Asaad
Quick to strike while the iron is hot, Cash Money Records co-founder Birdman continues his demands for R-E-S-P-E-K on his newly released track “Respek.”
PARTYNEXTDOOR put his pen to work on Rihanna’s number one Drake-assisted single “Work,” which rested atop of the Billboard charts for nine weeks.
Tracks dedicated to 4/20 continued to roll in during the afternoon and night hours on Wednesday night. Erykah Badu delivered the most entertaining song of the bunch with “I Been Goin Thru It All.”
Late last week, Lupe Fiasco announced a few changes in the plans for the three albums–DROGAS, DROGAS light*, and his final album SKULLS–he will release this year. Now he whets fans appetites with “CONVERSATIONS #1” and a follow up titled “Meditations On a New Diasporic Mythology Complex.”
Surprise, surprise. Royce Da 5’9” is streaming his new album, Layers, guilt-free before it releases on Friday (April 15).
As music fans, we have collectively let T-Pain down. But fret not, the Florida singer-songwriter is forgiving and continues to bless us with tracks like “Look At Me.”
Chicago’s own Lil Durk debuts his new track “Trap House,” featuring Young Thug and Young Dolph.
Here it is, the moment we’ve (read: this writer) been waiting for. Readying his Layers album for an April 15 release, Royce Da 5’9 premieres the title track, featuring rap heavyweights Pusha T and Rick Ross.
SBTRKT’s recent three-day string of music releases weren’t for not. Today, Aaron Jerome delivers a new album titled Save Yourself.
After giving Nylon the scoop on her recent dealings, Nicki Minaj delivers her second guess verse of the year on Bebe Rexha’s “No Broken Hearts.”
Boogie, a shining star in the rising class of Compton rappers, has a very nuanced set of skills, propelled, in part, by his comedic flair. No song in his catalog displays this like “Bitter Raps,” the sequel of which arrives today.
It’s a good day to be a Hip-Hop fan. Along with a surprise album from Kendrick Lamar and a collaborative mixtape from Lil Wayne and 2 Chainz, the Internets were also blessed with full-length releases from Dreamville’s Bas and Harlem-bred rhymeslinger Smoke DZA.