Daily Discussion Thread 11/30/2018 - HipHop |
- Daily Discussion Thread 11/30/2018
- New Music Friday: November 30th, 2018
- [FRESH] EMINEM - KICK OFF FREESTYLE
- [FRESH VIDEO] Travis Scott - YOSEMITE
- J.I.D - DiCaprio 2 ALBUM REVIEW
- [FRESH VIDEO] A$AP ROCKY - GUNZ N BUTTER
- [First Impressions] Earl Sweatshirt - Some Rap Songs
- Jay Z goes to Twitter to clear up any rumors that he and Kanye are feuding
- [FIRST IMPRESSIONS] Ski Mask The Slump God - Stokeley
- A Round Up of Some Less Talked About 2018 Hip Hop Projects
- ASAP Bari Arrested on Felony Drug Charges
- Travis Scott is coming to speak at Harvard this Sunday
- Racist old tweet from Fat Nick surfaces, told girl to "go climb back up to the mountains of colombia you facking dirty monkey"
- [FRESH] Tabby - SEQUEL! (Official Music Video)
- [FRESH] Earl Sweatshirt - Azucar (Prod. by Sage Elsesser)
- 50 Cent says he wouldn't mind if his estranged son 'got hit by a bus'
- [First Impressions] Meek Mill - Championships
- Meek Mill is currently doing a Twitter AMA
- Ice Cube announces tracklist for upcoming project
- [FRESH ALBUM] Victor Oladipo - V.O.
- Ski Mask's Crew, 'Members Only', Trunks & Ski Sound Off On Each Other On Live After Ski Took A Member Off Of Slump God's Debut Album!
- [FIRST IMPRESSIONS] Meek Mill – Championships
Daily Discussion Thread 11/30/2018 Posted: 30 Nov 2018 08:27 AM PST Welcome to the /r/hiphopheads daily discussion thread! This thread is for:
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New Music Friday: November 30th, 2018 Posted: 30 Nov 2018 09:28 AM PST AlbumsJID - Dicaprio 2 6ix9ine - DUMMY BOY Meek Mill - Champions Earl Sweatshirt - Some Rap Songs Ski Mask The Slump God - STOKELEY Lil Baby - Street Gossip Skizzy Mars x Prelow - I Can't Take Me Anywhere Smoke Dawg - Struggle Before Glory Peewee Longway - State Of The Art Daboii - Neva Lookin Back Larry June - Very Peaceful Tommy Cash - ¥€$ Victor Oladipo - V.O. Problem - S2 Illa J - John Yancey Snövit - DEMON EPsBlack Thought & Salaam Remi - Streams of Thought Vol. 2 Big K.R.I.T. - Double Down KAYTRANADA - NOTHIN LIKE U / CHANCES The Alchemist - BREAD EP KEY & Kenny Beats - 777 Deluxe SinglesMac Miller - Spotify Singles (Dunno, Nothing From Nothing) Chance the Rapper - The Man Who Has Everything/My Own Thing (feat. Joey Purp) Travis Scott - SICKO MODE (Skrillex Remix) Saba - Excited Jay Rock - Shit Real (Feat. Tee Grizzley) Gesaffelstein - Reset Bladee - I Chose to Be This Way (prod. 16yrold & Lil Skys) (maybe not on streaming) Offset - Red Room A$AP Ant - Testarossa ft. Hoodrich Pablo & Offset (prod. Murda Beatz x Cassius Jay) (maybe not on streaming) Tory Lanez - Talk To Me (Remix) [Feat. Lil Wayne, Rich The Kid & DJ Stevie J] Blood Orange & Yves Tumor - Smoke [feat. Ian Isaiah] (Remix) Gucci Mane - BiPolar (Feat. Quavo) Stwo - You, World, or Myself (feat. Roy Woods) Gunna - My Slime (feat Billionaire Burke) Armani White - Onederful LoosieMysonne - Joyner Lucas Diss - " Litty/ zeze " Freestyle MIKE - 2. grabba LUCKI - WHO YOU REALLY KIDDING? Ras Kass - Smoke Break (Joyner Lucas Diss) Stormzy - Line Lil Skies - Opps Want Me Dead KOTA The Friend - Camp Hilltop Hoods - Leave Me Lonely [link] [comments] |
[FRESH] EMINEM - KICK OFF FREESTYLE Posted: 30 Nov 2018 06:27 PM PST |
[FRESH VIDEO] Travis Scott - YOSEMITE Posted: 30 Nov 2018 12:03 PM PST |
J.I.D - DiCaprio 2 ALBUM REVIEW Posted: 30 Nov 2018 07:26 PM PST |
[FRESH VIDEO] A$AP ROCKY - GUNZ N BUTTER Posted: 30 Nov 2018 09:02 AM PST |
[First Impressions] Earl Sweatshirt - Some Rap Songs Posted: 30 Nov 2018 05:21 PM PST
Thoughts? Favorite songs? Personally, Mint is the standout for me. I really like the cohesiveness of this album. [link] [comments] |
Jay Z goes to Twitter to clear up any rumors that he and Kanye are feuding Posted: 30 Nov 2018 10:03 AM PST This is in reference to his "red hat" line on the Meek album https://twitter.com/s_c_/status/1068565544008384512?s=21 Update: Kanye West: "Throne 2 🤷🏿♂️" Juicy J Meek album is super 🔥🔥🔥! You killed that verse 🔥🔥🔥 when y'all droppin that watch the throne 2? [link] [comments] |
[FIRST IMPRESSIONS] Ski Mask The Slump God - Stokeley Posted: 30 Nov 2018 05:57 PM PST |
