Bas Unpacks His New Album, Dreamville Dynamics, Higher Callings & Much More

Balance might be the best word to describe Bas’ artistry, and we just got his best example of that yet. Moreover, he just released his new album today– his first in five years– We Only Talk About Real S**t When We’re F***ed Up. In it, the Sudanese-American MC from Queens discusses the heights of his career, the good times it’s brought, the struggles with love he still faces, and the breadth of mental and emotional tolls that this life takes on a star– and that life takes on everyone. There’s a lot to dissect from a sonic and lyrical standpoint here, with so many themes that are tackled with grace and vivid honesty over a wide variety of moods, soundscapes, and emotive pallets.

Fortunately, the Dreamville star spoke to us in this new interview about it all, and you’ll find a lot of insight into his process here. In addition, he goes over the dynamics within his legendary label and his close friends, the spirit of live collaboration, the social and humanitarian issues plaguing his family’s home of Sudan, and how he’s grown, learned, and processed his emotions through his craft. Bas is by no means an easy rapper to box in, but this conversation yielded a strong sense of constance in every style and life aspect he faces. He enjoys it all with the same level of humility and passion, and that’s a rare sight in today’s world.

While stuck in heavy traffic in São Paulo for a performance, the 36-year-old still hopped on a call to discuss his new album, talk about his favorite movie of the year, and give us a compelling slice of his amazing career. Why persevere through it all as an industry artist and deal with all the deafening noise it brings? Well, because of the balance he found within it, which makes him fulfilled, happy, and free.

This interview has been edited for brevity and clarity.

Bas New Album
Kgotso Aphane for The Fiends

HNHH: Bas, I wanted to dive right into We Only Talk About Real S**t When We’re F***ed Up. I feel like this is very much a statement album from you, and one that really sums up a lot of your artistic values. How did the concept of the album come about, and what inspired some of the material, especially given the distance between this and Milky Way?

Bas: Probably the genesis of it was when I did “Risk” for FKJ. He kind of inspired me, for his project, he had some things he wanted to do that I found inspiration in. [Considering COVID-19], these careers have kind of grinded to a halt, like everyone else. Everyone’s routine, their social life, everything was kind of disrupted, and I just found us having these conversations that we had never had before, you know? These are, like, guys I considered my friends for 20 plus years. Brothers, you know, like family, and they were expressing these things and I was expressing these things to them. I just was like, “Wow, this is just something meaningful, this is something relatable. This is something that I want to find a way to bring to an audience.” While still kind of protecting people’s identities, but it was more so the things that we’re going through, the themes of the conversations, these moments we were going through. I wanted to find a way to approach every song kind of from that level.

Do you have a favorite song of yours from this time, whether it was in the writing process or in the recording process?

Oh, man… I don’t know if there’s one favorite. The last song I did was the intro, “Light Of My Soul,” which is produced by Boi-1da. I think I was kind of chasing that [concept] chasing it self-consciously. So I think when that one came along, it just kind of let me know that I had tied that last ribbon and came full circle. Obviously, with the outro being “Wait On Me” and everything I’m discussing on that record, I just felt like it was the perfect bookend.

Speaking of “Light Of My Soul,” I did want to ask you about a particular bar that I thought was really interesting off of the album, which was when you talk about “not blaming them boys anymore” after you mentioned that people were stealing from you and Cole. Does that resonate for you when you think about the album’s wider themes and how you were thinking about each song?

It’s funny, man, me and Boi-1da were having this same conversation. He made a statement that I just loved. He was like, “Sometimes, it’s hard not to put on the Venom suit.” You know, like, you try to be a stand up guy. You try to do as good as you can by others. But sometimes it’s tempting to feel like you’ve been done wrong, and to put on the Venom suit and let go of all those… But, you know, it’s important not to let them compromise you and yourself. Even that line, like, I’m not mad at those dudes. It’s a shame, but that’s just a weakness in people, you know what I mean?

This has been a really big year for you, Bas, whether it’s artistically or personally. When you look back at some of your favorite memories that really defined this year for you, particularly around the creation of this album, which stands out to you?

I would just say there was a lot of live music that went into this album. I did some sessions with my boy, Linden Jay. He introduced me to Lydia– well, I actually knew Lydia, she’s part of Jungle, I don’t know if you’re familiar with Jungle. They contributed a lot to this album. Lydia is on maybe five records and Linden producing, they have kind of a collective from London. We did a lot of sessions just going in and kind of doing jams. I’m writing songs in a voice note, and I’m just kind of watching them and all of what they do. It’s like a refreshing departure from getting a beat and writing to it, or someone coming in the studio and making beats.

In a sense, it was really refreshing to create in that environment. I think it pushed my artistry. There’s a bunch of times we linked in L.A., we linked in London. We ended up doing “Diamonds;” that was me using the juxtaposition of their soulful sound with a Jersey bounce that my homie Depth did the drums on. So it was kind of fun to expand my sound in that sense. Obviously, a lot of people I work with, whether it’s FKJ or Cole, T-Minus, Diesel, you know, we’ve had a rapport already. But I think every album, I’m looking for a new wrinkle, and they definitely helped provide that and inspired me and pushed me in a new direction.

The reason why I asked you is because HotNewHipHop is doing an Advent Calendar series where, leading up to Christmas, we’re gonna do a retrospective on the year with a lot of different artists, interviews, lists, stuff like that. With that in mind, what’s some of your favorite media from this year? I know you play a lot of video games, but it can be like an album, a movie, a good book… What were your media obsessions throughout the year that inspired you or you just had a lot of fun with?

Oh man, Oppenheimer. Loved Oppenheimer, that was a great cinematic experience. You know, I always draw a lot of inspiration from film. I mean, on Milky Way, I sampled a few movies. That’s just like a headache to clear; I had to kind of learn that lesson. I feel like the way directors kind of build their worlds is something I’ve always admired and try to do the same when it comes to creating albums. I like to build these cohesive landscapes. Obviously, Christopher Nolan’s a G when it comes to that, so I think Oppenheimer was definitely a very inspiring piece of media this year for me.

Gotcha. Did you do Barbenheimer by any chance?

Nah, I didn’t, honestly. We were in London doing some press when it dropped. I caught, like, a 10AM ticket to see Oppenheimer. It was, like, the last seat so we just kind of lucked up.

You’ve also been doing a lot of performances around this time. You’re in São Paulo right now, and you were recently in South Africa at the Rocking The Daisies festival with some familiar faces. What do you think is one thing about performing overseas for artists that other artists or the media don’t talk about as much? Or something that maybe surprised you about the experience of switching between.

