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New Music Friday: November 12th, 2021 - HipHop

New Music Friday: November 12th, 2021 - HipHop


New Music Friday: November 12th, 2021

Posted: 11 Nov 2021 09:00 PM PST

Albums

EPs

Singles

  • Drake - Neatly*
  • Coi Leray - TWINNEM (Remix) [feat. DaBaby]
  • Juice WRLD - Already Dead
  • John Legend - You Deserve It All
  • iann dior - Let You
  • Fivio Foreign - Squeeze
  • Lil Pump - In Da Way
  • Merlyn Wood & CONNIE - SYK
  • Bella Thorne & Juicy J - In You
  • 645AR & Kenny Beats - On My Back
  • Famous Dex - Dehydrated
  • Smino - I Deserve (feat. NOS)
  • J.I the Prince of N.Y - Taken For Granted
  • Chris Webby - Raw Thoughts V
  • KRS-One - Knock Em Out
  • Cico P - Vegas
  • LUCKI - 4Ever Ever
  • Icewear Vezzo - Bacc Again
  • Wais P & Statik Selektah - Clubber Lang (feat. Paul Wall, Termanology & KXNG Crooked)
  • Jurdan Bryant - Enough (feat. Aus Taylor)
  • Fana Hues - Pieces
  • Clams Casino - Water Theme 2
  • Bizzy Banks - Still Into You (Still Into You Remix)
  • BEARCAP & $TUPID YOUNG – JUG & FINESSE
  • 30 Deep Grimeyy - Around
  • Stalley & Apollo Brown - We Outside
  • Asian Doll - No Exposing
  • CASISDEAD - Boys Will Be Boys
  • BERWYN - MIA
  • Bandmanrill - I AM NEWARK (Beggin')
  • Fat Trel - Last Day In
  • Michael Christmas - Paul Wall
  • ShittyBoyz - Rob Dyrdek
  • Jayaire Woods - Wasted Time
  • Kahlil Blu - 4 The African Shorties (Including the Diaspora)
  • Dyme-A-Duzin - Stop Playin
  • Milly Wop & Wan Billz - Sky Is Grey
  • Big Sad 1900 - Bump (feat. Baby Stone Gorillas)
  • Lil Gray - Reservoir
  • El Rass - فرناس
  • Merlyn Wood & CONNIE - S.Y.K.
  • Moh Baretta - Against the Wall
  • Baby Stone Gorillas - King Kong / Drip Drop (feat. LowTheGreat & Slumlord Trill)
  • Bear1boss - askin 4*
  • Liltae2 - Mulatto
  • Sal Crosby & Bons Reeb - HOOKED//the law

* means not on Spotify/Apple Music

sorted by Spotify monthly listeners


From /u/KHDTX13 (will be updated):

SPOTIFY PLAYLISTS:

Fresh Singles

Fresh Albums & EPs


Full Calendar

submitted by /u/TheRoyalGodfrey
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[FRESH ALBUM] Silk Sonic - An Evening With Silk Sonic

Posted: 11 Nov 2021 09:00 PM PST

Listen to it on Spotify | Apple Music | YouTube Music | YouTube Audio | TIDAL

All tracks are also on Bruno Mars' official YouTube albeit not listed in featured yet and with comments disabled.

TRACKLIST Hosted by Bootsy Collins

  1. Silk Sonic Into (Prod. by Bruno Mars & D'Mile)
  2. Leave The Door Open (Prod. by D'Mile & Bruno Mars)
  3. Fly As Me (Prod. by D'Mile & Bruno Mars)
  4. After Last Night (with Thundercat & Bootsy Collins) (Prod. by D'Mile & Bruno Mars)
  5. Smokin Out The Window (Prod. by D'Mile & Bruno Mars)
  6. Put On A Smile (Prod. by Bruno Mars)
  7. 777 (Prod. by D'Mile & Bruno Mars)
  8. Skate (Prod. by D'Mile & Bruno Mars)
  9. Blast Off (Prod. by Bruno Mars & D'Mile)

9 Songs, 31 minutes.

Let me know your thoughts on the album!

submitted by /u/harshmangat
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Astroworld victim dies after concert injuries, bringing death toll to 9

Posted: 11 Nov 2021 01:02 PM PST

[FRESH] Juice WRLD - Already Dead

Posted: 11 Nov 2021 09:02 PM PST

[FRESH ALBUM] Aries - BELIEVE IN ME, WHO BELIEVES IN YOU

Posted: 11 Nov 2021 08:59 PM PST

KAYTRANADA announces new EP "Intimidated" featuring Mach-Hommy, Thundercat, and H.E.R. dropping Nov. 19th

Posted: 11 Nov 2021 08:26 AM PST

source

Pre-Save link: https://forms.sonymusicfans.com/campaign/kaytranada-intimidated-pre-save/

Cover Art
Tracklist:
1. Intimidated (feat. H.E.R.)
2. Be Careful (feat. Thundercat)
3. $PayForHaiti (feat. Mach-Hommy)

EDIT: he just posted a snippet of all 3 songs

https://streamable.com/4k553y

submitted by /u/RafiakaMacakaDirk
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[FRESH ALBUM] Aesop Rock & Blockhead - Garbology

Posted: 11 Nov 2021 09:03 PM PST

[FRESH] Polo G - Bad Man (Smooth Criminal)

Posted: 11 Nov 2021 08:58 PM PST

Kanye West On His Yeezy Brand, Mental Health, Larry Hoover, & More Part 2 | Drink Champs

Posted: 11 Nov 2021 07:59 PM PST

2021 Rolling Loud Live Performances

Posted: 11 Nov 2021 06:12 PM PST

[FRESH] Bando and Isaiah Rashad - Payday

Posted: 11 Nov 2021 09:02 PM PST

[Fresh] Juice WRLD - Fighting Demons (Album Trailer)

Posted: 11 Nov 2021 12:04 PM PST

[FRESH ALBUM] Joell Ortiz - Autograph

Posted: 11 Nov 2021 09:00 PM PST

[FRESH VIDEO] Fivio Foreign - Squeeze (Freestyle) [Official Video]

Posted: 11 Nov 2021 09:02 PM PST

[FRESH] DaBaby - Back On My Baby Jesus Sh!t AGAIN EP

Posted: 11 Nov 2021 09:01 PM PST

[FRESH VIDEO] Juice Wrld - Already Dead

Posted: 11 Nov 2021 09:02 PM PST

[LEAK] Kanye West - Brothers (feat. Charlie Wilson)

Posted: 11 Nov 2021 04:24 PM PST

[FRESH] Rick Ross - Outlawz (feat. Jazmine Sullivan & 21 Savage)

Posted: 11 Nov 2021 09:00 PM PST

[FRESH VIDEO] ROSALÍA & The Weeknd - LA FAMA

Posted: 11 Nov 2021 09:07 AM PST

[FRESH VIDEO] Key Glock - Channel 5

Posted: 11 Nov 2021 05:33 PM PST

FKA Twigs is releasing "measure of a man" with Central Cee on November 18th as a part of the marketing of The King's Men

Posted: 11 Nov 2021 01:52 PM PST

[FRESH ALBUM] Smiley - Buy or Bye 2

Posted: 11 Nov 2021 09:15 PM PST

[FRESH VIDEO] Aries - RIDING

Posted: 11 Nov 2021 09:12 PM PST

[DISCUSSION] Let’s Make Something Happen – How A Tribe Called Quest’s The Space Program sets the scene for a world of acceptance

Posted: 11 Nov 2021 09:00 AM PST

Five years ago today, A Tribe Called Quest released their sixth and final album, We got it from Here… Thank You 4 Your service. It is my favorite album of all time, and in celebration, I'd like to discuss what I believe to be the best song of all time – the opening track, The Space Program.


