is rooted in the energy of an emerging artist, who seems ready to take over the entire world, one emcee battle, one bar, one hook at a time if he had to.

45 is getting indicted here in New York today — right about now. I thought about four different songs that seem to fit the weird yet very historical occasion:

  • Antibalas‘ “Indictment,” off 2010’s Who Is This America?
  • Intelligent Hoodlum‘s “Arrest The President” off 1990’s self-titled album
  • YG and Nipsey Hussle‘s “Fuck Donald Trump” off YG’s 2016 effort Still Brazy
  • Madison McFerrin‘s “Guilty,” which was released as a standalone single back in 2021.

Fuck Donald Trump forever and ever.

New Video: audran Shares Another Banger

Audran Cattin is a French actor, best known for being in the series, Les Bracelets Rouges. His first starring role in a movie with Kad Merad, Clovis Cormillac and Isabelle Carré is forthcoming. But in the meantime, Cattin is also a musician and emcee, who writes, records and performs as audran

The Franch actor and musician’s debut EP EMOJI was released earlier this month. The EP which features “Plastiq” with Oscar Lesage structurally and thematically tells an eight part story — a sort of auditory short film — that follows a young person, who asks himself existential questions throughout the course of a night.

The EP’s latest single “ABCD” is built around a looping acoustic guitar line paired with skittering boom bap and Cattin’s self-assured yet easy-going flow. Much like the EP’s preceding single, “ABCD” continues a run of material that sounds indebted to  Ligne Quartre‘s Arret Demande.

The accompanying video follows the French actor and musician throughout Paris shamelessly promoting and selling a CD. We gotta do what we gotta do, right?