With doing Rocking The Daisies and going to South Africa, I think Africa as a whole is just really slept on from a live show perspective, you know? I think the fans there are just as rabid, if not more excited, to see us. They have a lot less access, you know, so I guess there’s less entitlement to it. Or less, like, “seen it all before” kind of vibe that sometimes you might get in New York City or L.A., where you get to see all your favorite acts whenever you want, damn near. It’s cool to get that energy out there and just build. That’s why I brought a few of the homies last year and this year we brought JID and Denzel Curry and Westside Boogie, MixedByAli. It’s cool to see, and to show even those artists that don’t even understand their reach, that people have all that love out there waiting for them.

[This specific question and subsequent answer, via email, is from after the interview was recorded.] I’m curious about how “The Sound Of Tomorrow” came about, a collaboration with The Fiends and EngineEars to bring on other artists to perform and kick it at this festival. What was that experience like?

[Via email] We’ve long partnered with EngineEars on previous projects, such as the Seeing Sounds educational workshops. “The Sound of Tomorrow” was our chance to be a platform and bring aspiring artists to perform in South Africa, a country we’ve always valued for its high musical IQ and giant cultural footprint. Our partners at Rocking The Daisies festival shared our enthusiasm and dreams were made true.

I’m glad you brought up those tight-knit personal connections. A lighter question I wanted to ask you is about a “call for help” that you put out in June to wrangle J. Cole back inside, you wrote, “by the dreads, if you must” because he was running up five-figure bar tabs and stuff like that. How does the Dreamville crew balance out this “work hard, play hard” mentality? You all seem so close going through these journeys together and as lifelong friends.

Yeah, the “play hard” part of it, it leads to a lot of inspiration, obviously. Our music kind of runs the gamut: you might hear us do something introspective and more vulnerable, then you might hear something like “Passport Bros.” That probably would’ve never happened if me and Cole weren’t in London and Barcelona and Miami on benders, you know what I mean? So I think, with anything, our music is always going to reflect our life, and it’s always going to be honest in that regard. You want to be well-balanced in that effect. It’s a blessing to travel the world with your homies and be well-received in all these cities and just have a blast. Like, these are the moments we’re gonna remember forever, so we got to immortalize them in the music.

That sense of balance is something I’ve been thinking about a lot with this new album. You do such a great job of not just balancing things out topically, but also in the production. You mentioned Jersey, there are a lot of Afrobeat influences on here, you have your classic boom-bap cuts, you have your more dreamy Jungle-inspired stuff. Did you expect to tackle all of these genres in this way? You’ve always been very versatile, but did you expect to tackle something like a Jersey beat or something like “Passport Bros,” something like “Diamonds”?

That’s a great question. No, honestly, I think when it began, it was much more of just a slow burn. You know, the “Diamonds,” the “Risk,” the “Wait On Me.” I knew that I wanted to give it some tempo, some bounce, just just some sonic curveballs. So when I started doing the more Afrobeat-type records, and that tempo kind of opened up the space to do the Jersey bounce, to do the amapiano, it just felt like a way to get there and still remain cohesive, you know? I have songs like “The Jackie” that could’ve been on the album, but they just felt like they didn’t belong. I wanted to find a way to still bring energy and vary the sonic landscape. Everything kind of was built brick by brick, but I think in the beginning, it was just all those slow burn records.

Do you think that came about more from you talking with producers, or it was just sounds that were presented to you naturally? That you were, like, “Oh, actually, I could probably do that.”

Yeah, nah, I think the first one was “U-Turn” with my brother DJ Mo, who produced it with his partner Guy. Obviously, “U-Turn” is still super vibey like a lot of the album, but it kind of introduced the Afrobeat element. Once we had that, we were able to grow that into “Testify,” which is the amapiano production. I did that with Loma as well and the homie Herc from South Africa, from Johannesburg, and Sha Sha. They’re all part of the ecosystem of the Stay Low record label, the guys I do the festival with out there. So everything kind of happened naturally in that regard. Then once we had that, I was like, “Alright, well, let’s kind of build this section out a little more.” Obviously, I’m from New York, and I’ve been inspired by what’s going on on the East Coast with the Jersey bounce. I had this Jungle sample, and I’m like, “Well, if I did it, how would I make it my way?”

So I had the Jungle sample that they sent me. They sent me to loop and I went to the homie and I’m like, “Man, throw a Jersey bounce on this, let’s see what it sounds like.” It was cool, honestly. I would say “U-Turn” was the beginning of that whole up-tempo section. Then we built it out. I like to think of albums in acts, you know? I think that act of that album is super important. It kind of gives you that space in the middle that’s kind of a curveball without taking you out of the sound of the album. Then the last act is probably personally my favorite. That starts with “Paper Cuts” and goes into “Diamonds” and “Yao Ming” and “Wait On Me” and “Dr. O’Blivion.” Those are the mission statements of the album, those last five, six songs, you know?

I like that you get introduced to what it’s doing, you get taken on this ride, and then there’s that sobering moment at the end. It’s also kind of akin to how these convos happen, you know? Like, “Passport Bros” is kind of like that 2AM, 3AM moment where we’re lost in the good times. Everyone’s getting lit and we haven’t reached that point where we make it back to the hotel suite. It’s five, six in the morning, we’re sitting on the balcony with whatever we got left to drink. That’s when the real s**t, that’s when the real conversations really come out of us, you know? I think the album kind of mirrors that art of how those nights happen.

One thing that’s always impressed me about your music is your balance of melodic, buttery performances and rapid-fire, personal, and braggadocious verses. “Diamonds” stood out to me as a particularly good example of this. Is there any difference for you in the creative and recording process for melody and for verses, or do they both come from a similar headspace in terms of writing?

I think with melody, I don’t worry about the words as much at first. It’s about just finding the right melody that complements the music and the instrumentation. Then I can kind of devise my words from there, Opposed to something like “Light Of My Soul,” where there’s something I clearly want to say and get across, that’s going to probably be much more pensive in writing. But I think with melody a lot of times, if you’re just trying to be on your phone or in your notepad, you can miss the magic, you know? Sometimes you just want to throw the headphones on, turn them up, cut the mic on, and just kind of go with what you feel. At the end of the day, especially when it’s melody, you really want the audience to feel whatever it is you’re feeling. You want to evoke that emotion. Once you have that emotion that you’re going for, whatever emotion the music is giving you, then the words are usually not too far behind. I think the most important part is getting that melody that just feels right.

Would you say that for this album, the melodic elements came about once you had the music laid down, or did you try to plan everything out beforehand?

No, I would say all of them came from the music. I think that first things first is what the producer does, or what the musicians do. That’s why I had such a good time recording with Lydia and Linden and that whole U.K. collective of multi-instrumentalists. I can just sit there while they’re jamming out, pull out my phone, and just voice note some melodies, you know? That way, everybody can keep jamming. I don’t have to stop the session, like, I was just doing a lot of that on my phone. And then I’ll kind of deep dive into it after.

