Ant Glizzy – Dirty Glove Bastard Interview (Video)

Last week we sat down with D.C. rapper Ant Glizzy for an exclusive “Off The Porch” interview! During our conversation he talked about life in D.C., being the villain in his city, his close relationship with his mother who is bi-polar & schizophrenic, reveals when he knew it was time to leave the streets, losing 4 of his closest friends to violence & prison, signing his first artist Lilbro YP, starting to rap when he was 22, explains how he first linked with Shy Glizzy, reveals why him & Shy fell out with each other, his first mixtape going viral, the talented rappers in D.C., explains situation with YNE Sosa, his thoughts on the rap game, upcoming music, his new business Midnight Trucks, shares advice for the youth, and much more!

Taz Tikoon – ‘Airplane Mode’ (EP)

Taz Tikoon releases her new Airplane Mode EP. Distributed by Steve Stoute’s United Masters, the project includes features from Chanel Sosa and Corey Benjamins. Taz Tikoon had this to say about her recent release below.

“I created Airplane Mode to disconnect to reconnect to my higher self. Sometimes your elevation requires isolation. I wanted to get higher while still being grounded. I had to cut off a lot of people so that I could get closer to God. When a person puts their phone in airplane mode, it’s either because they’re flying or they don’t want to be reached,” says the entrepreneurial focused rapstress about why the project was made.”

Washington Wizards Reveals 2021-2022 NBA City Edition Uniforms (Narrated by Pusha T)

Today the NBA reveals the 2021-2022 NBA City Edition uniforms for the NBA’s 75th Anniversary. Pusha T narrates the Washington Wizards announcement for their 2021-2022 uniforms. Take a look at the video above. What do yall think about those jerseys? We believe these jerseys are fire! Take a look at the other 29 NBA teams below.

A.Chal – “Zorro”

After hitting the road with Triller this summer, A.Chal releases a new record off his upcoming project “Far From GAZ”. A Chal gained inspiration for this record from a Latin American’s ballad.

“This song takes me back to a time of commotion when I was driving from state to state in my black truck with tinted windows. Dealing with all that pressure, I felt like Zorro. The music was inspired by Peruvian Boleros my dad would play when I was a kid,”

-A Chal

Drug Boss Alpo Martinez Killed in Harlem

According to Ashley Southall of NY Times:

Alberto (Alpo) Martinez, whose cocaine-dealing empire stretched from New York to Washington, D.C., at the height of bloody drug turf wars three decades ago, was shot and killed in Harlem early Sunday, according to a high-ranking police official.

The police said a 55-year-old man was shot several times in the chest, chin and arm while sitting in the driver’s seat of a Dodge Ram on West 147th Street near Frederick Douglass Boulevard.

The police official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to disclose the information, identified the man as Mr. Martinez, whose exploits had been immortalized in hip-hop songs and in the 2002 film “Paid in Full.”

The police responded to the scene around 3:30 a.m. after receiving 911 calls and alerts from a system that detects gunshots. The man was transported to Harlem Hospital Center and declared dead on arrival.

He was found carrying identification bearing the name Abraham Rodriguez, according to the police.

His vehicle had temporary plates from Texas, the police said. No arrests had been made as of Sunday evening.

In a prison interview with F.E.D.S. magazine quoted in The New York Times in 1999, Mr. Martinez — who confessed to 14 murders before becoming a government witness — described shooting a boyhood friend, Richard Porter, in 1990 because he suspected him of cutting in on drug deals.

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“Paid in Full” also portrayed Mr. Porter’s life and his relationship with Mr. Martinez.

An accomplice had shot Mr. Porter twice, Mr. Martinez told the editor of the publication, which circulated among inmates. “He didn’t die, so I shot him in the head,” Mr. Martinez said.

Mr. Martinez said that he and an accomplice then dumped the body on City Island in the Bronx.

Mr. Martinez was raised in New York and came to play a prominent role in the violent turf battles over dealing cocaine and crack cocaine there starting in the 1980s.

He expanded his empire to Washington, D.C., where in 1991, he was arrested and later charged with 14 counts of murder, including the murders of a D.C. drug dealer and a Brooklyn drug dealer, among a slew of other charges.

Lupe Fiasco – “Not A Costume Freestyle”

Lupe Fiasco gives us some new music on Halloween. He jumps on Jay-z ‘Hovi Baby and freestyles over the record. Fun Fact according to Just Blaze, Lupe Fiasco played the drums on Hovi Baby. Congrats to Jayz for being inducted in the Rock& Roll Hall of Frame. Good Look to Hip-Hop N More for the fun fact.