Background: Who is A Tribe Called Quest?

A Tribe Called Quest is the most culturally important group to come out of the 90s. First coming onto the scene in 1990, but not gaining full popularity until a few years later, the Tribe are pioneers of the alternative hip-hop scene. When Wu-Tang Clan emerged in 1993, bringing a then unheard-of underground grit coupled with tales of streets and gangsters, Tribe took another route. They focused on intellect, soul, funk, and on the mellow delivery of their lyrics. They fused together sounds and created beats that defined the subgenre of alternative hip-hop, a sound that contextualized their socially aware and philosophical lyrics. They appealed to the older generation just as much as they appealed to the younger ones, and for the first time in hip-hop, they bridged the age gap, a difficult task that artists today are still trying to figure out how to navigate. Producer and MC Kamaal "Q-Tip" Fareed, the late MC Malik "Phife Dawg" Taylor, MC Jarobi White, and DJ Ali Shaheed Mohammed were far from urban jungle warriors. They didn't tout the standard east coast kingpin mentality, but loved to read and wanted to smoke weed, not sell it. They were modest, but made music proudly, and they made hip-hop for people who were as interested in ideas as they were into humor.

Tip and Phife were childhood friends. The two grew up together in Queens and met Shaheed and the Jungle Brothers in high school. Tip and Shaheed recorded together, frequently with Phife, but they never came together as a group until Jarobi joined, with Phife following suit. In 1989, the group recorded a demo with Geffen Records, and released their debut album People's Instinctive Travels and the Sounds of Rhythm with independent label Jive Records the following year. Travels was marked by playful and cheerful lyrics talking about conscious content surrounding Afrocentrism, safe sex, vegetarianism, and youth, and it carried a sense of humor that was absent from existing hip-hop at the time. They went on to release four more albums - The Low End Theory; Midnight Marauders; Beats, Rhymes & Life; and The Love Movement - after which they disbanded in 1998. Each one addressed topics including Afrocentrism, societal norms, the music industry, blackness and blackness as it relates to the n-word, and spirituality. All throughout their career, they were credited as pioneers in the jazz rap subgenre and helped launch many superstar careers, most notably in frequent collaborators Busta Rhymes, Consequence, and J Dilla. Q-Tip pursued a solo career, and, when combined with his conversion to Islam and tendency to be overbearing in the group, began to put strain on his relationship with Phife Dawg, eventually leading to the group's breakup, and culminating in a bitter feud between the two in the 2000s. Through the decade, they hardly spoke, but made some appearances together towards the late 2000s and early 2010s – most notably opening for Kanye West's Yeezus tour for a few shows, as well as making an appearance on The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon in celebration of People's Travels' 25th anniversary. In the aftermath of that night, the Tribe celebrated a triumphant return, as they began to record We Got It From Here.


We Got It From Here's place in America

Their performance on The Tonight Show was pivotal. Signifying Tip and Phife making amends, the show also coincided with the 2015 ISIS Paris attacks. The entire night had a profound impact on the group. "Feeling charged," they came together later that night to begin to record their sixth album. In the studio, Q-Tip's manager Dion Liverpool said, "every evening [Phife would] go down to the house, and he and Tip would spend hours in there vibing and coming up with lines. Seeing them together in the studio joking, coming up with ideas, disagreeing, vibing, and trading vocals, it was pretty incredible. It was like watching a unicorn." Q-Tip later said he felt like they were "kids again."

Tragedy struck on March 22, 2016, however, as Phife Dawg passed away due to complications from diabetes. Q-Tip went on to finish the album, with Phife having recorded enough for the album to be completed, and on November 11, 2016, We Got It From Here... Thank You 4 Your Service was released.

We Got It From Here came at a pivotal moment for America. Just a few days earlier, Donald Trump was elected as president of the US. The album, having been primarily recorded during the presidential race, touches on 2016's political and socioeconomic landscape in many of its songs. Chief among them is the song "We the People..." The song showcases some blatant problems in America, including police brutality, discrimination, gender equality, and immigration policies. The day after We Got It From Here's release, the group was featured as the musical guest on the weekend's Saturday Night Live episode, and performed "We the People..." for their first song. Introduced by Q- Tip's friend Dave Chappelle, Q-Tip says to the audience, "We need everybody... If you lookin' at us, stand up, touch somebody next to you – Everybody stand up, one fist in the air. We are all one, we are the people." Tip urges for unity, one of the album's central themes, as he, Jarobi, and Shaheed perform their song.

Later on, the three of them would come back onstage to perform another song, this time singing "The Space Program." This performance begins as a pretty standard performance. With Shaheed DJing and Tip and Jarobi rapping their verses in front of a mural of Phife, the only interesting note is that they appeared to be up there rapping for themselves and for Phife, rather than for the audience gathered before them – when Tip fumbles his first verse, he just doesn't care, and proceeds to sing the n word nearly 20 times in a row, the FCC be damned. They spent the first two verses moving around on stage, having a good time, and not concerning themselves with hitting every word in the song nor sounding good. They were there to enjoy themselves and to celebrate Phife, and they succeeded. But, when Q-Tip finishes his second verse, he asked, "What we gon' do, y'all? Are we gon' move to the stars? Are we stuck here? Or are we going up to Mars? I think we stuck here. What we gon' do? We can't give up!" The camera then cut away to the audience, as it is revealed that long-time Tribe collaborators and friends Busta Rhymes and Consequence were sitting in the audience, waiting for their cue to join the Tribe onstage. The four MCs rapped Phife's verse for him, showing undeniable energy and chemistry together. The performance ends with Tip looking like he's on the brink of sobbing, as they all join in an emotional group hug onstage under the Phife Dawg mural, truly making something happen.


The Space Program's place in We Got It From Here

Being the opening track to an 18-year hiatus, The Space Progam had a lot riding on it. Expectations for what the Tribe had cooked up were astronomical. But the song meets every one. While the song is primarily about unity, in its five minutes it touches on and sets up the album's three distinct themes: political commentary of 2016's America, saluting the next generation of hip-hop as the Tribe says its farewell, and tributing Phife Dawg.