That’s an interesting process considering how easy it can be to share beats, studio sessions, verses that you record and send back, and two collaborators might not even be in the same room. You can really tell on this album when that live instrumentation is coming together because it feels like it’s pulling from so many different places that it might be harder to materialize when you don’t have that closeness.

Yeah, absolutely. It was all hands on deck. You know, some of the things I would do, they would add me into what I had heard, or counter-melodies, or just really help bring it all to life. They really helped center on my sounds and my artistry.

I wanted to mention one of your singles from the album, which I think is also among the most powerful songs. “Khartoum” is a song that you reflected on social media a couple of weeks ago on how it means a lot to you. You also mentioned that you were a little bit skeptical about whether or not the message was going to be able to cut through all the noise, which it definitely has for people. You reposted a lot of messages that you got after releasing that song, which speaks about the violence in Sudan, and about everything that’s going on. That’s unfortunately really within context with what’s going on in Gaza and so many other places in the world right now. Why do you think that it can be so difficult for these humanistic messages to resonate with audiences these days, especially within the genres that you’re playing in?

Man, that’s a great question. I mean, I wish I knew, but I’d be lying if I didn’t say I’m conscious of that, you know? That’s where sometimes, you get to like, “Man, like, do people even want to hear this? You know what I mean? Are people even gonna care, can they relate? That’s the biggest thing, because you’re making music for people to relate to. But with that song, it just felt about a higher purpose. I had to speak for people who are voiceless at this time, and it just felt like something I had to do, you know. I didn’t care about the metrics or anything of that nature. Like, we might usually pore over how did this stream first week, and anything you regularly would do with a single. None of those things really mattered. It was more for friends and family that are in that struggle. For my parents who wake up every day and deal with that depression of seeing their motherland torn apart. To my cousins, and everyone in the diaspora that feels the same way. It just felt like it was something I had to do.

Absolutely. I think it really resonated powerfully on the record. It starts off with a very melodic verse, very melodic chorus, and then you really get into the meat of things, ending off with the audio of a news report. Was that a main idea for you with that song structurally, in terms of wanting to ease people into that process? I just found it very interesting the way that you presented it by structuring out the song.

Yeah, to be honest, Adekunle Gold, who’s on that record– he’s from Nigeria, super dope artist– he came in the studio. This was, like, September, me and my guy Kel-P, we’re doing some sessions. Kel-P has produced a few songs for me, including “Ho Chi Minh.” [Adekunle] did the hook. Man, I just loved the hook, it brought so much emotion out of me. When I went to write my verse, I didn’t necessarily know what I was going to write about. But again, you always let the music dictate the emotion. And then it just came to me. As soon as… I think “Carryin’ everybody’s ills” was the first bar. That was just months of pent-up frustration and depression about the situation back home.

Like I said, seeing seeing my elders in a way I’d never seen them, speaking to friends that were fleeing the country, family that were fleeing the country, hearing the horrors of what they were going through, and not having anyone to really speak to about it on my end. It’s hard for people to relate to that, you know? So until I got to write it– I can’t remember, maybe “Live For” on Too High To Riot was the only other time I’ve really shed tears writing something. I wrote it in a small writing room away from the homies, and I had to gather myself before I even went to record it. It was just such an emotional outpouring for me. It just all came out. I definitely salute my boy A.G. and all the producers that were involved with that. They really set the template that just really pulled those emotions out.

It’s also something that the rest of the album does really well; you’re very specific with how you relate to issues that can be very general. You know, coming up through struggle, love, a national issue of violence and poverty. I wanted to ask you about how you kind of reached that specificity. I think that it’s through specifically learning about issues like what’s going on with your home country of Sudan that actually helped folks reckon with some of the very different issues that might be going on for other communities. Through that specificity, you do end up kind of reaching something universal, and I just wanted to kind of get your thoughts on that and how you think that contributes to your art.

Yeah, I think that’s why I named the album We Only Talk About Real S**t When We’re F***ed Up. I wanted every subject to be able to tie back to it. Even if it’s testified as more of like a sneaky link. Like you’re drunk-texting at 3AM and you’re trying to link with this girl, essentially. It’s still one of those things that happens in those moments. Whether it’s “Khartoum,” where that one doesn’t even speak to being f***ed up from a drug or alcohol-induced way. That’s just being being f***ed up mentally, in your soul, in your spirit. Being down bad. I wanted every song to be able to tie back or speak from that perspective. Like you said, that is relatable. Then I wanted to make sure I varied the subjects because I wanted to really give the concept depth, you know what I mean?

Everything from “Light Of My Soul,” which is me trying to maintain my better nature in the midst of continuously getting taken advantage of for my better nature. Or “Decent,” which I’m learning as I grow that there are no perfect partners. Everyone has their ups and downs. You really just want to find someone who’s decent at the end of the day, like someone who you can trust to be a decent person. All those themes and all those subjects have a root, and that’s what the album title signifies. Even “Home Alone,” where Cole is speaking on his childhood trauma of realizing at five years old that he’s the man at a house because somebody’s trying to break into his crib. I’m speaking on some of the things I went through in New York when I was running around in the streets and had an attempt on my life.

Those are really traumatizing moments, you know, for both of us. Those are convo that are almost impossible to have sober, you know what I mean? But they come out of us when our guard is down, when our inhibitions are down. When we feel safe enough or confident enough to speak on it. The majority of the subjects on the album were not easy to tackle at all, but they were incredibly fulfilling artistically.

Bas New Album
LAS VEGAS, NEVADA – SEPTEMBER 17: Bas performs onstage during the 2021 iHeartRadio Music Festival on September 17, 2021 at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada. EDITORIAL USE ONLY. (Photo by Denise Truscello/Getty Images for iHeartMedia)

I’m glad that you were able to find that fulfillment and work with people that, as you mentioned, really fueled that and inspired you to go in those lanes. I wanted to bring it all the way back to 2013, when you released your second mixtape, Quarter Water Raised Vol. 2. You also featured on Cole’s Born Sinner along with 50 Cent. Looking back at those days when your career was taking off and you were finding these connections and these audiences that would be so important to you, what do you think has changed the most about you as a person and artist since then? What would you say is something that has remained very constant for these past 10 years?

