Pablo and Trap-A-Holics drop a “Designer Drugz Edition” mixtape. The Atlanta rapper has found himself rising fast to the top of the Trap Scene.
Shy Glizzy – Funeral (Remix) Ft. Jeezy
Shy Glizzy drops the Jeezy-assisted remix for “Funeral.” You can buy the song on iTunes.
King Louie – Pray For Em
Taken from urban apparel store Exclusive773’s new mixtape, which features plenty more new music from Chicago.
DJ Whoo Kid Feat. Meek Mill & Kur – Never Before
DJ Whoo Kid brings together current king of Philly Meek Mill with his up-and-coming peer Kur for the hard-hitting track ‘Never Before’.
Jackie Chain & ST 2 Lettaz – Doobie Brothaz (Mixtape)
Alabama artists Jackie Chain & ST 2 Lettaz come together for a new mixtape titled Doobie Brothaz, which can be streamed or downloaded below.
Kur – How It Never Was (Mixtape)
Kur is like Meek Mill on steroids. The Philadelphia rapper’s new mixtape How It Never Was, might position him as Meek’s protege. He raps faster (“Energy,” Never Before), better (“Up”) and has more diverse subject matter (“Doggie Dog,” “Project Nights”). Kur can paint a picture of life in the “trenches” of Philadelphia’s neighborhoods or do lyrical acrobatics and amazing speeds. I do wish he rapped less about girls and clothes and more about getting his mother out of the hood. How It Never Was will probably propel Kur into the ears of many listeners nation-wide, thanks to help from Meek Mill and company. But, will anything be better than “When I Lost It”? That song is easily my pick for best rap song of 2015.
Lil Bibby Drops Three New Songs
Below, Chicago’s Lil’ Bibby blesses his fans with three new tracks: ‘Gambino Freestyle’, ‘F.I.L.W.T.P. and the Lil’ Herb-assisted ‘Better Dayz’.
Lil Uzi Vert Feat. Lil Durk – Pressure
Lil Uzi Vert & Lil Durk address what’s going on in Baltimore (R.I.P. Freedie Gray) in addition to what’s happening in their own neighborhoods. Produced by DJ L.
Styles P – ‘Ghost Rivers To The Riches’ (Feat. Chris Rivers) & ‘Give Me Your Ghost’
Two new tracks from the Ghost (one featuring Chris Rivers). New York hasn’t been playing fair with the freestyles lately.
Oochie – Deanwood (Video)
Oochie dedicates on to the neighborhood with “Deanwood. I really like this new flow…Shot by FoolwiththeCamera.
OC Hermo – OC Shxt (Video)
OC cranks on “OC Shit,” shot by FoolwiththeCamera. This track reminds me of some old New Orleans rap.
Jadakiss & Styles P – Block Work
The LOX’s Jadakiss and Styles P blessed your Friday morning with a new freestyle over Cam’ron and Prodigy’s ‘Losin’ Weight’.
Tootie Ro – Really Out (The Mixtape)
Wanna know what its’ really like in Baltimore right now? Check in with our homie Tootie Ro as he drops his new mixtape, Really Out. The project is named after his record label and has a bunch of great drug raps, boastful trap tales and sad stories about life up in Bmore. Features and beats from Turk Ro, Zaytoven, Nito, Cino Ro, Sly Drexler, etc.
TopDolla Sweizy – Score Remix (Video)
Sweizy goes in over Glizzy’s “Score.” This video was shot in the studio by YSE.
Rambo Da G – The Intro (No Excuses)
Rambo drops the grind-hard introduction to his new mixtape No Excuses.
BeatKing Feat. Rico Love, Kirko Bangz & Ken Randle – Keisha (Remix)
Houston club DJ BeatKing drops a new tune of his own: the remix to his somewhat-laid-back ‘Keisha’, which now features Rico Love, Kirko Bangz and Ken Randle.
Trinidad James – Palm Trees
Check out the below Trinidad James single (our second of the day), the Cali-inspired ‘Palm Trees’. Produced by Cavie and available on iTunes.
Rico Love Feat. Usher & Wiz Khalifa – Somebody Else (Remix)
Rico Love’s new album Turn The Lights On drops May 19th.
ALBUM STREAM: Oddisee – The Good Fight
Oddisee’s latest project The Good Fight is out now via Bandcamp and available for stream (below). We’ve also included its press release:
Imbued with love, honesty, and selflessness, The Good Fight is virtuosic in its musicality, direct in its language, and infinitely relatable.
In a landscape overrun with abstract indulgence and shallow trend-chasers, the Prince George’s County, Maryland artist has created a record that reminds you that it’s music before it’s hip-hop.
For Oddisee, The Good Fight is about living fully as a musician without succumbing to the traps of hedonism, avarice, and materialism. It’s music that yields an intangible feeling: the sacral sound of an organ whine, brass horns, or a cymbal crash. It’s a meditation on our capacity to love and the bonds binding us together. It’s our ambition and greed warring with our sense of propriety – a list of paradoxes we all face when living and striving.
Oddisee’s production simmers in its own orchestral gumbo. You sense he’s really a jazzman in different form, inhabiting the spirit of Roy Ayers and other past greats. The Fader’s compared him to a musical MC Escher, calling hailing his “grandiose and symphonic sound” and “relevant relatable messages.” Pitchfork praised his “eclectic soulful boom-bap.”
The Good Fight acknowledges the stacked odds, but refuses to submit.
It’s both universal and personal. The child of a Sudanese immigrant highlights the rigors of his own upbringing: his pregnant mother working the register until she was about to burst, his pops’ shuttered diner that couldn’t survive Reaganomics—the one that Oddisee drives past every time he returns home, just to remind him how quickly the world can turn bad.
It’s these minor details that add into something major. It’s testament to the indelible nature of art: when you can turn what you love into something that lasts.
Baraq & Peewee Longway – Struggle (Prod. by MPC Cartel)
DC’s Baraq links with ATL’s Peewee Longway for a strong new track called “Struggle.” MPC Cartel on the beat.