The Space Program, literally

The song serves as a metaphor, and encourages the listener to ask, "What is the space program?" It opens with a sample from the 1974 blaxploitation film Willie Dynamite. Blaxploitation is a term that refers to black action films starring black actors, aimed towards black audiences. Often the movies were anti-establishment and criticized for stereotypical representations and glorification of violence. At the point of the movie where these four lines come from, the top New York pimp Bell explains that the best way to avoid "the heat," or the police, is for the rival pimps to organize and unify with each other. This sets the tone for the rest of the song. Tribe feels that right now, unity is the most important thing. All throughout the song, they call for us to "get it together," and "let's make something happen." It's a very welcoming tone for what later reveals a much bleaker message.

While being released on the first album release day following Donald Trump's election, the first words we hear from Q-Tip are "it's time to go left and not right," subtly rebuking the far-right populism that emerged in the 2016 election cycle. Next up, from "Tyson types," to "Che figures," Tip urges everyone in the range from Mike Tyson and Neil DeGrasse Tyson to Che Guevara to come together in unity. Mike Tyson is a Black former heavyweight boxing champion. Neil DeGrasse Tyson is a Black scientist known for his scientific research, social justice activism, and public outreach actions. Che Guevara was an Argentinian Marxist revolutionary and guerrilla leader who helped lead the Cuban Revolution, whose face has become a symbol of rebellion and counterculture for the left. As the intro continues, Phife and Tip plead and encourage for everyone to make something happen, until they both end the back and forth to speak in unison, adding in "Let's," in favor of "Gotta," fostering in the overarching sense of unity. They let the listeners and their fans know that they are in it together.

Towards the middle of the first verse, the song's central theme sets into place as the overarching metaphor begins to show itself. The line "none of our people involved" alludes to a general sense of defeat among the Black community, as so often Jarobi has witnessed instances where Black and impoverished people are treated as second-class citizens and often disenfranchised. Jarobi continues the image painted in the line before, the rich elite, isolated away in their own bubble, pour expensive alcohol and live lavishly while the black and minority communities lament. Hennessy is a high-end brand of cognac, and Smirnoff is an expensive brand of vodka. Both drinks have an extensive history of references in hip-hop.

The verse then has a few lines that require mentioning:

  • "Spaceship doors" marks the first space reference in the song, starting the "Space Program" metaphor that Q-Tip will later flesh out.
  • "It always seems the poorest persons / are people forsaken, dawg" marks a common sense of dread and defeatism that's often found in communities that are left behind by those in power.
  • On first listen, "Washingtons, Jeffersons, Jacksons" refers to dollar bills - George Washington on the $1, Thomas Jefferson on the $2, and Andrew Jackson on the $20. In the space metaphor, Jarobi refers to the poor communities being left behind as the wealthy improve their own lives, forgetting those they perceive as beneath them.
  • "on the captain's log" - However, as the line continues, it becomes clear that Jarobi is also referring once again to Black people. Washington, Jefferson, and Jackson are three predominantly Black last names. With none of these names on the "captain's log," Jarobi once again shows that he and the rest of the Black communities are being left behind in whatever program exists. Around this point in the song, the Space Program begins to show its hand as a metaphor for gentrification.

And then with the phrase "mass unblackening," the metaphor truly makes itself known. Gentrification is defined as "the process of repairing and rebuilding homes and businesses in a deteriorating area (such as an urban neighborhood) accompanied by an influx of middle-class or affluent people and that often results in the displacement of earlier, usually poorer residents." It has often been criticized for displacing those citizens who previously lived there and is looked at as an erasure of those citizens' heritage and culture.

The next line, a "three-by-three structure with many bars" refers to two different things that the elite would "rather see we in." First, and most obviously, the bars are a jail cell. A common point of discussion in hip-hop, Black people, and Black men specifically, are imprisoned at a far greater rate than any other ethnic group. The imprisonment of artists such as Lil Wayne, Gucci Mane, TI, Bobby Shmurda, and 03 Greedo have raised awareness for Black incarceration and prison reform. In the song, Jarobi raps that the elite will "leave us where we are so they can play among the stars," bringing back the sentiment that he and his communities are being left behind. At the same time, he introduces the theme that they're being left behind on Earth, as the wealthy make their way to the stars.

Secondly, a "three-by-three structure with many bars" refers to Jarobi's status as a rapper, invoking a sentiment felt by some that he should just shut up and rap - this tone has even made its way to basketball, when journalist Laura Ingraham told LeBron James and Kevin Durant to "shut up and dribble," when the two criticized President Trump in February 2018.

For the Space Program, the final destination is Mars. Instead of staying home to fix Earth's problems, the elite are leaving to inhabit the red planet. And in asking "what you think they want us there," Jarobi signs off and brings the listener back down to Earth, reminding the listener that the elite would never have the poor, run-down, and minority communities up there on Mars with them. Jarobi's last four lines hold a similar sentiment to Gil Scott-Heron's "Whitey on the Moon," in which Heron asks, "Was all that money I made last year / For whitey on the moon? / How come I ain't got no money here? / Hmm! Whitey's on the moon."

When Q-tip takes over, despite the song's bleak and dreary message, he still holds hope that people will "get it together forever." Hope is a hidden theme of the song and is further explored later on in both the song and album. His last two lines hold a huge contrast and significance in terms of the meaning of the song - what really is the Space Program? Literally, it refers to humankind's desire to abandon Earth once it reaches the point of inhabitability, and to "move on to the stars." Programs like SpaceX have already toyed with this idea and it's a common recurrence in pop culture. But because "There ain't a space program for n---as / Yeah, you stuck here n---a," space's inhabiting will not include Black people. Secondly, as mentioned before, the Space Program represents gentrification, as alluded to by Jarobi and as Q-Tip will further describe in his coming verse.

In the beginning of his second verse, Q-Tip chides that "And the president's refined, in her wing she's confined / With about thirty Percocets and five bottles of wine." He raises some questions in referring to the president as female. Did he (incorrectly) predict Hillary Clinton to win? Would he have made this comment regardless? Did he want to leave it as "her" to incite the president or simply to raise some questions? Regardless of his thinking process, Tip frames the president as "confined" and isolated away from any other problems, alone with her drugs and alcohol. He feels defeated knowing that the leader of our country ignores this problem and is so out of touch with her constituents. Although Tip is talking about Clinton, it is applicable to almost any major politician.

