SMOKE DZA – A.L.B.A.N.Y.
More music from Smoke DZA as he flexes over Dave East’s “Type of Time.”
Flashius continues to rumble with banger after banger as he drops “Kobe Clayton” and is already on a path to claim greatness.
Smoke DZA takes on Drake’s “KMT” for his latest freestyle that pays homage to The Wire with “The Barksdale Code.”
Nova Scotia’s ChanHayes recruits Ras Kass and Pharoahe Monch, along with Ghettosocks for “Ghost In The Shell.” From ChanHayes debut album Here available now.
After murdering the BET Hip Hop Awards cypher, Conway comes to give us some “More Steroids” alongside DJ Green Lantern. Alchemist, Daringer, and Statik Selektah provide production while Conway drops new joints and freestyles over classics. Stream it in its entirety now.
The dynamic duo of Anderson .Paak and Knxwledge drop off the remix to “Best One” in advance to the November 17th release of the remixes from the Yes Lawd! album.
The soulful sounds of Snoh Aalegra sounds oh so good alongside the rhyming style of Logic on Snoh’s single “Sometimes.”From Snoh’s album FEELS dropping this weekend.
Smoke DZA goes to work over the instrumental to Drake’s “4PM in Calabasas” with “65 In Providence” as he continues to drop off some goodies while on the road.
The tag team known as Knuckle Sandwich Deli get us ready for the NBA season with “Preseason (The Warm Up).”
A whole decade has gone by since the release of Blu & Exile’s Below The Heavens and the duo have decided to release a new project that is a collection of songs that were recorded during those sessions but didn’t make the final cut. “On The Radio” is one of those joints liberated before In the Beginning: Before the Heavens drops.
“This song was our attempt to make a radio song exactly stating how we feel about the radio,” Blu explains. “Our way of keeping it true and not selling out even for the album. This is one of the songs that helped me get more open with writing the rest of the album. One of Exile’s oldest beats, he pulled that from deep out the vault. I was like… ‘oh, that’s me.’”