I think what’s changed the most is that I’m fully past my 10,000 hours. Then, I think, I had the benefit of guys like Cole, Ron Gilmore, and the producers that I was working with that had put in their 10,000 hours and were developing me as an artist. Therefore, they helped me kind of speed along in the process. Obviously, since then, my ability with my pen, my ability with my voice, my ability to implement my opinions into my sound, and being able in a sense to help produce my sound has grown. But I think what’s remained the same is, even from my earliest mixtapes, I was rapping on Jamiroquai instrumentals. I was jumping on U.K. garage. In my soul, I was always building this very expansive sound that I’m thankfully looking now in retrospect at how it’s kind of kept me out of a box.

It’s helped me build the fanbase that respects and admires the risks that I take sonically. I see sometimes in my peers, that’s not so much the case. Even if they’re dope at something new, people don’t even give them the chance because it’s like, “Yo, this is the version of you we want, the version of you we’ve grown to love, and we don’t want to hear nothing else.” I almost feel bad for them, because that’s so limiting for an artist. I think that’s one thing that I’m thankful that I did from the beginning, just kind of opening up the sonic pallet.

Obviously, this is in a very different way than what you’re doing as well, because you play with so many different genres and so many different styles and do them all in your very own way. But I can’t help but ask if you’re looking at all the really bad Twitter takes on the new André 3000 album and feeling that way.

Yeah, I mean, that’s kind of a perfect example. Even though like, man, to me, André is one of those guys who’s been doing things left of center forever. So it’s like, I’m not surprised, and he absolutely deserves to do this, you know what I mean? He absolutely deserves to do whatever he wants creatively, and I’m here for it. It’s gonna get my attention, it’s gonna get my play. Was this album for me? No, I can’t say it was for me, necessarily. But that’s what the guy wanted to do, and he deserves to do that. I don’t know what the takes are on Twitter, so I’m not really sure what you’re alluding to. But I played it. I definitely listened to it.

You can imagine the whole thing of like, “André, there are no bars, we wanted you to rap, blah, blah, blah.” It’s that kind of thing of expectations from the fanbase and everything. But I do agree that you’ve done a really good job of always presenting that genre shift. Just being very creative with it in a way that I think has pulled your fans in this really interesting way.

Yeah, I appreciate it.

I’d be remiss not to close off with celebrating hip-hop’s 50th anniversary. What was the thing that got you into hip-hop, whether it’s the music, the culture, or the history? What is something that you would show somebody who wants to get into this half a century run in 2023?

I would say, for me, Pharrell and The Neptunes. Growing up, I listened to a lot of music. I think one of the first albums I bought with my own money was Daft Punk’s Discovery. So when I saw Pharrell in that world, and then The Neptunes in that world, and then how they built their sounds in the streets from almost an electronic sound, it heavily appealed to me. But then, you know, Get Rich Or Die Tryin’, that was a big moment. I think that’s what I would play for anybody. Like, if some aliens landed from Mars next week, and they were like, “Play me one hip-hop album,” I’m putting on Get Rich Or Die Tryin’ without a doubt.

Bas Interview New Album
Kgotso Aphane for The Fiends

That’s a great answer, and I think those are two core strains that are essential to a lot of hip-hop today. Well, Bas, thank you so much for this! Is there anything else that you would like to add or shout out or speak about?

Nah, man, I appreciate you. Those were hella well-thought out. I’m glad, and the way you received this album got me even more excited to share it with the world.

The post Bas Unpacks His New Album, Dreamville Dynamics, Higher Callings & Much More appeared first on HotNewHipHop.

Hip-Hop Albums That Grew On Us The Most In 2023

No matter how hard you try, it’s practically impossible to listen to everything that you would like to in any given year. That was especially the case in 2023; we got a lot of amazing music, and a lot of it fell under our radar because of the sheer quantity of it. Moreover, so many hip-hop albums deserve more credit, and we had a blast looking back at some underrated releases of the year. Maxo’s Even God Has A Sense Of Humor, Homeboy Sandman’s Rich with Mono En Stereo, Paris Texas’ MID AIR, Ways Of Knowing by Navy Blue, and so many more deserved more love than they got from the mainstream this year. But that’s not what this list is about. Rather, this list goes over the ten albums in no particular order that grew on us the most in 2023.

Whether they just came out at a busy time, didn’t have the initial impact they went on to have with time, or just simply didn’t hit our ears right the first time, we found plenty of reasons to keep going back to these projects, and were surprised every single time. In a saturated year that felt more divided and stunted in the mainstream than ever, these hip-hop albums remind us that we can’t always look to the future. Sometimes, we need to reevaluate what we’ve heard, especially with the context of the full year in mind, in order to see what really defined 2023. Hopefully, you pick up some new recommendations from this list and look back on what you would put on here. Drop your own list in the comments section below, and let’s go over the albums we were happy to be wrong about.

Key Glock – Glockoma 2

Kicking off our list is one of the hardest, grimiest, and most energizing hip-hop albums of the year. Key Glock’s deluxe version of Glockoma 2 really made many fans appreciate the project’s original vision all the more, and you can count us in that group. It was a relatively warm year for mainstream trap, and this record stands as one of the most well-executed, consistent, and self-aware additions in its lore. It knows exactly what it is, doesn’t try to be anything more, and ends up becoming even more compelling as a result. Whereas other LPs this year tried to do so much of everything, the Memphis MC stuck to his guns and made sure that every attempt at a similar vibe was equally quality.

Of course, it’s this adherence to the style that made us and many others under-appreciate Glockoma 2 initially. It seemed like as the year went on, we realized that not many bangers were going harder than “Dirt,” “F**k A Feature,” “In & Outta Town,” “Chromosomes,” and so many more. Also, it’s important to make it clear that Key Glock also stepped up on the lyrical end and wrote with engaging, addictive, impactful, and undeniably catchy and charismatic finesse. Sometimes, we focus too much on what trap albums have or lack in addition to its foundation. But Glizzock showed us that there is nothing more important to cultivate for a trap album experience than the ground floor.

BIA – REALLY HER

Speaking of hip-hop albums that grew on us after a deluxe release, we have REALLY HER from BIA. This year was dominated by female hip-hop, and as is sadly the case for femcees, it seems labels and the media only focus on a couple at a time. As such, we didn’t give this project its deserved time of day. But as far as full experiences go, this became one of the most fleshed-out of the year in this category, and is a versatile display of skill. The Boston MC is just as capable of flowing adeptly over soulful beats, slow trap bangers, club anthems, and fast-paced lyrical onslaughts. Needless to say, it’s got a little bit of everything for you to love.

Furthermore, there is even some tasteful reggaetón fusion on “FOUR SEASONS” that makes up one of the most slept-on tracks of the year. BIA also dishes out impressive and boastful lyricism on “I’M THAT B***H,” “BIG BUSINESS,” “CLASSY,” and pretty much every other cut. As such, REALLY HER is a lavish and brag-heavy album, one whose bombast and erratic variety took some getting used to. Nevertheless, few breakout LPs from stars this year were as dynamic and detailed with each new listen, despite the subject matter being relatively one-note. But again, it’s not so much about what you’re doing: it’s about how well you do it, and in that sense, the 32-year-old is… well, you know how this pun ends.