He then alludes to two significant Black people who have made an impact on society leading up to the album's release: Brittany Newsome and Eric Garner. In June 2015, activist Newsome was arrested for climbing the flagpole in front of the South Carolina statehouse to remove the confederate flag being flown. This was not her first act of civil disobedience, nor was it her first arrest. In July 2014, Garner was killed by police after being put in a chokehold by NYPD officers. After being questioned for selling cigarettes without a tax stamp, officers tried to detain Garner, and ended up putting him in a chokehold and having another man forcibly lay on top of him. The incident was recorded, and Garner yelled out "I can't breathe" eleven times before losing consciousness. Garner died an hour later in the hospital. His mistreatment and the lack of conviction of the officers who killed him sparked nationwide protests and demonstrations. At the time, "I can't breathe" became a slogan and chant against police brutality in the aftermath. Athletes from the Cleveland Cavaliers and Brooklyn Nets came together in a December 2014 pregame to wear shirts saying "I can't breathe" on them, to raise awareness and to speak out. Their two tragedies were hardly the first nor were the last instances of injustice towards Black people in the 2010s.

Tip then returns to the space program with the lines, "Put so much in this motherfucker, feel like we shouldn't leave / Put it on TV, put it in movies, put it in our face / These notions and ideas and citizens live in space." In the months leading up to the 2016 election, a common sentiment among many liberals was that they would leave the country and move to Canada if Donald Trump was elected. Tip questions that sentiment here, asking why they should leave when they've put so much into their current lives and homes. "We stuck here," so we "gotta get it together." And in pop culture, space is often seen as a luxury and is presented in a very lavish and expensive way. Movies like Elysium and Interstellar focus around space travel and colonizing other planets and moons. Space is a commodity, and is thrust into everyone's face, regardless of whether they are a part of the Space Program.

In his next lines, brings the metaphor back down to Earth. He explicitly brings in people of color and people in poverty as those being left behind by the Space Program, and then he finally makes it explicit that he's talking about gentrification. For POC and impoverished communities, those wealthy elite people running the Space Program have pushed them out of their homes in order to make way for a nicer and wealthier neighborhood. Q-Tip then poses a question to the listener: "Did they find you a home?" To which he replies that no, they have not found one.

If the listener really had not caught on by now, Q-Tip ends his part on the song by literally spelling it out – "Imagine if this shit was really talking about space, dude." He is not talking about a literal space program. These are the three bleakest lines on the entire song, with each one becoming quieter than the last.


Thank You 4 Your service

An important part of the song is its music video. Released in June 2018, it was the final piece of art ever put out by the Tribe. The eight-minute video furthers all of the song and albums' central themes and motifs, but it reveals an important part about Tribe's outlook on this generation.

The music video begins on a spaceship. Day after day, Q-Tip remains alone and locked in one room, with Jarobi in another, surrounded by TV screens, with Ali Shaheed alone with his DJ headphones, and with a green crystal ball alone in a dark room. Once the song makes it to end of the first chorus, Q-Tip sees a mysterious figure walk out of the room, and he follows. He is transported to a meadow, where he watches the man play chess against a faceless white man in a suit. Q-Tip's second verse begins, and the figure reveals himself to be Q-Tip.

At this point in the song, at Phife's outro, Q-Tip, Jarobi, and Ali Shaheed group up around the green crystal ball, looking at a scene not shown to the audience, and rapping Phife's verse. It cuts then to Q-Tip awakening from a nap on the spaceship to an alarm letting him know that the oxygen reserves are critically low. In his room, a TV is on, as rappers from the old and new generation sing Phife's outro for him. Erykah Badu, Common, Consequence, Doug E. Fresh, Alicia Keys, Talib Kweli, Ladybug Mecca, Questlove, Kelly Rowland, Black Thought, and Pharell Williams pay tribute to Phife as faces of the old generation, with Janelle Monae, Anderson .Paak and Vince Staples representing the new generation, as they all beg and plead "let's make something happen." In the Tribe's words, Monae, Paak, and Staples represent "Dis Generation," a theme explored later on the album. Reporter Ta-Nehsi Coates and actress Rosario Dawson make appearances as well.

These scenes represent an important moment in the Tribe's history, one that is explored on the song "Dis Generation," and explains what the album's title truly means. On "Dis Generation," Tip, Phife, Jarobi, and Busta spit back and forth rhymes with each other, saluting the new generation of rappers. Rather than outright rejecting the new sounds that have taken shape, most notably like Eminem does on his album Kamikaze, Tip and the Tribe welcome it, and could not be more excited for hip-hop's future. On the song, Tip shouts out some of the new age's essential figures when he raps, "Talk to Joey, Earl, Kendrick, and Cole, gatekeepers of flow / They are extensions of intellectual soul," shouting out Joey Bada$$, Earl Sweatshirt, Kendrick Lamar, and J. Cole for their contributions to modern hip-hop. The song and the aforementioned scene in the music video provide context in understanding the album's title.

The album features a handful of rappers. In order of appearance, from the "old-school," Consequence, Busta Rhymes, Andre 3000, Talib Kweli, and Kanye West all provide vocals – five artists who have credited the Tribe as having influence on their work. From "dis generation," Anderson .Paak and Kendrick Lamar provide guest verses – two artists whose careers in alternative hip-hop might not have been possible without the Tribe's work in the 90s. The album's title, "We got it from here, thank you for your service," is spoken by the new generation of rappers to A Tribe Called Quest. The Tribe is finally hanging up their coats, are being thanked for their service to hip-hop, and are leaving the rap game in some capable hands. The new generation has it from here.


Word to Phifer

Phife Dawg's death in March 2016 sent shockwaves throughout the hip-hop community, but it affected no one more than Q-Tip. They were childhood friends and meant more to each other than the world. They were brothers, and like brothers, they fought. Their feud following Tribe's breakup hurt each other more than imaginable. How Q-Tip was affected by Phife's death was best captured in November 2017. On November 28th, the nominations for the 2018 Grammys were announced, and Tribe was snubbed – not one nomination. Furiously, Q-Tip took to Instagram to rant on his story. "Y'all think it's a caveat because a white man wasn't nominated in no major categories and shit? We were the most Black, cultured group out. That's all we stood on. That's what we represented. This last Tribe album, this stands with everyone else's shit that's up there. I don't give a fuck." He then recalls the Grammys asking Tribe to perform at the 2017 ceremony. "Y'all fucking busted y'all ass to try and get us out there and perform! You think a n---a wanted to fucking go out there and perform after I lost my man? We closed y'all show and we don't get no nominations? The last Tribe album? My man is gone!"

In the words of essayist Hanif Abdurraqib, Q-Tip was visibly upset, his voice broke from anger to sadness after having to bring Phife back into the room. The way he fought through the statement as he had fought through the past several months since the album's release without his friend by his side. This isn't how it was supposed to be. He wasn't supposed to have gone on a tour without Phife, and he wasn't supposed to perform at the Grammy Awards without Phife by his side, and he definitely wasn't supposed to be fighting for the validity of his album without his brother Malik there to push him forward. It isn't just as if Q-Tip had hidden his pain before that moment, it was just that he had never peeled back the layers intensely until them. It was brief – he gathered himself and continued his rage at the Grammys shortly after. But it was a moment when one was reminded of the void, and how that void shifted the stakes of the album. And in the moment, it seemed foolish to imagine that Q-Tip wouldn't have cared if they didn't get nominated. Of course he cared, more than anything. It wasn't just for his legacy anymore. It never was.