NPR’s ‘The Formula’: “How Rico Nasty And Kenny Beats Became The Loudest Duo In Rap”

Rico Nasty and Kenny Beats make one of the unlikeliest duos in rap. It started with one impromptu studio session and one primal scream.

In April 2019, Rico Nasty and producer Kenny Beats released the joint mixtape Anger Management. Concocted to sound like a temper tantrum from start to finish, it was the culmination of a nearly two-year run in which they’d effectively become the loudest, unlikeliest duo in rap.

In this week’s episode of The Formula, the first of a new season that digs into the collaboration between rappers and producers, we sit down with each of them in their respective cities — Rico at a performance space she frequents in the DMV; Kenny at his home studio in L.A. — to talk about their genre-bending discography and how it remade Rico into rap’s raging queen of scream. They lay the groundwork by recalling the making of their signature anthem, “Smack A B****,” a song recorded in their first impromptu studio session when Rico was still in the process of finding her voice in an industry brewing with frenemies and rival beefs. From there, they dissect “Sellout,” the vulnerable, penultimate track from Anger Management, an album inspired in part by psychologist Arthur Janov’s classic therapy tome, “The Primal Scream.”

The sound they achieved would become synonymous with the emerging image of Rico Nasty as a sonic rebel while simultaneously making a lane for the outcasts and weirdos who saw themselves reflected in Rico’s punk stance. Beyond Kenny’s essential beats, Rico credits him for being the kind of producer who valued her voice, figuratively and quite literally. That trust has enabled her to grow into an artist who controls her studio sessions with confidence today, even in a game where the men in power constantly feel obliged to tell the women what to do.

Together, they’re a reminder that even the wildest experimentalists rely on collaborators they trust to let it all flow.

Fetty Wap Arrested On Federal Drug Charges

From ABC7, where you can read the full story:

Rapper Fetty Wap was arrested along with five others, including a New Jersey correction officer, on federal drug charges.

He pleaded not guilty in federal court in Central Islip on Friday after his arrest at Citi Field on Thursday.

Six members of a drug distribution ring were charged with dealing heroin and fentanyl during the Rolling Loud music festival.

Anthony Cyntje, a New Jersey correction officer, Anthony Leonardi, his brother Robert Leonardi, William Junior Maxwell II, AKA Fetty Wap, Brian Sullivan, and Kavaughn Wiggins have been charged with conspiring to distribute and possess controlled substances.

Five of the defendants are also charged with using firearms in connection with drug trafficking.

The 30-year-old rapper from Paterson, New Jersey, was allegedly part of the group.

He was ordered detained pending trial.

NBA YoungBoy Released From Jail (UPDATE)

UPDATE: Check out a image showing YoungBoy post-freedom above. You can also read more on the conditions of his release here. From Rolling Stone, where you catch the full story:

After seven months behind bars, rapper YoungBoy Never Broke Again was released from jail in Louisiana Tuesday to serve pre-trial house arrest in Utah, the St. Martin Parish Sheriff’s Office confirmed to Rolling Stone.

The Baton Rouge-bred hip hop prodigy walked out of custody around 3 p.m. local time after federal prosecutors on his pending California gun case agreed to the terms of the $1.5 million bail and home detention ordered in his separate Baton Rouge gun case by a federal judge last week, multiple sources said.

“I’m really, really happy for him,” defense lawyer Drew Findling told Rolling Stone following a Tuesday hearing. “This is the right result. It’s the fair result.”

YoungBoy, whose legal name is Kentrell Gaulden, was granted the $1.5 million bail with a GPS monitor and strict conditions Friday afternoon after the rapper’s defense team presented a detailed bond proposal with witness testimony during a three-day hearing.

IDK – “Coal”

From Apple Music:

For the 2021 edition of Carols Covered—Apple Music’s collection of Christmas standards updated by contemporary artists—Maryland MC IDK submitted “Coal,” a song he’d had waiting in the stash, but hadn’t been compelled to release until now. “This song was made about three years ago,” IDK tells Apple Music. “But I always wanted to release it as a holiday record. It’s my depiction of a Black household where things may not be as perfect as they may seem in other households. It’s my reality of comparing what was taught and shown to me—through TV and all these other things—about Christmas and what my reality of Christmas was.”