A Round Up of Some Less Talked About 2018 Hip Hop Projects Posted: 30 Nov 2018 06:58 AM PST This is a round up of 25 lesser known hip hop/hip hop adjacent projects from 2018 that I think are most worthy of highlighting, as well as a host of other projects that deserve recognition but didn't quite manage to rank among my favourites, similar to this post I made in 2016. I realise that "lesser known" is a broad and murky designation, with everybody thinking their favourite rapper is "slept on" or "criminally underrated" (ahem, Isaiah Rashad, JID, Denzel Curry...). So I've tried to skirt around that by using an objective qualifier - I've only included projects whose initial release (if it was posted at all) received fewer than 100 upvotes here, at the time of my writing this. So that excludes a lot of great artists that still very much fall under the underground label - Busdriver, Milo, Ka, Roc Marciano, Armand Hammer... - but I think it does a good job of keeping the selections/discussion fresh, and avoiding collective masturbation over the same few "approved" underground projects. Furthermore, I've made sure only to include one project per artist, for a lot of the same reasons. Another important note - I've tried to include a bit of variety, so in the case of 2 albums where I don't really have a preference I've usually included the one that I think adds a bit more of a new dimension to the list. The decrease from 50 to 25 is partly because of my laziness, partly because of the new restrictions, and partly because I wanted to feel comfortable writing about/recommending everything here. If possible, I've included a Bandcamp link to each of the projects - it's a great platform that facilitates music discovery and helps create an audience for smaller artists, and in my opinion gives artists the most control over their music and how it's presented. It's possible to stream everything I've linked for free, without even having to sign up (though that's also free), and if you're purchasing this is the best way to give the artist the greatest share of the profits. Otherwise, everything here should be available on the normal streaming services or at least soundcloud/youtube, so you know, use your search bar like a semi-capable human being. For each project, I've included one track that I think is the best/best representation. And finally - there is no order whatsoever to the list. ANKHLEJOHN - KNOWLEDGE ANKHLEJOHN has been one of 2018's breakout stars, star of course meaning small cult following and incompatible with any mainstream recognition. Project after project of some of the grimiest hip hop there is, sounding like a the natural successor to people like Mobb Deep and Onyx while still pushing himself forward and avoiding revivalist cliches. But out of all that output, where he's jumped from car theft to Van Gogh, nothing has stuck with me as much as KNOWLEDGE. Drawing from 5 Percenter and Nation of Islam ideas, it's a dense 15 minute onslaught that never lets up. Blackfist - Strapped 4 Survival Blackfist is a duo out of LA consisting of VIK and YUNGMORPHEUS, both of whom rap and produce, and who sacrifice zero creative control, by releasing music on their own label "RAWSH_T". In a lot of ways, Strapped 4 Survival can be seen as the embodiment of "lofi hip hop", while still moving the scene forward in a meaningful way. This album is hazy, gritty, and sounds like a weird cross between early 90s Memphis hip hop and a Madlib beat tape, with effortlessly political lyrics. It works as a slow burn stoner tape, something nostalgic, and a potent discussion of some important ideas, but what's most impressive is how all of this is done in such a casual, fluid way. lojii exploded onto my radar last year with DUE RENT, his collaboration with producer Swarvy. It sounded like an incredible merging of Ka and Knxwledge, just as much grit running through it as there was off kilter alt. hip hop. So considering lofeye shares almost no sonic similarity with that album, my initial reaction was one of disappointment. Everything about this is colder, harsher, more calculated, even uglier... that laid back working class quality is nearly all gone. But fortunately, it's been replaced with some of the sharpest, cleverest, and most efficient lyricism of the year. lojii has gone from a great rapper, to one of the best alive - he chronicles street life and social issues, always full of an incredible wit. The sparser production plays into the desolate world he's created, and while this will never be as 'fun' a listen as DUE RENT, it's a much more ambitious creation. Cavalier is from Brooklyn, resides and records in New Orleans, and is integrated with Detroit's experimental hip hop scene, and all that culminates in the wise nomad-like figure at the centre of Private Stock. Cavalier ruminates on race, wealth, police brutality, and spirituality, accompanied by Iman Omari's lush, "full" sounding production. The territory spans from the dark to the nostalgic to the joyous, and throughout Cavalier comes across measured and in control of everything around him. At surface level it's a pleasant, relaxing listen, but with a little more unpacking you encounter one of the most compelling, intelligent MCs around. Watch Me (feat. Quelle