Cash Cobain – Pretty Girls Love Slizzy

Hip-hop is more about vibes than ever these days, and whether that’s a good or bad thing is a conversation for another time. Instead, what matters is whether artists accurately execute that focus. When we first heard Cash Cobain’s new album, the reliance on drill and Jersey club beats for its otherwise woozy production choices was a bit of a turn-off. After all, especially in 2023, these styles can feel like a dead horse that the industry keeps beating over and over again. But there’s a reason for that, and with time, we identified why we kept coming back to Pretty Girls Love Slizzy. If we’re talking about odd, balanced, and timely rap music from this year, few were able to capture that description as uniquely as the plugg exponent.

Moreover, Cash Cobain’s delivery and synth choices on tracks like “Slizzy Dialogue” and “Send The Addy” contrast curiously with the fast flows and beat tempos. While it’s a tad repetitive, there’s definitely a much more interesting genre and mood fusion here than what we initially gave it credit for. Not only that, but “So Fire,” “Nice N Slow,” “Clocking U,” and more switch up the tracklist flow quite effectively. Overall, this type of hypnosis and consistent haze that Pretty Girls Love Slizzy keeps you under is hard to see at face value. It’s only when you fully understand what it’s going for, and judge it on that metric, that you unlock its appeal.

ICECOLDBISHOP – GENERATIONAL CURSE

Next up is what might be the most underrated, creative, exciting, and idiosyncratic hip-hop debut of 2023. Still, when we first heard this Los Angeles rapper’s album, we felt it was quite good, but far too indebted to its influences, namely Kendrick Lamar. There’s a lot of themes, eccentric vocal inflections, and flows that overlap with his early 2010s output, which might be a turn-off for some listeners. But we’d argue that ICECOLDBISHOP goes even further into this zany and wild direction with shifting production styles, energetic deliveries, and a very one-of-a-kind vocal tone. With each new listen, it sounds more and more like GENERATIONAL CURSE could’ve only come from his mind, which is a rare feat to accomplish.

Narratively, this album paints a vivid and unique picture of violence, misogyny, and gutted economic and social mobility, a tragic reality for many communities in L.A. Songs like “FOCUSED” progress directly into “LAST NIGHT,” and others like “THE GOV’T GAVE US GUNS” and “TIL THE END” pack a potent punch both ideologically and sonically. Whether it’s trap heavy hitters, tough-as-nails boom-bap, or West Coast worship, ICECOLDBISHOP engages with a lot of different sounds here. He does it all with an amateurish and childlike sense of whimsy, vibrance, color, and personality, which illustrates how the horrors he reflects on can be so destructive at such an early age, and to people who don’t have the mature tools to reckon with them. A poignant and musically compelling message, to say the least.

grouptherapy. – i was mature for my age, but i was still a child

Alternative hip-hop had a big year in 2023, with it becoming more intertwined with the mainstream than ever thanks to some big releases. i was mature for my age, but i was still a child didn’t really form part of that movement at first glance. Moreover, the group dynamic on display, the treatment of many different rap styles, and its similarities to other artists like Tyler, The Creator, BROCKHAMPTON, and many more had us thinking this album was a bit derivative. It didn’t take long, though, for grouptherapy.– a trio of former child actors– to drill their ear-worms and emotional sincerity into our brains. The quirks that perk your ear up startlingly on first listen are the idiosyncrasies that define its vision and charm.

Look no further than tracks like “Lightspeed ~>,” “how i’m feeling,” “thatsmycheck.,” “HOT!,” and many more for some truly bubbly, catchy, and vibrant choruses. What’s more is that Jadagrace, SWIM, and TJOnline blend boom-bap, acoustic balladry, and funky, frenetic percussion to craft personal, witty, and often dizzying verses. There’s a lot of charisma on display on i was mature for my age, but i was still a child, one that’s almost too sugary on impact. But each revisit makes it clearer that said reaction is a byproduct of how unfiltered, concentrated, and honest these artists’ work is. Rather than seeking compromise with mellowed-out diversions to the mainstream, they occupy that space with all the joy, sadness, angst, and heartfelt wonder that music fans often want to see distilled and reined in. grouptherapy. has no need for such restrictions, and we were fools to assumer otherwise.

Young ThugBUSINESS IS BUSINESS

When this album dropped right after Gunna’s a Gift & a Curse, many felt that the student had become the master. Although Wunna ended up coming through with the more impactful project, Young Thug proved once again that he’s forever imitated– and never replicated. His infectious energy and inflections on tracks like “Money On The Dresser,” “Went Thru It,” and “Uncle M” still stand as some of the most expressive performances in 2023’s mainstream. In fact, in hindsight, these moments stand as even more raw, unique, and above all, fun. Perhaps that’s the most important thing that kept us coming back to Thugger’s newest offering, especially amid a RICO trial with other YSL affiliates that gets more disheartening each week.

However, BUSINESS IS BUSINESS still impresses in other areas of sonic quality, songwriting, and variety. Metro Boomin’s executive production sometimes carries Young Thug or his featured guests, songs like “Jonesboro” and “Want Me Dead” contain powerful moments and progressions, and despite much of this album comprising of his vault, there’s still a strong sense of cohesion and interplay between each cut. It’s by no means a perfect release, and still pales in comparison to the Atlanta native’s best work in the 2010s. But speaking of which, there is still so much fun to be had here, and the more that the album ages beyond the context of its release, we can appreciate it for what it is.

7xvethegenius & DJ Green Lantern – The Genius Tape

The Griselda movement is now no longer limited to its label roster, as so many artists have embraced it as a new wave. In fact, 7xvethegenius is on Conway The Machine’s Drumwork label, one of a couple of offshoots and new artists to emerge from its initial splash. As such, compared to other more high-profile releases from these camps during 2023, this one fell under our radar. With just 28 minutes of material and a straightforward mentality, The Genius Tape feels unassuming and standard at first glance. But when you dive into the lyricism and hear the beats compliment one another more and more, you’ll see that it might be this year’s best example of this rap subgenre.

Love achieves this through her mastery of flow switch-ups, displayed on songs like “Biddy Mason,” “Back End Development,” or “Lost On Mars.” In addition, Lantern’s keys-centric boom-bap provides a dreamy glue that ties the whole album together. Most importantly, though, what makes this project stand out among similar and more popular peers is the hunger. Griselda’s been hot for almost a decade now, and that longevity means that there’s a certain fatigue settling in with its fanbase. But the Buffalo femcee reveals her skill, her come-up, her unique perspective on street life and social issues– and an acknowledgement of her own growth and what’s left to do– with determined responsibility. Love knew how important this was for her, and hopefully that drive is something she keeps bringing to the Drumwork camp.