The album doesn't start with the Willie Dynamite sample. It doesn't start with "it's time to go left and not right." It opens when Q-Tip says, "Word to Phifer."

There are a few stylistic choices in The Space Program that put Phife at the front of the song. To open the song and for the first ATCQ vocals in 18 years, the two central members of the Tribe, Tip and Phife, come together to bring in the chorus. There, Phife's voice sits a bit higher in the mix than Q-Tip's, a likely intentional decision to put the focus on Phife. The next time we hear Phife on the song comes once Tip and Jarobi finish their verses, and Phife sings the outro. There, the beat begins to lose some of its structure, to draw all of the focus to Phife. With every repetition of the chorus, part of the beat comes back in, also introducing claps and new lines to the chorus, "gotta get it together forever," furthering the song's message of hope. All throughout this outro, Phife's voice sits higher in the mix, so that he's heard more prominently, furthering the album's role as a tribute to Phife Dawg. Towards the end of this verse, the mixing is changed to add a vocal layered effect to Phife's voice, making it sound as if there are multiple Phife Dawgs recording in the studio, adding to the song's thematic tropes of unity and Phife Dawg. As the verse goes on, the hope in Phife's voice becomes palpable and unignorable, a shining light on the song following one of the album's bleaker moments.

While The Space Program's tribute to Phife is a bit more subtle, the album has two other piercing songs that are much more direct to Phife – Lost Somebody and The Donald. On Lost Somebody, Tip and Jarobi rap in memory of Phife. Tip beautifully tells the story of Phife's childhood, name-dropping Phife's parents, and closes his verse with some hauntingly beautiful lines:

Malik, I would treat you like little brother that would give you fits
Sometimes overbearing though I thought it was for your benefit
Despite all the spats and shits cinematically documented
The one thing I appreciate, you and I, we never pretended
Rhymes we would write it out, hard times fight it out
Gave grace face to face, made it right
And now you riding out

Jarobi then comes in with lyrics about his friendship with Phife, his ride-or-die. When speaking on what it meant to him, he said that "This was one of the hardest songs I've ever had to do… I wanted to say so much—give something but not too personal. But I know I had to be uber-personal just to talk about his spirit and the man he was and the person he was and the feelings that he shared. I walk around every day and people are always like—even now, they're like, 'Man, I'm so sorry for your loss.' I know I had to honor that, so it was really difficult to write that song."

On the other side, though it's still a tribute to the late great, The Donald, named for Phife's nickname "Don Juice" is much more uplifting. Busta Rhymes and Q-Tip give verses hyping up their friend, swaying back and forth with impeccable flow on a wonderful beat. Phife gives one last verse, and it feels like he's right there. The entire song just feels like a few guys having fun, which is exactly the kind of music Tribe made throughout their career. The song is nostalgic and friendly, and it's a breath of fresh air for such a heavy album. The song ends with a 2.5 minute outro where the lines "Phife Dawg what a go on with the crew? Phife Dawg, that's why I had to come through. Phife Dawg, you spit wicked every verse. Phife Dawg, respect the Trini man first. Phife Dawg, I know you had the man shook up. Phife Dawg, 'cause your mastermind cook up. Phife Dawg, you know they back with one another. Phife Dawg, them don't want no problem, brotha" are repeated over and over. Until finally, the song closes with one piercing line: "Phife Dawg." These are the last words ever spoken from A Tribe Called Quest, which is fitting, seeing as their first words ever spoken, on Push it Along, are Q-Tip. The Tribe begins and ends with Q-Tip and Phife Dawg, and now that Phife is gone, there's nothing left.

At the end of The Space Program's music video, Q-Tip, Jarobi, and Ali Shaheed are clad in a meadow at dusk in desert robes and are the only people in sight. Q-Tip looks around and focuses on something off-screen, as if to say goodbye, as the three artists walk off into the sunset. The screen goes blank, and Phife is paid tribute one last time as two words appear in the bottom right corner: "For Malik." The bassline to "Can I Kick It" comes in, as the credits roll for both the music video and for A Tribe Called Quest's career.


Gotta Get it Together Forever

Above all, We Got It From Here is an album about acceptance. The Tribe have found themselves in a world full of uncertainty. What comes next for Black people? How do they fit into hip-hop today? How do they move on from losing their brother? It would be incredibly easy to look at everything and to just give up. There are times on this album where it seems like that's what's happening, but Tribe just get right on up and ask what they can do to make it better, to make something happen. And, by the end of the album, they come to accept the world they're living in, while also acknowledging what they can to make something happen. The Space Program sets up all of the album's themes perfectly, and I can't think of a better example of accepting what is right now while also remaining hopeful for change to come.

We got it from Here… Thank You 4 Your service is my favorite album of all time, and The Space Program is a perfect opener, and a perfect song. There's no better way to end an 18-year hiatus, and they truly made something happen. Phife forever.

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[FRESH ALBUM] seeyousoon - HZLIKEHELL

Posted: 11 Nov 2021 09:11 PM PST

What have you been listening to this week? / Last.fm thread - November 10, 2021 - HipHop

What have you been listening to this week? / Last.fm thread - November 10, 2021 - HipHop


What have you been listening to this week? / Last.fm thread - November 10, 2021

Posted: 10 Nov 2021 08:30 AM PST

This is the weekly thread to share what you've been listening to recently and/or post 3x3 collages. Make sure to write some shit about what you listened to in order encourage discussion.

To make 3x3s:

Import from Last.fm:

Make yours manually:

Make sure to re-upload your picture on a site like Imgur, otherwise the 3x3 posts change.

submitted by /u/HHHRobot
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Kanye squashes the beef with Soulja Boy

Posted: 10 Nov 2021 11:13 AM PST

Kenny Beats announces Saba and Pivot Gang as next cave guests, Friday November 12th at 12pst

Posted: 10 Nov 2021 10:08 AM PST

Astroworld Aftermath Megathread 11/10: Scott pledges to offer mental health services, FBI joins criminal probe, 56 page operations plan released + more

Posted: 10 Nov 2021 02:46 PM PST

Confirmed passed victims:

  • Axel Acosta Avila, 21

  • Danish Baig, 27

  • Madison Dubiski, 23

  • John Hilgert, 14

  • Jacob Jurinek, 20

  • Franco Patino, 21

  • Rodolfo Peña, 23

  • Brianna Rodriguez, 16

11/08:

11/09:

11/10:

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Juice WRLD’s team announces new single “Already Dead” dropping Friday

Posted: 10 Nov 2021 08:05 AM PST

999 Club announcement post

NME article

Cover Art

——————————————————————

The track was first previewed on Juice's Instagram in late 2018, and is one of the biggest grails in the community.

submitted by /u/Cooleor
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[FRESH] Merlyn Wood & CONNIE - S.Y.K.