Chris & Iman Omari) The latest project from Ishmael Butler (Digable Planets, Shabazz Palaces, Cherrywine) - this time joined by Seattle music veteran Erik Blood, sees yet another evolution from an artist whose career has been characterised by adventure and unpredictability. This is perhaps the lushest and most freeform Butler's music has ever been, with a lot of the production here having more in common with shoegaze or dream pop than with what you'd expect on a hip hop album. The album is in equal parts abstract, even futuristic, and a commentary on current events. It's relaxing and 'pretty', but there's always a sinister undertone running through the album. Most of all, it's another case for Ishmael Butler being one of the best musicians ever to grace hip hop. Cities Aviv - "Raised For A Better View" Cities Aviv has been a less picked up on but nevertheless important part of "internet rap" during the current decade, and has shown over multiple albums his ability to experiment tastefully and intelligently, making forward thinking music that doesn't rely on being abrasive or deliberately inaccessible. After being mostly inactive since 2015's Your Discretion is Trust, he returns with what is possibly his finest achievement yet. The music here is a lot sparser, less busy than his previous work, and that leads to something a lot subtler, that rewards repeated listens. A good deal of the album is instrumental, and when he chooses to add vocals, they carry extra weight, each of his words sounding purposeful and powerful, the depth of his voice adding a kind of ominous quality to everything. It's not an album that goes out of its way to assert itself and make a spectacle, it fades in and fades out and once you're through it you're compelled to keep diving in. Kenny Segal - happy little trees Kenny Segal has been a go-to producer in art rap circles for a while now, and through his work with guys like Armand Hammer, Open Mike Eagle, Busdriver, Milo etc, as well as through a vast collection of beat tapes, he's cemented himself as one of the most talented beatmakers out there. But in spite of that, this is his first 'real album', the first time that he's taken his ability and directed it into one unified, ambitious piece of music. Lots of instrumental projects drop every year. Some good, some bad, most fairly pleasant without really asserting themselves. But Kenny Segal managed to make a cohesive, consistent 'instrumental album', that exists in its own right and not as hypothetical background to someone else's stories. Sterling Hayes is an oft-neglected part of the Savemoney collective, who hasn't yet managed to cement himself at the forefront of the burgeoning Chicago hip hop scene of the last few years. But during that time, he's occupied a space distinct from his peers - foregoing the playfulness, optimism, the mellower stuff. Instead, his music is frantic, gritty, and occasionally even ugly. He touches on fairly common topics in modern hip hop - mental health, addiction - but does it in a very real, well rounded way. It's not the mindless wallowing of emo rap, it's not an inspiring tale of overcoming struggle, and it's not even some cerebral examination of these issues. It's a visceral unrestrained portrait of desperation that never loses its grounding or realism. Vocals are yelped out, production is bass heavy with hints of soul, the tempo is constantly changing, and nothing is held back - overall an excellent album with a unique identity running through it. Mckinley Dixon - The Importance Of Self Belief This is the kind of title I might initially dismiss as trite and corny, too close to self help book territory. But Mckinley Dixon has succeeded in creating a consistently engaging, genuinely moving album, which excels in the area where so many rappers struggle - making use of unique song structures that shirk the played out 'verse chorus verse chorus' template that runs through so much hip hop. Certain tracks here feature no rapping at all - there are instrumentals, poems, prayers.... And most importantly, getting through this album feels like undergoing progression - Dixon builds towards a optimistic conclusion rather than obnoxiously throwing it in your face from track one (____ The Rapper). He's backed by a live band who merge hip hop with neighbouring Black genres like jazz and soul, and throughout he acts more as a guide amplifying the music than as its main point of focus. It's like a modernised, expanded version of what Native Tongues were doing in the late 80s/early 90s, without every sounding tired or unoriginal. In recent years underground hip hop has been infested by guys in their teens/early 20s making pseudo-poetry out of their