
Danny Brown keeps the twerkers on their feet hands with his rump shaking tune. No word on where this will live, but his album Old is coming in October.
Danny Brown keeps the twerkers on their feet hands with his rump shaking tune. No word on where this will live, but his album Old is coming in October.
Ransom’s been pretty hot on the Internet lately. Last Thursday, the Showoff Radio crew invited him to the show and he decided to drop a few bars before his departure.
Shottas give love too. So with an appearance with 2 Chainz, Sean Kingston puts his heart on his sleeve for his newest release. Back 2 Life drops September 10.
New shit! DJ Clue is back with exclusives and brings along a few familiar faces for a new track produced by The Turn Up Team. TGIF!
The gloves are off as the self-proclaim king of NY breaks his alliance with Kendrick for a shot at New York supremacy. Oh yeah, Big Sean, Drake and Kanye can get it too.
You know what they say: Mo money, mo problems. But with Mike Will Made It on the beat, Juve and Spitta Andretti have no qualms watching the money pile up.
The Mad Rapper wants some too. And he’s back to his antics by adding a few jabs at a few of Kendrick’s responders including Joell, B.o.B., Fred The Godson, Ransom, and Cassidy as well.
Grafh kicks off day three of the Kendrick responses with an attempt on keeping NY’s crown within the boroughs. Below, Bronx’s Mysonne replies with “Uncontrollable”.
We haven’t seen ‘Bis much since he brought his notepad and sling to his rap battle, but he emerges back on to the scene with this audio off his Prelude To The 2 Coming mixtape.
Ransom joins the party and laces Big Sean’s instrumental for his Kendrick response. Looks like it’s going to be awhile before this dies down.
With "Which One," Drake and Central Cee bridge the Atlantic through their shared affinity for Caribbean-influenced sonics, cementing UK drill's arrival in mainstream hip-hop's upper echelon. This collaboration isn't just another checkbox on Drake's endless list of co-signs—it represents the continued global evolution of Black music dialects, with Central Cee's gritty London cadence providing the perfect counterbalance to Drake's melodic versatility. The track's immediate chart success proves that the UK-Toronto pipeline remains one of hip-hop's most fruitful cross-cultural exchanges.