Posted: 10 Nov 2021 05:59 PM PST

[FRESH] Smino - I Deserve

Posted: 10 Nov 2021 09:01 PM PST

Nicki Minaj's "Super Bass" Certified Diamond

Posted: 10 Nov 2021 12:23 PM PST

[DISCUSSION] A Tribe Called Quest - We got it from Here... Thank You 4 Your Service (5 Years Later)

Posted: 10 Nov 2021 10:00 PM PST

Following a tense breakup, bitter feuds, and an 18-year hiatus, A Tribe Called Quest got back together for one last ride, releasing their sixth and final album We got it from Here... Thank You 4 Your Service five years ago today.

At some point in the early 2010s, Q-Tip and Phife Dawg made amends after falling out with each other throughout their illustrious careers. One night, on November 13, 2015, A Tribe Called Quest reunited to perform on Jimmy Fallon, in celebration of the 25-year anniversary of their debut album. That night, the same night as the 2015 ISIS Paris attacks, the two of them, Jarobi White, and Ali Shaheed Muhammad went straight from the show to the studio to begin recording We got it from Here," reportedly "feeling charged." What ensued was magic, as the four of them reclaimed the same energy that they once had back in the 90s.

Recording kept on until March 22, 2016, when tragedy struck. That day, Phife Dawg passed away due to complications from diabetes. But fortunately, Phife had recorded enough up to then for the album to be completed, as Q-Tip announced. Phife's death would then shape the rest of the album's composition, as paying tribute to Phife and mourning his death play a large role in the album.

The album also touches on two other main topics - the political state of 2016 America, and it serves as Tribe's farewell to the rap game and embraces the new generation with open arms. Most notably, songs like The Space Program, We The People, Dis Generation, Lost Somebody, and The Donald all touch on these themes and are the centerpieces of an album that sounds as fresh as ever. For a group so influential and important to the growth of hip-hop, for them to return 18 years later with not one hint of rust is nothing beyond magnificent, creating not only one of the best albums of 2016, but one of the best albums of all of hip-hop


Listen Here and Album Info:

Spotify

Apple Music

Tidal

YouTube

Wikipedia

RateYourMusic

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Megan Thee Stallion's "Something for Thee Hotties" sells 33K First Week. A$AP Rocky's "LIVE.LOVE.A$AP" sells 15K 523rd Week (First Week On Streaming)

Posted: 10 Nov 2021 10:17 AM PST

Rank Artist Album Label Pure Sales Streaming Sales Track Equivalent Sales TOTAL SALES
1 Drake Certified Lover Boy OVO/Republic 46,000 562,329 5,000 613,000
2 Kanye West Donda G.O.O.D./Def Jam 37,000 272,000 684 309,000
3 J. Cole The Off-Season Dreamville/Roc Nation/Interscope 37,000 243,000 2,000 282,000
4 Tyler, The Creator CALL ME IF YOU GET LOST Columbia 55,000 114,000 604 169,604
5 Lil Baby & Lil Durk The Voice of the Heroes Alamo/Geffen/Interscope/WolfPack/Quality Control/Motown 4,000 144,000 1,000 150,000
6 Polo G Hall of Fame Columbia 18,000 124,000 1,197 143,000
7 YoungBoy Never Broke Again Sincerely, Kentrell Never Broke Again/Atlantic 10,199 126,874 701 137,775
8 Rod Wave SoulFly Alamo/Geffen/Interscope 4,000 126,000 700 130,700
9 Migos Culture III Quality Control/Motown 22,500 106,000 2,028 130,500
10 Lil Nas X MONTERO Columbia 22,000 102,000 2,000 126,000
11 Young Stoner Life, Young Thug & Gunna Slime Language 2 Young Stoner Life/Atlantic 6,000 106,000 1,000 113,000
12 Moneybagg Yo A Gangsta's Pain CMG/N-Less/Interscope 4,000 106,020 713 110,713
13 Doja Cat Planet Her Kemosabe/RCA 11,024 95,722 2,715 109,461
14 Meek Mill Expensive Pain MMG/Atlantic 10,000 82,000 3,000 95,000
15 DJ Khaled KHALED KHALED We The Best/Epic 15,006 76,000 3,000 94,000
16 Young Thug Punk Atlantic 9,007 80,718 621 90,346
17 NF CLOUDS (THE MIXTAPE) NF Real Music/Virgin 61,541 27,377 916 89,834
18 The Weeknd The Highlights XO/Republic 9,995 69,827 9,018 88,840
19 Pop Smoke Faith Victor Victor/Republic 3,984 83,000 1,323 88,000
20 Trippie Redd Trip At Knight TenThousand 6,143 69,171 426 81,000
21 Don Toliver Life of a DON Cactus Jack/WeRunIt/Atlantic 18,000 49,000 1,000 68,000
22 Lil Tjay Destined 2 Win Columbia 2,549 59,013 705 62,267
23 Pooh Shiesty Shiesty Season Atlantic 1,324 61,618 463 62,000
24 NCT 127 Sticker - The 3rd Album SM/Virgin 58,161 2,964 188 61,648
25 Nas King's Disease II Mass Appeal 20,385 34,962 1,594 56,941
26 Prince Welcome 2 America Legacy 51,970 4,476 480 56,926
27 Baby Keem The Melodic Blue Columbia 1,187 52,517 365 54,068
28 G Herbo 25 Machine Label Group/Imperial/Republic 1,609 44,693 289 46,591
29 Isaiah Rashad The House Is Burning TDE/Warner 4,338 38,175 211 42,724
30 Jazmine Sullivan Heaux Tales RCA 6,907 32,177 694 39,778
31 H.E.R. Back of My Mind RCA 6,099 29,045 1,026 36,170
32 Young Dolph & Key Glock Dum and Dummer 2 Paper Route/Empire 3,775 31,187 258 35,220
33 Megan Thee Stallion Something for Thee Hotties Atlantic 3,918 28,390 346 32,654
34 DMX Exodus Def Jam 14,332 16,872 965 32,168
35 42 Dugg Free Dem Boyz CMG/Interscope 819 30,899 206 31,924
36 $uicideboy$ Long Term Effects of SUFFERING G59 3,464 27,703 93 31,260
37 Giveon When It's All Said And Done... Take Time Not So Fast/Epic 1,307 28,624 365 30,296
38 Lil Tecca We Love You Tecca 2 Galactic/Republic 1,203 28,689 134 30,027
39 BROCKHAMPTON ROADRUNNER: NEW LIGHT, NEW MACHINE RCA 14,932 14,362 53 29,347
40 Only The Family Lil Durk Presents: Loyal Bros Only The Family/Empire 2,020 26,806 200 29,025
41 EST Gee Bigger Than Life Or Death Warlike/CMG/Interscope 2,053 26,186 217 28,456
42 J Balvin JOSE UMLE 24,832 1,402 700 26,935
43 Anuel AA & Ozuna Los Dioses Real Hasta La Muerte 3,359 22,588 416 26,363
44 YNW Melly Just A Matter of Slime P2021 6,377 19,232 752 26,361
45 ITZY Crazy in Love JP 21,663 4,374 170 26,206
46 Various Artists Judas and the Black Messiah: The Inspired Album RCA 1,924 22,963 1,244 26,132
47 Tee Grizzley Built For Whatever Atlantic 828 23,363 235 24,427
48 Big30 King Of Killbranch Bread Gang/N-Less/Interscope 1,526 20,578 464 24,067
49 Toosii Thank You For Believing South Coast/Capitol 5,538 17,853 97 23,488
50 Yung Bleu Moon Boy Vandross/Empire 2,208 20,728 533 23,469
51 24kGoldn El Dorado Records/Columbia 2,501 19,675 458 22,634
52 Kevin Gates Only The Generals Part II Breadwinner's Association 2,346 19,706 303 22,365
53 Big Scarr Big Grim Reaper Atlantic 1,649 20,125 84 21,858
54 Kodak Black Haitian Boy Kodak Atlantic 691 19,845 123 20,659
55 Logic Bobby Tarantino III Def Jam 2,910 17,319 330 20,559
56 KAROL G KG0516 UMLE 1,439 18,166 576 20,181
57 Mozzy Untreated Trauma Mozzy/Empire 10,656 8,446 499 19,964
58 Young Dolph PAPER ROUTE iLLUMINATi Paper Route/Empire 2,428 17,260 189 19,876
59 Vince Staples Vince Staples Blacksmith/Motown 3,374 16,264 114 19,752
60 Wale Folarin II MMG/Warner 2,960 16,190 554 19,704
61 Rauw Alejandro VICE VERSA Sony Music Latin 456 18,674 258 19,388
62 G-Eazy These Things Happen Too BPG/RVG/RCA 2,518 16,068 634 19,219
63 Leon Bridges Gold-Diggers Sound Columbia 12,160 6,473 335 18,968
64 Benny The Butcher The Plugs I Met 2 Black Soprano Family/SRFSCHL 8,419 9,571 205 18,194
65 Snoh Aalegra TEMPORARY HIGHS IN THE VIOLET SKIES Artium 3,341 14,473 250 18,064
66 Myke Towers LYKE MYKE Warner 671 17,208 88 17,967
67 MO3 Shottaz 4Eva H$M/Empire 2,104 15,654 175 17,933
68 Pi'erre Bourne The Life Of Pi'erre 5 Interscope 397 17,170 87 17,653
69 Sleepy Hallow Still Sleep? Winners Circle/RCA 231 16,433 89 16,754
70 ATEEZ ZERO : FEVER Part.3 KQ 1,121 15,415 199 16,735
71 Ski Mask The Slump God Sin City The Mixtape Victor Victor/Republic 775 15,433 53 16,260
72 Farruko La 167 Sony Music Latin 816 15,427 565 16,807
73 Lil Yachty Michigan Boy Boat Quality Control/Motown/Capitol 218 15,708 71 15,997
74 Gucci Mane Ice Daddy Guwop/Atlantic 1,125 14,508 295 15,928
75 Lil Skies Unbothered All We Got/Atlantic 756 14,145 175 15,076
76 ZAYN Nobody Is Listening RCA 4,181 10,338 378 14,898
77 Lil Wayne & Rich The Kid Trust Fund Babies Republic 1,535 12,987 287 14,810
78 Fredo Bang In The Name Of Gee (Still Most Hated) Se Lavi/Def Jam 4,023 10,572 93 14,687
79 Logic YS Collection Vol. 1 Def Jam 1,955 11,807 377 14,140
80 Nelly Heartland Records/Columbia 2,976 9,877 1,108 13,961
81 Gucci Mane So Icy Boyz Atlantic 1,562 12,004 357
82 mike. the highs. 4TheHomies 6,532 7,025 77 13,634
82 CJ Loyalty Over Royalty CJ Music/Warner 370 11,930 270 12,5702