Lucki – s*x m*ney dr*gs

On the opposite end of that spectrum, sometimes a more reserved, vibe-heavy, and woozy aesthetic is what drives artists to perfect their craft. That mission is what initially turned us off from Lucki’s latest. With psychedelic plugg and trap production, drowsy vocal performances, and a one-note albeit concise tracklist, we didn’t think s*x m*ney dr*gs had much to offer. But repeat listens, especially in a more casual context, prove that there’s more than one way to resonate with fans. Although it hinges on an acknowledgement of its appeal, this new album is still a successfully intoxicating, addictive, and endlessly re-playable experience. Why? Because few rappers come off as effortlessly cool as the Chicago artist.

“Karma A B***h,” “Super Ski,” “New York,” and “Almighty Tune” are among the best examples of s*x m*ney dr*gs‘ production’s variety, vision, and victories. It does a lot of the heavy lifting here, but Lucki knows exactly how to compliment it with ease. Warbly flows, blunt lyricism (in more ways than one), and a uniquely cold demeanor make this a very hypnotizing and almost numbing listen. Maybe that doesn’t sound up your alley or isn’t up to your quality standards as a rap fan. However, you can’t deny that few artists in the genre currently can encapsulate a mood and ease your mind as effectively as him. It’s a project that aims to provide something specific and unassuming, and rather than hook you in with force, it allows you to ease yourself into it.

Kelly Moonstone – I Digress…

Every year, we check out countless underground hip-hop albums from emerging artists, and those growing pains are often quite noticeable. In the case of Queens’ own Kelly Moonstone, it was another case of very clear influences dominating our initial listen in a cumbersome way. I Digress… is a Neo-soul escapade reminiscent of Erykah Badu and many others, broken apart intermittently by grounded, reflective, and laidback rap verses. Much like other emerging creatives, these similarities often overshadow the songwriting talent and skill level on display. Once you put that to the side, though, and listen to what she’s actually saying here, what you’ll unlock is a wholly driven and self-improving approach that mindfully balances its inspirations with personal storytelling.

On I Digress, Kelly Moonstone touches on familiar topics, especially for someone in this stage of their career. Love is questioned, potential is recognized and staunchly stood up for, and there’s a creeping sentiment throughout it that it could all slip through her fingers at any given point. However, you couldn’t guess that doubt from the music; it’s too calculated, smooth, crisp, and well-organized to indicate any fear. “Sinner,” “Burn Your House Down,” and “To The Moon!” are just a few examples of the buttery jams that this album packs in. The fact that it’s not a full hip-hop release is what wrongfully made us not look any deeper into Moonstone’s story and only take the sonics as our guide. But fewer debuts and rising moments were as triumphant and resonant on further listening, and fewer still had us as excited for what’s bubbling beneath the mainstream.

Veeze – Ganger

Finally, we have the most welcome surprise of the whole year from a titan of the current Michigan scene. But don’t let that regional representation make you box Veeze into the fast-paced, synth-heavy, and nonchalant flow-focused sound that said scene is associated with. There are tinges of plugg, standard trap, and R&B leanings throughout Ganger, an aspect that initially distracts from his signature sound. But the Detroit MC is able to deliver cutting, clever, and compelling lines over it all, even with his low-key demeanor and raspy delivery in mind. To put it bluntly, no other album became stronger, catchier, or more impactful over time than this lengthy but jam-packed offering.

Furthermore, that’s because Veeze is incredibly adherent to this skillset, a quality that is hard to appreciate when you listen to so many styles in a year. In fact, you might’ve noticed that as a common theme throughout this list. We can’t even name specific songs that represent this, because we’d just give you the whole tracklist. In comparison to other Detroit MCs, his more restrained energy, fitting beat selection, and aloof bars come off as a solid middle ground between that scene and more ethereal styles of trap. Ganger gets more gratifying and vibrant with each listen, more so than any other album here. In a year in which the mainstream seemed more bombastic but often misguided in its execution, the cult hero surprised us with hidden skill, subtle artistry, and a whole lot of fun.

The post Hip-Hop Albums That Grew On Us The Most In 2023 appeared first on HotNewHipHop.

Yung Bans Comes Back With New Album, “Vol. 6”

After four years of radio silence when it comes to full-length project, his last being 2019’s MISUNDERSTOOD, Yung Bans is finally back with a new mixtape. Vol. 6 is a 15-track offering of what he does best: woozy beats, drowsy delivery, and a whole lot of vibes. Moreover, the St. Louis native focuses on hypnotizing soundscapes with his trap production, with songs like “I Juss” and “No Belt” with YNW Melly packing a heavier punch with their bass treatments. If you need a refresher, the last track we covered from his was 2021’s “Won’t Think Twice,” and not much has shifted since then when it comes to his artistry.

Furthermore, that would be a tad disappointing for Yung Bans, if not for the fact that he encapsulates this style so well. His patient flows and easily adaptable rhyme schemes on songs like “The Streets” remind us of why he captured the ears of so many listeners during the SoundCloud rap golden age. What’s more is that the “Blow Her Back Out” MC also chose a pretty solid list of features on Vol. 6 to show off his chemistry with other artists and switch up the tracklist’s flow. For example, there’s the aforementioned Melly, plus Highway, R5 Homixide, Doe Boy, and Ralo.

Read More: Bhad Bhabie Defends Yung Bans After Rapper Is Found In Her Bed

Yung Bans’ Vol. 6: Stream

However, these features don’t take away from the record’s overall experience, as the 24-year-old is still at the center of everything here. There are also plenty of moments here that turn more explosive, reminiscent of earlier singles like “Freak Show” with Latto. If you haven’t heard Vol. 6 yet, find it on your preferred streaming service and let us know what you think in the comments section down below. If you’re curious before you dive in, check out the tracklist down there as well. For more news on Yung Bans and more great hip-hop releases around the clock, check back in with HNHH.