bedrooms, where poor mixing is supposed to be some grand artistic statement. With that in mind, it would be easy to dismiss Medhane at first glance. But he distances himself from the crowd with bolder production choices, and most importantly lyricism that goes into more abstract places, as well as an approach that foregoes self-aggrandisement, and is outward-focused enough to make him acutely aware of his place amongst things. He's not a tortured soul, but he's not lacking vulnerability either. The end result is very much 'everyday' hip hop, characterised by its balance and measured grasp of the issues that spring up around us, It seems a lot of the discourse this year has been around the disconnect between overly long albums, and short 20 minute projects meant not to have any frill (despite, you know, EPs being around forever). Given that, it's always refreshing to hear an album that's not aimlessly filled to the brim, but is instead intentionally sprawling, and that's exactly what ensley does. 25 tracks, all of which bleed into each other without any set up or transitions, most representing vastly different ideas both musically and lyrically, but it all comes together into this beautifully eclectic creation. Political, introspective, soulful, witty, always charismatic... Pink Siifu has already accrued in an impossibly vast and difficult to track down discography (including a great punk EP from earlier this year, fuck demo), but this is him at his most complete and confident, and it really pays off into a compelling piece of music. pray everyday (feat. awhlee & liv.e) Jeremiah Jae, although originally from Chicago (he's the son of Miles Davis collaborator Robert Irving), has been one of the anchors of the LA experimental hip hop/beat scene of the last decade, working closely with people like Jonwayne, Zeroh, Flying Lotus, Koreatown Oddity, Mndsgn... But that scene has lost some of its strength and cohesion in the last couple years, and during that time it seems Jae's music has taken a more casual, even wayward direction. Still putting out good stuff, but nothing defining came after 2015's collaboration with L'Orange. Fortunately that looks to have changed with DAFFI, which excluding the excellent Raw Money Raps might be his most focused and consistent solo work yet, and it's also the most vulnerable and directly introspective he's ever been. The production, all done by Jae himself, hops between griminess and making your head nod, desolation and majesty. Jerry Quickley - (american) FOOL Jerry Quickley might be the most interesting person on this list - journalist, filmmaker, and poet, who's spent a lot of time working in Iraq as a war correspondent. And perhaps more importantly, this album's creation was preceded by 3 suicides of those close to him, all within the space of 3 months. That background manifests in one of the strangest, most unsettling, yet consistently compelling albums of the year. Quickley's urgent spoken word is soundtracked by underground icon Busdriver, whose glitchy production is eerily matched to the eccentric, near disturbing atmosphere. Bambu - Exrcising A Demon | Article I | A Few Left Compared to most people here, Bambu is a grizzled veteran. A Filipino who grew up in Los Angeles, he's been putting out intelligent, overtly political music for 15 years now, dealing not just with social issues within the US but with broader problems surrounding things like colonialism, authority, child labour, and the immigrant experience. On Exrcising A Demon, he grapples with LA gang culture, particularly the way it relates to immigrants. Obviously gang culture is not a novel topic in hip hop, and even more nuanced portraits are fairly common. But I've never encountered an album which tackles the subject with such detail and grounding, that gives a thorough examination of the tragedies involved and the social factors responsible for this climate. A significant portion of the album involves real people simply telling their stories, and through that as well as Bambu relating his own experiences in rap form, the content is consistently gripping. Over the last few years Coops has established himself at the forefront of the English jazz rap scene, with his projects God Complex and Lost Soul especially acting as evidence of his measured, introspective style. But since then he's taken a bit of a dip, and his other 2018 project, No Brainer sounds like someone who got fed up with a lack of commercial appeal turning to the lowest common denominator. But only a few months later, he's put out his most ambitious, developed work yet. The concept here is fairly easy to grasp - Coops takes you through one man's life, from birth to death and touching