12/22/24

Blaq Kush - There's Always Hope Vol.5


When a need for mind-numbing television and love of rap collide, Rhythm & Flow offers a new appreciation for memorable punchlines, especially those that arrive early. Blaq Kush answers the call with "The smoke in the room got it looking like the first level on Silent Hill." And levels there are. To begin, Silent Hill puts the gamer in the role of a father searching for his vanished daughter. The end is what you make it. With There's Always Hope volumes, we track the cover girl's expressions from shock through derangement to trauma and then watch (blankly?) as each vanishes, leaving her face as featureless as the projects themselves. You'll wish you hadn't learned where she's from. I never beat Silent Hill. Instead, I unlocked a glitch that made any kind of resolution, however disappointing, impossible. I'm writing this off the first 14 seconds of Vol.5's first song. It's also a weed rap. 

12/21/24

5 favorite lines from Skeleton Key


1. "I run NYC to burn calories."
2. "Vulgar like a Russian soldier but much colder."
3. "I'm a wolf. I'm aloof. I'm not cool despite what you might've assumed."
4. "These whores made voodoo dolls out the hairs of my pubis fallen from my two balls."
5. "How you get to look devilish but angelic / With my ancestors in heaven when I made man in my image / But all n*ggas ain't handsome just to be fair to the women / Up here where the air is thinner ain't no weird n*ggas or square bitches here to irritate my spirit / I'm busy creating pyramids." 

12/20/24

Blu Warta - Original Rugged Authentic


What's it called when you're so of something that it's as much a part of you as you are of it? As far I can tell, that was Blu Warta's relationship with hip-hop. This mixtape's title speaks to that. Coopting commercial jingles and tags was a fundamental component of the first raps, even pre-dating the phrase hip-hop. Before the orders come the advertisements. In the '80s, nobody beat the Biz. In the '90s, the Indelible MCs got their name off a marker. And in the '00s, Blu Warta lifted the title for this Smooth Denali-hosted mixtape from the only footwear arguably more synonymous with hip-hop than Adidas shell toes and Clarks Wallabees. Sadly, Warta passed away in 2005. Twenty years on, there are a number of tributes floating around. What there isn't is anything like a complete discography. So, clocking in at over 40 minutes, Original Rugged Authentic is the most comprehensive review of Blu Warta's music currently available. No false advertising, it is as described.

 

12/13/24

Skyzoo - "Courtesy Call" ft. Chuck D

If I can be honest with you, this post is as much an excuse to get Skyzoo on the site as it is anything else. At this point, I'm very comfortable saying he's one of the most underappreciated rappers of our generation. I remember once reading about Cage that he found himself considered too thugged out for indy rap and too intelligent for the mainstream. If Skyzoo is in a similar position, he's taken the opportunity to ghostwrite for majors while moonlighting as the one of the best rappers alive. (Hear: In Celebration of Us, All the Brilliant Things, The Mind of a Saint, and now Keep Me Company.) It's too bad the only other site I want to write for doesn't want to publish a Skyzoo interview. (Direct all hate mail here.)

12/10/24

516reapa - The New Prodigy


The future of music has arrived. If rap is at its best unfiltered human expression, then here it is in distillate. Have you ever seen a rapper take over a cipher without lyrics? I don't mean to say that they have wack rhymes. I mean that they may not be saying words at all. 516reapa brings that energy to every song. He also may be rapping in another language occasionally. I'm not really sure, and for that matter, I'm not really sure if it matters. For the past month or so, he was dropping music at the breakneck pace of about an album a day. That suddenly stopped, he's taken down much of his recent material, and there's still a ton! Again, I'm not sure any of this matters. For example, all that remains of recent standout TBS•••BLACKPOWERS are the following words: 
"*a righteous term for the keys of mastering neurodivergence, particularly one’s of an introverted black man in America

one of my most precious projects is yours to keep forever :) to stand free in your brain is black power! blackpowers are soul tactics to activate yourself. we black people struggle with self-harnessing, so i made black powers to give you a grip. 🖤

ci §uuf 10 lockpick!s, 10 powers videlicet;
maraboutage - power of possession
the orisha’s chant - power of the gods
lowersslf- power of one’s lower self
sight screaming - power of the eye
redmxxn - power of accession
reload!!! - power of primal rage
777made - power of the angels
refusetobeaslave - power of assertion
shikifujin - power of the reaper's cradle
chosen - power of acceptance

special thanks to dt, prodigy and zzakkatt you guys rock"

How fucking dope is that? So dope that when 516reapa tags his music "Afrofuturism" he may just succeed in taking the term back from the slough of ubiquity and in so doing, presently forge new tomorrows from a repaired past. And that's not even the half of it. Fact is, the closer you listen, the clearer it becomes that he's not just mumbling. Those are indeed words. If you ever imagined rap couldn't possibly get more abrasively dialectal than it is now, reimagine. It's a new day and from Hempstead, NY, rises The New Prodigy.


***12/24/24 EDIT: It's back!***

12/8/24

Ray Robinson - Black Suit

Do you like this? "What do you mean? Do you?" I mean, of course I do. I wouldn't do it otherwise, but there is something to be said for a second set of ears, or in this case, eyes and ears and maybe more than two. Relevant trivia from the Spiderman Wiki: the black suit started as a fan idea. Marvel bought it for cheap. Fans hated it, so Marvel decided to can it, but then fans came around to it, so Marvel kept it around for longer—or something to that effect. The point is most people don't really know what they like aside from the obvious. Then there are people who know all too well. I'm thinking of Henry Rollins living with a massive archive of vinyl and paper records, all meticulously sorted and stored in an acid-free environment, all alone. I figure the trick is landing somewhere in the middle, like creating the Long Island Hip Hop Wiki so that such a thing does exist, but not taking the time to actually build the thing by oneself. After all, I've already compiled the records. You're looking at them. Now hear this.