Wu-Tang producer and DJ Mathematics saddles up a few members of the Wu and rolls out the latest offering from his album, The Answer. The project arrives in full on July 25. Bonus: U-God’s new track off his album, Keynote Speaker on July 23.
Tag: raekwon
All three respectively murder this Alchemist beat. Taken off of Prodigy’s solo set, Albert Einstein drops next Tuesday. Pre-order yours here.
Over the soothing vocals provided Melanie Fiona, Shallah serves up the first round of music from his forthcoming F.I.L.A. album. hhnm
September will mark 15 years since Fat Joe rocked alongside Big Pun, Jadakiss, Nas and Raekwon on “John Blaze”. The All-Star collabo appeared on Joe’s third album, Don Cartagena. In a conversation with Revolt, Rae talks about their chemistry and how the song came together.
These may be your usual suspects, but nonetheless, Tony Toca gathers these 4 MCs for his Piecemaker 3: The Return Of The 50 MCs on July 9. Produced by himself and Beatnuts’ Psycho Les. Cop the track here.
DJ Kay Slay enlists the services of a few good men for the latest track off his upcoming mixtape, The Last Champion. dsom
Fall is more than a few months away, but Inspectah Deck, Rae, RZA and U-God plan to kill it on this unreleased cut produced by Frank Dukes. Cop the audio here. A Better Tomorrow coming soon.
We’re wondering what the Chef is cooking up. kodaklens
Like it or not, Montana makes himself welcome and brings the Chef and Ne-Yo along. Diddy’s shit talk included. Off French Montana’s debut Excuse My French dropping May 21. Pre-order yours today. flex
While David Berkowitz sits behind bars, Raekwon delivers some heat over Frank D and RoadsArt’s soul clap.
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.