everything in between. It's nothing revolutionary - Undun among others - but it takes a lot of talent to dance with this ambition at all, let alone at the level Coops does. The production is reminiscent of a smoky room, Coops sounds angry and resigned at times here - it's a very bleak album, and that lack of melodrama makes his message all the more powerful. navy blue is another product of the blossoming underground scene populated by people like MIKE, Medhane, sixpress among others, and recently gained some traction after guesting on Earl Sweatshirt's "The Mint". Generally speaking, it's easy to say that if you're into that sound you'll enjoy navy blue's stuff. But what distinguishes him is the heart his music carries, he's not just impressive lyrically, his content comes across as genuinely endearing. All of that is on full display throughout yvan wen, which even at 10 minutes manages to feel like a substantial, fully formed piece of music. Low Leaf has always been on the peripheries of hip hop - working with people like Jonwayne and Zeroh - and this EP might be her hypnotic, lush sound at its most refined, equal parts live instrumentation and electronics. In a relatively short time, PRiMiTiVA completely envelopes you. There's this grandiose orchestral sound throughout the EP, every sound is clear, the production is full of subtle adjustments here and there, and Low Leaf's voice has an otherworldly quality. One of the most 'beautiful' releases of the year. Lorde Fredd33 - NORF: The Legend of Hotboy Ronald In many ways, Lorde Fredd33 sounds like hip hop's future - a weird melding of the art rap world and mainstream sensibilities, mixing off kilter trap beats with off the wall flows and esoteric lyricism, jumping from sheer ridiculousness to something poignant at a moment's notice. If I had to pick the most well rounded, versatile album of the year, I'd probably go with this one - it's aggressive, funny, relaxing, insightful, jazzy... His delivery sounds like an evolution of people like Pharoahe Monch and Busdriver (with whom he works) - relentless, unpredictable, hitting you from all angles. There really isn't anything this album doesn't accomplish. Another excellent addition to the vast Mello Music Group catalogue, Detroit's Illingsworth exists in the same space as people like Quelle Chris, Open Mike Eagle and Denmark Vessey (the latter 2 guesting here) - getting through grave messages about mental health in a deceptively lighthearted way. Most of the album is made up of off kilter alternative hip hop instrumentals, with vocals coming from Illingsworth and the guests breaking through every now and then to anchor the project down. That loose structure allows him to explore things like self esteem and insecurity with adulthood in a way that never weighs down on you. It's always exciting when an album can succeed wholeheartedly on more than one level, and that's exactly what You're No Fun does. This is the 3rd of Lando's 2018 collaborations with producer The Lasso, and of the 3 it's the most fitting successor to last year's The Boy Who Spoke to the Wind. It mixes the scope and spirituality of that album with the intimacy of his debut For Mark, Your Son, and the result is one of 2018's warmest, most textured, 'musical' hip hop albums. A lot of the mainstream is marked by artists who employ 'melody' alongside their rapping, and in that field very few can compete with Lando - his delivery is rich and soulful, he frantically jumps between flows and displays a near-unmatched flexibility. He grapples with themes of Blackness in America - both in how that relates to individual mental health as well as in the way it reflects in society at large - and because of the aforementioned musicality Lando comes across just as much as a successor to Stevie Wonder or Marvin Gaye than as a piece in contemporary hip hop. Peso (feat. Quelle Chris & Rey) Trap music has dominated 2018, whether it's established acts exploding to a new level of success, the indistinguishable sea of new acts popping up, "veteran" acts aping the style in order to regain some desperately craved attention, or even genres of music totally disconnected from hip hop seeking to cash in on what's trending in the mainstream. With that level of saturation and blind commercialism, it's easy to become disillusioned with the scene as a whole. But occasionally something comes along which feels like a genuine progression within the sound, and in 2018 that's The Outfit, TX. It takes a lot of trap tropes and pushes them to their extremes past the point of tedium. The 'darkness' sounds almost demonic at points, the bass heavy production takes on hints of industrial music... It's loud and outlandish, but