Daunte Wright’s Cop Shooter Kim Potter Resigns

After two days of unrest and emotional statements about the horrific killing of Black man Daunte Wright, the Minneapolis police officer responsible for taking his life has resigned. Daunte Wright’s Cop Shooter Resigns According to reports, the white cop who killed Wright has resigned 48 hours after the world took action with Black Lives Matter […]

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Sauce Walka Unveils “God Of Texas” Project

Behind the flamboyant fashion choices and sometimes controversial rants, Sauce Walka has always had a surplus of music ready to release, and the fans are always welcome to it. Last week, the rapper came through with back-to-back projects which included a solo album, a collaborative tape with El Trainn, and R&B Sauce

A fourth project emerged during the prolific run last week. God Of Texas is a 20-song body of work that brings Sauce Walka to the forefront alongside a slew of collaborators. Major names like Trippie Redd and A$AP Rocky appear while the majority of the features come from Sauce’s list of frequent collaborators like Peso Peso, Rico Glizzy, Sancho Saucy, El Trainn, and more.

Check out the latest project from the self-proclaimed God Of Texas below. 

LL Cool J Isn’t Happy About “Forefather of Pop Rap” Title

LL-Cool-J-Isnt-Happy-About-Forefather-of-Pop-Rap

Rap veteran LL Cool J wants respect put on his name. The hip-hop OG went to social media to voice his complaint about the title of “forefather of pop rap” being given to him. LL Cool J Isn’t Happy About Pop Rap Credit The “I Need Love” crooner took to Twitter to let followers known […]

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Megan Thee Stallion Interviews City Girls About “Hood” Days

Megan-Thee-Stallion-Interviews-The-City-Girls-About-Their-Hood-Days

Houston rapper Megan Thee Stallion is changing her career path. The Texas Hottie is trying her hand at interviewing and had some pretty dope guests to get started. Megan Thee Stallion Interviews The City Girls The “WAP” hitmaker interviewed Florida rap duo City Girls for Interview Magazine. The triad of superstars discussed their successes in the […]

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Funk Flex Calls Rappers Out Who Turn Off Comments Cowards

Funk-Flex-Calls-Rappers-Out-Who-Turn-Off-Comments-Cowards

Radio veteran Funk Flex thinks rappers need to just suck it up. The Hot 97 host recently spoke out against artists who turn off comments from haters on social media. Funk Flex Calls Rappers Out For Turning Off Comments Flex didn’t hold back on a new episode of “Cigar Talk” and called the rappers who […]

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NBA Youngboy’s GF’s Sister Comes For Yaya Mayweather Over Subliminal Shot

Iyanna “Yaya” Mayweather gave birth to her first child Kentrell Jr. earlier this year, welcoming the adorable baby boy into the world with her ex-boyfriend Youngboy Never Broke Again. If you’ve followed any of the stories surrounding Youngboy’s love life, you already know it’s a pretty complicated situation with the 21-year-old incarcerated rapper. He’s got seven children with different women, but he’s not presently tied to any one of them. 

In recent months, Youngboy has been spotted with Jazlyn Mychelle, who has proudly showed off their love on social media. They’re still in the earlier stages of their relationship, which is surely challenging right now with all of the legal obstacles facing the rapper. All the while, Yaya Mayweather continues to swoon over YB, seemingly angling to win him back. Sending a subliminal shot at Jazlyn online, Youngboy’s girlfriend’s older sister made sure that Floyd Mayweather’s daughter thought twice before coming for her family again, firing back with some words.


Unique Nicole/Getty Images

“I want all the smoke @moneyyaya !!!!! Lmao you should have stayed in yo place,” she wrote on Instagram Stories. “Why you do it to you self mega man @moneyyaya.” 

Her message continued, and you can read it all in the post below. It all started after Yaya allegedly tried to check Jazlyn Mychelle. 

What do you think about Yaya’s latest drama? Let us know in the comments.

