ROYCE DA 5’9″ – DEAD PRESIDENT HEADS
Royce Da 5’9″ drops yet another banger in the form of the Streetrunner produced “Dead President Heads.” But this won’t show up on Layers, it will be a part of another EP titled Trust The Shooter.
Royce Da 5’9″ drops yet another banger in the form of the Streetrunner produced “Dead President Heads.” But this won’t show up on Layers, it will be a part of another EP titled Trust The Shooter.
Reebok Classic partnered with Brighter Sounds and the Wonder Inn to host a Hip Hop Workshop for 40 young musicians in Manchester, UK. The day quickly took an unexpected turn when Kendrick Lamar surprised the session. Kendrick Lamar and the musicians gathered and an impromptu cypher broke out.
Grand Puba touches on issues ranging from racial tensions to celebrity scandal on the lead single from his forthcoming album Black To The Future.
Royce Da 5’9″ sat down with WatchLoud to discuss his relationship with Sean Price, how they were fans of one another and that time they discussed a Random Axe vs. Slaughterhouse battle.
In the video for “Tabernacle,” the son of Royce Da 5’9″ plays a young Nickle for the introspective narrative about one fateful night where his life changed.
DJ PREMIER–LIVE FROM HEADQCOURTERZ RADIO SHOW FOR MARCH 11th, 2016
1. DirtyDiggs feat. Styliztik Jones & Killer Ben “Hydroplane” (prod. by DirtyDiggs)
Joell Ortiz tells you about the not-so-glamorous other side of the stripper’s life in the video for “Precious.”
Everybody Luv Black returns with a new set of visuals titled “What Goes Around” (Produced by Gemcrates).
Driven by a need for freshest salmon, most grass-fed lamb, and legal weed, Action makes a pit-stop in the Pacific Northwest enroute to a concert in Vancouver.
Joell Ortiz sat down with 2DopeBoyz for an interview to promote his new album “That’s Hip Hop” (which drops on March 15 and you can order here) and ended up discussing why he rhymes, if young rappers need to know their hip hop history and gives us an update on the new Slaughterhouse album.
Fourteen years [after you debuted with Kool G Rap], you’re still here with a new album that has a simple title.
I chose the title because it’s a self-explanatory project. I always hear people thanking me for continuing to do “real hip hop.” Hip hop is one thing and you have this other avenue with what I feel is trap music meets hip hop. I personally don’t feel like the divide is between the music, the divide is trying to figure out how to rename this genre of what kids are doing now. Even in rock you have Heavy Metal and Soft Rock, but it’s still all rock music. The kids that are doing these records… it is hip hop but it’s not the same category. And we have to figure out a way to name this new genre. When I get into something, I go into it representing that golden age when you had to be hard, rap hard and rip something apart. You had to make someone’s face scrunch up. When you heard the beat you had to frown. That’s what I stand for.
Read the rest here.