Top 10 First Weeks of 2021 Across All Genres

Rank Artist Album Label Pure Sales Streaming Sales Track Equivalent Sales TOTAL SALES
1 Drake Certified Lover Boy OVO/Republic 46,000 562,329 5,000 613,000
2 Kanye West Donda G.O.O.D./Def Jam 37,000 272,000 684 309,000
3 Taylor Swift Fearless (Taylor's Version) Republic 185,215 112,072 2,785 300,072
4 Olivia Rodrigo SOUR Geffen 68,333 214,446 3,771 286,550
5 J. Cole The Off-Season Dreamville/Roc Nation/Interscope 37,000 243,000 2,000 282,000
6 Morgan Wallen Dangerous: The Double Album Big Loud/Republic 75,181 178,576 7,608 261,365
7 Billie Eilish Happier Than Ever Darkroom/Interscope 148,529 84,055 1,464 234,049
8 Tyler, The Creator CALL ME IF YOU GET LOST Columbia 55,000 114,000 604 169,604
9 Justin Bieber Justice RBMG/Def Jam 30,000 119,941 4,401 154,000
10 Lil Baby & Lil Durk The Voice of the Heroes Alamo/Geffen/Interscope/WolfPack/Quality Control/Motown 4,000 144,000 1,000 150,000

FAQ:

Q: Source?

A: http://hitsdailydouble.com/sales_plus_streaming

Q: How is this list sorted?

A: It's sorted by the total first-week sales

Q: What are pure sales?

A: Pure sales are purchases of the album (iTunes, Amazon, physicals, etc)

Q: What are track equivalent sales?

A: Track equivalent sales (or TEA/Track Equivalent Albums) is a term used to describe the sale of music downloads or singles. A track equivalent album is equal to 10 tracks, or 10 songs

Q: Where is X album?

A: Only albums that make the top 50 in sales+streaming for their debut week are counted

Q: Why do some albums show exact sales numbers while others do not?

A: The albums that do not show exact numbers are the ones that have had sales corrections from Billboard

Q: Where can I find last year's list?