Mustard Completely Exposes His Ex Personal Shopper

West Coast producer Mustard is putting all of his business out there. The award-winning hitmaker has come forward to call out a former employee after she did the most with his credit card. Mustard Completely Exposes His Ex Employee The longtime friend and producer for YG hit up his Instagram Story with big revelations. Mustard […]

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Brockhampton’s Expansive ‘Roadrunner’ Finds The Group At A Crossroads

The highlight of Brockhampton’s new album, Roadrunner: New Light, New Machine, is the production — as it so often is with the group’s full-length projects. But this time, there’s an interesting twist, as they incorporate more classic hip-hop sounds and styles into the overall sonic background of the album. It’s a gift and a curse; while the new approach may entice older fans and intrigue younger ones as it expands the group’s production palette, it also underscores some members’ shortcomings as rappers.

Collectively, Brockhampton is great at knowing what they want to say, but they don’t always have the mechanics to say it in a way that the message is clear, concise, or charismatic. The group has mostly gotten by on their boisterous, untethered energy and the propulsive momentum of beats ready-made for pep rallies and mosh pits. When things slow down, the barely controlled chaos they harnessed to electric effect on efforts like the Saturation series or Iridescence reads as unfocused and haphazard on later projects like 2019’s Ginger.

Even the rollouts for their projects have been chaotic; prior to the release of Iridescence, they told fans they’d release a project called Team Effort, then switched mid-stream to a “different” album called Puppy. Whether these were all different projects or the same project undergoing multiple name changes remains unclear, but it has seemed evident at times that the group’s commitment to hyperactivity onstage could seep into their behind-the-scenes work. While this tendency never quite derailed the momentum they’d built from Saturation I, II, and III, it made the ride bumpier than perhaps was strictly necessary.

After Kevin Abstract’s detour into solo work, it also seemed that there was possibly some distraction to the group’s super-collaborative approach — rumors of discontent bubbled to the surface by the time the group rolled out Ginger, including from Abstract himself. Perhaps the crew mentality has run its course; ahead of releasing Roadrunner, Abstract hinted that it would be the group’s first of two projects in 2021 as well as the penultimate Brockhampton release. In that sense, perhaps it’s fitting that it’s such a nostalgic but fractured work, reflecting the uncertain frame of mind the band’s members must be in as they prepare for their next step.

It’s also a much more collaborative album, with more guests than the group’s ever had before in an effort to freshen up the chemistry. “Chain On” is a great example of using throwback-sounding beats and a guest rapper to liven up their efforts, drawing on a sample of Wu-Tang Clan’s “C.R.E.A.M.” and a DJ Premier-esque sample loop with boom-bap drums to back verses from the group’s top rapper Dom McLennon and featured artist Jpegmafia. “Bankroll” takes a similar tack, employing ASAP Mob members Ferg and Rocky, as well as the New York crew’s goth trap sound to break up the pop-rap aesthetics of “Count On Me” and the Griselda Records-esque horror movie organs on “The Light.”

The latter track is perhaps one of the most personal songs the group has ever released, as Joba recounts his father’s death by suicide. It’s also jarring — maybe by choice — in how graphic its lyrics are and how it juxtaposes the visual elements of Joba’s recollections with a beat that’s almost too aggressive for them, confusing and obfuscating their emotional impact. Something more somber and melodic might have captured Joba’s emotional distress but instead, listeners are left wondering whether to dissociate and headbang to the menacing beat’s screaming electric guitar.

The musical experimentation, though, is something to behold, just in terms of the outright bananas combinations the crew throws together. A G-Funk saw wave degenerates into a buzzy guitar solo on “What’s The Occasion?” while “When I Ball” sounds like 2006-era Pharrell — a surefire inspiration for Kevin Abstract’s own musical hero Tyler The Creator. Miami Bass&B turns up on “I’ll Take You On” with Charlie Wilson, and album intro “Buzzcut” with Danny Brown is as close to the signature Brockhampton sound gets.