Tracklist
1. Energy
2. Side By Side
3. Who Want Smoke
4. No Belt (featuring YNW Melly)
5. I Juss
6. The Streets
7. Stick N A Gown (featuring Highway)
8. Shirt Off
9. Luv 4 Granted
10. Rockstar Lyfe (featuring R5 Homixide)
11. Mr. Solo Dolo
12. Sometimes
13. Free Trap Free Ralo (featuring Doe Boy & Ralo)
14. Straight Cash
15. Bling On

Read More: KILLY Drops New Mixtape “KILLSTREAK 2” Featuring Yung Bans & More

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Usher & H.E.R. “Risk It All” On Our New “R&B Season” Playlist Update: Stream

What better way to heat yourself up during the winter season than with some steamy soulful jams? Moreover, we’ve compiled the best of the best R&B releases this week for our latest update of our R&B Season playlist. Even though 2023 is coming to a close, that’s by no means indicative of great artists slowing their roll down for the holidays. Leading the pack in that regard is the new single from Usher and H.E.R. from The Color Purple‘s soundtrack, “Risk It All.” The gorgeous duet is led by soft piano, gentle vocal harmonies, and a palpable sense of tension, release, and dedication, and these two do a great job of creating an emotionally resonant piece.

Elsewhere on our R&B Season playlist update, you’ll also find some funky and danceable jams to offset this other mood. This week, that came in the form of the one and only Channel Tres, who just dropped another new single: “Walked In The Room.” With an infectious house-inspired beat, a fluttery bassline, and the singer and producer’s trademark deadpan vocals, this cut is sure to blend in seamlessly with your next dance mix. The shrill and staccato synths towards the end of the song are a nice touch to give more body to this record.

Read More: Usher Reflects On His Career As Las Vegas Residency Ends

HNHH R&B Season Playlist: Stream

Next up is Tems, whose latest single “Not An Angel” once again shows why she’s such a revered artist these days. The production here makes a lot out of a little when it comes to its frenetic percussive elements, something that her vocals and the guitar leads help to balance out and make more engaging. Also on our R&B Season update is a new release from SAFE, the track “Don’t Call Me Selfish.” This is more of a woozy and trap-inspired offering, whose high-pitched vocals contribute to a hazy and sensual sound.

Rounding out our new picks is the song “Nothing Else Feels The Same” by LOONY, which sounds like a classic soul record from years ago. Finally, we wanted to shout out Amaal Nuux’s newest song, “Celebration,” for a dancehall swing and harmonic display that fits its title. Let us know what your favorite release of these was in the comments down below, and also what we missed from this week. Check out our R&B Season playlist above and stay posted on HNHH for more great music releases around the clock.

Read More: Nicki Minaj & Kenny Mason Bring Bangers To Our New “Fire Emoji” Playlist Update

The post Usher & H.E.R. “Risk It All” On Our New “R&B Season” Playlist Update: Stream appeared first on HotNewHipHop.

Homeboy Sandman Dishes On Artistic Growth, Lyricism & The State Of The Culture

When Homeboy Sandman is in Los Angeles, like he was for this exclusive interview, he loves nothing more than to walk around and take in the sights. Whether it’s on his grocery run, to ease his mind, or to listen to his next records up for release, the Queens rapper lives fully in the present. That goes for when he goes up to his home state, too, and the result is someone who, rather than just being hyper-aware of his surroundings, is hyper-aware of himself. You can hear that through H.S.’ lyrics: raw, honest, vulnerable, and wholly removed from compromise or pulled punches in his messaging.

In this new sit-down, Homeboy Sandman talked about his growth and path as a titan of underground lyricism in New York and beyond. He went over some of his favorite 2023 media, holiday meals for the season, and his various albums and mixtapes that he dropped this year. The 43-year-old is nothing if not prolific, creative, and passionate about what he believes in and what he stands for, so he had a lot to say during our conversation. Furthermore, he even spoke deeply about his everyday life; you’d be hard-pressed to find someone who more vividly describes why certain types of people annoy him.

Jokes aside, Homeboy Sandman has a lot to be proud of, and a whole lot more coming down the pipe. Perhaps the most salient idea or emotion throughout this exchange is the hope in new hip-hop, in an era in which a 50th anniversary celebration coincides with more division and segmentation than ever. It’s never been an easy path, and it’s only going to get harder from here. But he’s too aware of the problems and promises permeating rap to do anything but act upon them.

This interview has been edited for brevity and clarity.

Homeboy Sandman Interview 2023 Hip Hop News
Homeboy Sandman (Credit: Art Morera)

HNHH: As you know, HotNewHipHop is doing an advent calendar series where we’re putting out a new piece of content, such as interviews and lists, every day leading up to Christmas. You already kind of had the leg up on us on that idea with your 2023 project, 12 Days of Christmas and Día de Los Reyes, for which you dropped one of the thirteen tracks off the album every day leading up to its full release on “Día De Los Reyes” (January 6). How did that album come up for you conceptually? What inspired you to put it out with that release schedule, and with a title and a concept that calls back to your Puerto Rican and Dominican heritage?

Homeboy Sandman: I remember I was in the gym working out. I had some music in my headphones, and I had recently linked up with Luke Warmth, who’s the art director for Dirty Looks [his record label]. It’s been so fun to link up with him and be able to get creative, you know? Ever since getting up with him, I’ve been trying to think up what can we drop. What are good reasons to drop? I’m always creating joints, you know what I mean? Like, we did two joints yesterday and two joints the day before that. It was really that that last jam, the “Dia De Los Reyes” that I wrote, that I was like, “I want to put this out, man!” They won’t have no hooks, it’d just be like, verses. I was like, I’m gonna just drop one of them.

The thing about it was, you know, I’ve heard all throughout making music that the holidays is a time that people stay away from as far as drops. People are distracted with family celebration and cooling out. It’s not a conventional holiday album. I mean, none of the songs are about the holidays, but it just felt to me like a cool idea, you know? I grew up loving music and I still love music, and when I was growing up, my favorite crew was The Roots. When I think about, “Should I drop this or shouldn’t I drop this,” I think if The Roots would have dropped a holiday record out of nowhere, would I have loved that? Yeah, I would have loved that, you know what I mean? So cats that’s rocking with me like I was rocking with The Roots or whoever it was I was rocking with, my favorite rappers, the more the better. It was really a celebratory gift for those who want to check for it.

For sure, and thank you for the gift! You were talking about how you’re always looking to drop stuff. How do you think that process of looking for those windows has changed for you over the years, not just with the shifting industry and release methods, but also as you’ve grown as an artist?

I think that it’s gotten a lot more intuitive. I used to be a lot more opportunistic in the sense of waiting for the right time, you know? Like, I put out three independent records before I was ever rocking with labels or anything like that. But there was a big gap in between my second one and the next one. Well, for me, it’s a big gap, it’s two years. I was like, “I’m gonna wait for certain things to fall into place before I drop and I’m gonna get everything oriented and situated these ways.” And that’s not to say I don’t think about that stuff now. Rich came out August 4, and we definitely was waiting up to secure the right digital distro and the right physical distro. There were things we was waiting to shore up, but it definitely ain’t the same as how it’s been. Obviously, putting things out on Dirty Looks, I don’t have to take into consideration the release dates of other artists, at least not yet. Or the considerations that come with being on a label that has a roster, you know what I’m saying? Even though Dirty Looks is going to have the greatest roster ever assembled when it’s all said and done.