there's this grounded quality throughout that gives it more depth than its peers. Caleb Giles - There Will Be Rain Caleb Giles plays saxophone in New York trip hop/neo soul/quite a lot else group Standing on the Corner, and that versatility comes through on There Will Be Rain. At its base level, the album can be seen as another entry in the ever-growing New York "lofi" hip hop scene, but both because of the added musicality as well as the fairly difficult questions posed in the lyrics, it takes on a 'grand' quality that its peers lack. It's not a perfect release - Giles is still young and its clear that there are areas he can improve. But its rare to see something which hits these powerful notes with such ease and regularity, and that bit of imperfection only adds to the charisma and odd charm shown here. Wondering (feat. Standing on the Corner) Nocando has spent a fruitful career split between the LA underground "art rap" scene and the battling circuit, being as much an entrepreneur (Low End Theory, Hellfyre Club) as he is a rapper. During that time his music hasn't always been at the level of some of his collaborators (for instance his other 2018 release, MOTH, is one of the worst things I've heard this year). But on Coyote you can hear all his potential fully realised into a set of jazzy, vivid, and emotionally resonant songs, that deal with everything from fatherhood to the suffocation of poverty, all done with incredible maturity and thought. You hear the control of someone who's been rapping for so long and in so many different environments, everything sounds intentional and important. AKAI SOLO 無限 力力 - CRUSH EVERYTHING The last few years has seen some depressing trends explode throughout the world - a resurgence of nationalism and right wing thinking, the rise of anti-intellectualism, mass attacks on journalism, and perhaps most worryingly, l o f i hip hop radio 24/7 - chill study/relax/gaming beats. Given the cover of CRUSH EVERYTHING, as well as the name "AKAI SOLO 無限 力力", this project strays frighteningly close to that territory. But what you get instead, is one of New York's wisest, most unique voices. Akai Solo is close to that 'hip hop shaman' Jay Electronica mould, but without the pretension and delusions of grandeur. The defining feature here is composure, control - whether he's grappling with everyday problems or something loftier, there's always a level of balance here. He's captivating without trying too hard, and he makes the array of jazzy instrumentals here sound like they're under his command. Four Fists are the underground 'Cole and Kendrick' - endlessly teased collab album, but this time it's finally come out. POS and Astronautalis have been putting out some of the most ambitious hip hop of the 21st century, both accomplishing the very rare feet of making rock influenced hip hop in a way that doesn't sound like a trailer park, and this collaboration is the culmination of that - both are older, not as energetic as they once were, but that's replaced by a new level of maturity and world weariness. Both have gone through personal difficulties - notably POS's kidney failure - and on this record you hear a special chemistry that could only have been built up through time. It's the rare album that is both uncomfortably and acutely personal, while keeping hold of a larger scope. Basically, it's a good version of Kids See Ghosts. [link] [comments] |
ASAP Bari Arrested on Felony Drug Charges Posted: 30 Nov 2018 08:56 AM PST |
Travis Scott is coming to speak at Harvard this Sunday Posted: 30 Nov 2018 07:00 PM PST |
Posted: 30 Nov 2018 04:04 PM PST |
[FRESH] Tabby - SEQUEL! (Official Music Video) Posted: 30 Nov 2018 12:06 PM PST |
[FRESH] Earl Sweatshirt - Azucar (Prod. by Sage Elsesser) Posted: 30 Nov 2018 04:57 PM PST |
50 Cent says he wouldn't mind if his estranged son 'got hit by a bus' Posted: 30 Nov 2018 07:45 PM PST |
[First Impressions] Meek Mill - Championships Posted: 30 Nov 2018 04:39 PM PST |
Meek Mill is currently doing a Twitter AMA Posted: 30 Nov 2018 03:46 PM PST https://twitter.com/MeekMill, hashtag is #AskMeek. Surprised this hadn't been posted yet EDIT: It's done, hope at least one of you somehow managed to get an answer to your questions [link] [comments] |
Ice Cube announces tracklist for upcoming project Posted: 30 Nov 2018 12:06 PM PST |
[FRESH ALBUM] Victor Oladipo - V.O. Posted: 30 Nov 2018 07:04 AM PST |
Posted: 30 Nov 2018 06:20 PM PST |
[FIRST IMPRESSIONS] Meek Mill – Championships Posted: 30 Nov 2018 09:13 PM PST It's been 24 hours since it dropped. What are your thoughts on the Philadelphia rapper's fourth full-length studio album? [link] [comments] |
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