A: 2020 list, 2019 list, 2018 list, 2017 list, 2016 list


submitted by /u/Chriscftb97
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New Clams Casino Instrumental Project "Winter Flower" Out November 17

Posted: 10 Nov 2021 09:33 AM PST

Bryson Tiller announces “A Different Christmas” releasing November 19th

Posted: 10 Nov 2021 09:18 AM PST

Danny Brown Interview by Anthony Fantano

Posted: 10 Nov 2021 10:03 PM PST

Summer Walker Rips London on da Track for Claiming He Contributed to ‘Still Over It’: ‘He Didn’t Produce Sh*t’

Posted: 10 Nov 2021 08:04 AM PST

Nicki Minaj's Husband Claims Attempted Rape Victim Was a 'Willing Participant'

Posted: 10 Nov 2021 01:50 PM PST

This Friday, Joell Ortiz is releasing his new album "Autograph" on Mello Music Group – features KXNG Crooked, Cyhi The Prynce, Sheek Louch and Pastor LBS | production from The Heatmakerz, Apollo Brown, Namir Blade, Salaam Remi and Hesami

Posted: 10 Nov 2021 10:57 AM PST

Cover

BandCamp

  1. In My Feelings 02:40
  2. Uncle Chris Car
  3. Housing Authority (feat. KXNG Crooked)
  4. One Day 03:13
  5. Masked Up
  6. Sincerely Yours
  7. OG 03:20
  8. Lifeline (feat. Juliet)
  9. Goin' Thru It (feat. Marc Scibilia)
  10. Holy Ghost (feat. Cyhi the Prynce)
  11. Therapeutic
  12. Love is Love (feat. Sheek Louch) (free) 03:48
  13. Doors Up (feat. Pastor LBS)

Singles

In My Feelings (prod. by The Heatmakerz)

"In My Feelings is exactly that. Audio venting and reminding everyone who I am, my story and how I'm still turning pages. My pen moving over Heatmakerz production. No hook. Just real talk." - Joell Ortiz

OG (prod. by Hesami)

"I feel so lucky to be able to call myself an "OG". Where I come from adulthood isn't always a guarantee. But here I am, alive and well still doing what I love to do. Music. As life changes so does my story. Just happy to still be able to share it with you all the best way I know how. Over these beats! Yaowa." - Joell Ortiz

Love Is Love (feat. Sheek Louch) [prod. by The Heatmakerz]
One Day (prod. by Apollo Brown)

submitted by /u/TheRoyalGodfrey
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Hey this is Grandtheft! My Debut Album Wild Way is Out Now! Ask Me Anything

Posted: 10 Nov 2021 10:05 AM PST

Hey all this artist and producer Grandtheft, I just released my debut album, Wild Ways with Duke Deuce, Gangsta Boo, Jazz Cartier, Cookiee Kawaii, The Good Perry, Flosstradamus & more last Friday on Fools Gold label Listen now.. For those unfamiliar, I'm known more for my bass music releases on Mad Decent label, collabs with Diplo and remixes for mainstream artists like Calvin Harris and Rihanna etc. I've toured the world playing raves and festivals but on this debut album, I returned to my roots as a hiphop DJ and beatmaker.

I'll be around all day to answer questions and hang.

I'm also in Dallas on Nov 11th and Chicago nov 20th - RSVP at grandtheftmusic.com/tour!!

submitted by /u/aaron_grandtheft
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Daily Discussion Thread 11/10/2021

Posted: 10 Nov 2021 10:30 AM PST

Welcome to the /r/hiphopheads daily discussion thread!

This thread is for:

  • objective questions with right/wrong answers (e.g. "Does anyone know what is happening with MIXTAPE?", "What is the sample in SONG?")
  • general hip-hop discussion
  • meta posts...e.g. ideas for the sub

Do not create a separate self post for these types of discussions outside of this thread - if you do, your post will be removed, as stated in the guidelines.

Weekly/Monthly Threads

Other ways to interact

There are a number of other ways to interact with other members of HHH:

New to /r/hiphopheads or hip-hop in general?

Check these out:


11/12

  • Silk Sonic - An Evening With Silk Sonic [Smooth Soul, Aftermath / Atlantic]
  • DaBaby - BACK ON MY BABY JESUS SHIT AGAIN [Pop Trap, South Coast / Interscope]
  • Snoop Dogg - The Algorithim (featuring Ice Cube, E-40, Too Short, Jadakiss, Benny the Butcher, Busta Rhymes, Mary J. Blige, Fabolous, Dave East + more) [West Coast Hip Hop, Def Jam]
  • French Montana - They Got Amnesia (featuring Drake, Kodak Black, Rick Ross, John Legend, Pop Smoke, Lil Durk, Fivio Foreign, Saweetie, Doja Cat, Fabolous, Max B, Coi Leray, Latto, Ty Dolla $ign, Lil Tjay & Moneybagg Yo) [Pop Rap, Wavy, Epic]
  • Savage Ga$p - forever yours [Emo Rap, Hyperpop, Crowned / 300]
  • Smiley - Buy Or Bye 2 (featuring Drake, Yung Bleu, OhGeesy + more) [Toronto Rap]
  • KA$HDAMI - hypernova (featuring Trippie Redd) [Plugg, Atlantic]
  • YSY A - Trap de Verdad [Argentinian, Trap, Cloud Rap, Independent]
  • Aries - BELIEVE IN ME, WHO BELIEVES IN YOU [YouTube Rap, Russ-core, WUNDERWORLD]
  • Aesop Rock & Blockhead - Garbology [Abstract Hip Hop, Rhymesayers]
  • Erika de Casier - The Sensational Remixes (featuring Mura Masa, Hannah Diamond, Eartheater, Smerz + more) [R&B, Indielectronica, 4AD]
  • Sega Bodega - Romeo (featuring Arca & Charlotte Gainsbourg) [Weirdo Electronic Shit, NUXXE]
  • DaBoii - House Arrest (featuring Cash Kidd, Remble, OMB Peezy, ALLBLACK + more) [Bay Area, Trap, SOB x RBE member, YWN / EMPIRE]
  • Joell Ortiz - Autograph (featuring KXNG Crooked, Cyhi The Prynce, Sheek Louch + more) [Boom Bap, Mello Music Group]
  • Medhane - Do the Math (featuring ELUCID, Navy Blue & Wiki) [Lo-Fi Hip Hop, NYC, Independent]
  • dltzk - Frailty [Hyperpop, Digicore, Trap]
  • Irreversible Entanglements - Open the Gates [Jazz Poetry, Moor Mother group, International Anthem]
  • Westside Tut - Pack of Slapz 5 (featuring Babyface Ray + more) [Trap, Family Business Music / Rapbay / Urbanlife]

Full Calendar

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[FRESH] Clams Casino - Water Theme 2

Posted: 10 Nov 2021 12:12 AM PST

Lil Wayne - Georgia Bush

Posted: 10 Nov 2021 07:34 PM PST

Casanova charged with attempted murder

Posted: 10 Nov 2021 09:39 PM PST

Smiley dropping "Buy & Bye 2" on Friday

Posted: 10 Nov 2021 07:55 AM PST

The Cool Kids - Penny Hardaway (feat. Ghostface Killah)

Posted: 10 Nov 2021 07:14 AM PST

[FRESH VIDEO] Famous Dex - Dehydrated

Posted: 10 Nov 2021 04:42 PM PST

Isaiah Rashad -- Food for Thought (feat. YGTUT & Amazn)

Posted: 10 Nov 2021 07:54 AM PST

[Throwback Thursday] Compton's Most Wanted - Hood Took Me Under

Posted: 10 Nov 2021 04:00 PM PST