With a full head of hair and a whole gang of guests, Kiss returns with his Gangsta Grillz mixtape, hosted by DJ Drama. Tracklist and download link after the jump. Album coming soon.
Tag: jadakiss
One of the numerous events in NYC last night was Jada’s listening session for his next mixtape. DJ Booth provides a recap of the session including a chat with Kiss himself. A lot of dope tracks on the mixtape. Consignment drops tomorrow. Check Nigel D’s interview after the jump.
Looks like Kiss got more features than a Khaled project. Premiered this morning on Sway In The Morning, Jada rounds up Fab and Banks. Mixtape drops April 27. Tracklist after the jump. UPDATE: CDQ
Jadakiss is dropping his new mixtape this Friday. But today, he forks over a new cut featuring Wale and Styles P. Considering the line-up, this should’ve resonated more. On another note, is French Montana hip-hop’s new hook man?
Time to burn off some calories. For Chinx’s remix, he, Montana and Kiss
Pap’s album may never see the light of day. But for one of his recent tracks, he adds D-Block and the game’s most requested feature into the mix. flex
Life is a gamble, and so is the cover art for Jada’s upcoming mixtape. Hosted by Drama, Kiss will be taking on that Southern sound. Hopefully, the outcome is good. We’ll see on April 27. Previously: Jada Calls YN On EVR
Kiss and Styles normally trade bars. But in the clip above, they each go back-and-forth on which
Kiss checked in with YN’s Keep It Thoro show last night to discuss his business relationship with Michael Jordan, upcoming Consignment mixtape, his new hairdo and working with DJ Khaled and Kanye West. Peep playlist and whole show here.
Kanye seems to be in every NY studio session that’s been happening this week, and now we get a pic of he and Jada in the lab last night. Notice anything different about Kiss? steve-o
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.