If the group’s lyrics and concepts don’t always keep up with its progressive genre experimentation, it’s only a sign that perhaps they’re pulling the ‘chute with near-perfect timing. With only one of the group’s members putting out a solo project to date, there’s still plenty of potential for individual growth, and perhaps that’s what they need to truly refresh their sound — or find it, in some cases. Roadrunner also suggests some clever directions for their future endeavors as well — Dom could delve deeper into the hardcore rap that obviously attracts him, while Kevin could explore his production with other artists who fit it better.

And just because they’ve mined as much as they can from their group efforts today doesn’t mean they won’t find a better configuration for it tomorrow. Given time and space to determine their musical identities may make it easier to maintain focus if or when they decide to come back together as a group, which could result in a much more cohesive product. For now, their “new machine” has done well enough to churn out a handful of intriguing ideas worthy of shedding a little more light on in the future.

Roadrunner: New Light, New Machine is out now on RCA Records. Get it here.

DreamDoll Employs CJ’s ‘Whoopty’ Beat For A Quick-Witted Freestyle

In the past few weeks, Staten Island rapper CJ’s breakout hit “Whoopty” has become a favored backdrop for rappers looking for a beat to help them get their bars off. Tierra Whack employed the Bollywood sampling track for an impromptu session on social media, while Westside Boogie and Polo G both utilized the beat in more elaborately shot music videos. Now, just a few days after sharing the spotlight with CJ on his follow-up single “Lil Freak,” his fellow New Yorker DreamDoll takes the instrumental for a test drive, pairing her fist-swinging rhymes with a lyric video to help fans follow along.

Although DreamDoll has a versatile flow of her own, she borrows CJ’s sparse cadence from the hook and puts her own twist on it, crowing that “This sh*t a Disney movie / You hang with the rats, you f*ck with the ducks, and most of your n****s is goofy.” It isn’t the first rap to toy with puns based on the popular cartoon characters, but DreamDoll’s confidence carries the line and makes it work.

DreamDoll has similarly displayed her talent for witticisms on tracks with Hitmaka (the “Thot Box” remix featuring Chinese Kitty, Dreezy, and Young M.A) and Fivio Foreign (“Ah Ah Ah“).

Listen to DreamDoll’s “Whoopty” freestyle above.

CJ is a Warner Music artist. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

CJ Plays A Simmering Rendition Of ‘Bop’ For ‘UPROXX Sessions’

In a bit of a curveball for his first Uproxx Sessions performance, buzzing Staten Island rapper CJ foregoes his big hit, “Whoopty,” in favor of playing a simmering rendition of its slick follow-up “Bop.” Sporting a low-key black-on-black ensemble, CJ delivers a pitch-perfect performance with all the restrained energy of the swaggering original recording.

CJ, who saw the 2020 “Whoopty” climb all the way to the top ten of the Billboard Hot 100, was resolute in pursuing the success of his breakout hit with new music, following up with an EP, Loyalty Over Royalty, earlier this year. This past New Music Friday, he dropped a deluxe edition, which featured two remixes of “Whoopty” that approached the song from different angles.

On the NYC Remix, he recruited vocal doppelganger French Montana and the recently released Brooklyn drill prototype Rowdy Rebel to add complementary verses to his, then, on the Latin Mix, he employed fellow Latino artists Anuel AA and Ozuna to speak their piece. Not content to just ride remixes of his breakout, CJ also dropped videos for most of the songs on the EP, including “Bop,” “Real One,” and “Set,” then put out a new song from the deluxe, the sex-positive “Lil Freak” featuring fellow New Yorker DreamDoll.

Watch CJ’s Uproxx Sessions performance of “Bop” above.

UPROXX Sessions is Uproxx’s performance show featuring the hottest up-and-coming acts you should keep an eye on. Featuring creative direction from LA promotion collective, Ham On Everything, and taking place on our “bathroom” set designed and painted by Julian Gross, UPROXX Sessions is a showcase of some of our favorite performers, who just might soon be yours, too.

CJ is a Warner Music artist. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.