You know, l put out a jam today called “Banned in the USA.” I wrote that jam last week. But I was like, “Yo, I love this jam. I don’t want this sitting here.” I’m gonna put out I Can’t Sell These Either November 17 and I’m just gonna add it to that. I put out the “Therapy” Truth Hurts remix, and I had written that the week before. Jams come out and I don’t want to sit on these, you know? Rich 2 is going to come out soon, you know, and Rich 3 is going to come out soon after that. I’m being proactive now rather than reactive, you know what I mean? I’m gonna put the jams out there, thank God for cats that want to check for it, but I’ma have things reacting to me rather than me reacting to things, you know?

Yeah, and I think that definitely comes across. Before getting into your career, I do want to be a little bit topical, since we’re doing a 2023 retrospective and it’s the holiday season. I wanted to bring up your chorus of “Harina de maiz, plátano maduro” on your song “Día de Los Reyes.” That’s not always a holiday food, but do you have a favorite holiday food around this season that you’re looking forward to chow down on?

For me, I’ve been just eating mad fruits and veggies. You know, growing up, there was a lot of turkey and ham. Puerto Ricans big with the pernil, you know what I’m saying? But I don’t partake in that much anymore. My grandmother, Abuelita Lucy makes amazing arroz con gandules which are always great to get involved in. The stuff that I came up eating– my mother makes macaroni and cheese and fried chicken that at times can be super on point. I love my mom. Sometimes she nails it, other times she falls a bit short, but it’s been a while since I had any of that. These are the things I used to look forward to. My pops is nice with the fish, you know? But I’m just looking forward to my broccoli and my spinach and my kale and my watermelon and my oranges, so that’s what I’m looking forward to right now that got me feeling good.

That’s awesome. What music was heaviest in your rotation from this year? Either something that came out this year or something you were just listening to a lot. Did you have any other media obsessions, like a great book or a TV show you indulged in?

Well, there was a couple of things that really left a big impression on me this year. Obviously, Aesop Rock got that Integrated Tech Solutions, and he’s a brilliant genius and the best in the world. Whenever he drops, it’s a holiday season, you know? My boy Mandella Eskia put out this [album] called BABA, which is really fly, another 2023 joint. Tanya Morgan had a joint called “Don’t Look Up” which was fly, Napoleon da Legend and J Scienide had an album called Goat vs Sheep that was really fly. Black Thought– I brought up The Roots earlier– that record that he did with El Michels Affair, Glorious Game, was very fly. I also did my first headlining show in Montreal in 2023, and got up with a cat named Milla Thyme, who just put out a joint called “More Bounce” that I think is fly. So those are some joints that dropped in 2023. But just as impactful as those, if not more, the two records that have really wowed me and really knocked my socks off in 2023, neither of them is from 2023.

One is from 2022 and the other is from 2021. The 2022 one is by Spit Gemz– you familiar with Spit Gemz? Spit Gemz is extraordinary. He put out a record in 2022 called Home School. It’s short, it’s like an EP, you know? But he got a rhyme… “Blasphemous, worshipping Baphomet, selling sucks and violence to babies inside they basket net, your big homie’s a doofus, he’s not a Silverback, and you’re a Judas but Satan’s gon’ want his silver back.” Amazing lines of truth! And the thing about Spit Gemz is he’s been rhyming for a while. Watching him progress as far as the insights that he has is… The tracks are all amazing. It’s just some of the best rhyming that I’ve heard, and some of the most insightful. And then Shad, who I just put out this song with “Ignorant S**t.” I’ve been a Shad fan for a long time, but had never got to his 2021 record TAO. It’s amazing. I mean, it blew me away and I’m so grateful to have connected with him. He’s got a line on there… “I’m battle-tested but was never that aggressive, even as an adolescent I would rather have a message, but damn I’m fly…” You know, amazing lines. Go peep that, he got a joint on there called “God” that’s got amazing lines.

So the Spit Gemz and the Shad really blew my mind, but them other joints also blew my mind on the music tip, you know? On the movie tip, I like sci-fi a lot. There was this joint called The Artifice Girl that was an independent sci-fi that was really hitting. Another joint called Robots, it was like a comedy with the girl from Divergent. It was hitting. Then I saw this joing called Maggie Moore(s) with Tina Fey and the cat from Mad Men that I thought was pretty fly. Of course, The Equalizer 3. I really like The Equalizer series. Denzels get down with his, or Robert McCall, I think his name is. He reads, he’s polite, he shows mad love, but he’ll shut it down if it need to get shut down. He eats right, he looks out for his peoples, you know, that’s my character. That’s a character I like. Three movies that I’ve seen that wasn’t 2023 that wowed me was The Pledge with Jack Nicholson. That movie is crazy! I love that movie, like, I could talk about that movie all day. I seen Death to Smoochy, which is a fly movie. You know, very much about Homeboy Sandman, but in a different arena.

I got the rhyme that hasn’t come out but… “Like Gucci on Christ, understand that Homeboy Sand is Smoochy on ice.” And then I saw this joint called Daybreakers with Ethan Hawke. Slamming. Symbolism was crazy, loved it. Oh, you know what? Just what I’m seeing around me picking up? Cats been using the greyscale, you up on the greyscale on your phone? I’ve been seeing people switch to the grayscale in order to be less addicted to their phones. I’ve been liking how I’ve been seeing more dissent in mainstream media. When I say dissent, I just mean deviating from the popular narrative. Somebody sent me a link to a New York Times article about how mask mandates made no difference. 2022 or 2021, for sharing that link,, somebody would have tried to assassinate. You know, it’s less about people’s views or opinions or how they feel. I get excited about seeing different perspectives come up in popular media, you know what I mean?

Still now, we can make a lot of improvement. There’s been a lot of censorship that’s real crazy. There’s been a lot of open censorship, which is Instagram and YouTube just coming out saying, ‘If you don’t see things our way, we’re taking you off.’ And it’s kind of embarrassing how many people are cool with that, but that’s a whole ‘nother story. I’ve been happy to see a little bit more variety in mainstream media, even though myself, I don’t really partake in mainstream media a great deal. But I know many people do, you know. But my number one thing that I’ve been seeing and popping off a lot: I’m a plant-based eater. The veganism, the plant-based eating is becoming more and more easy to find options. It’s becoming more prevalent. [My love] sent me a link the other day that was talking about how in Denmark, they’re gonna be the first country to try to implement a full plant-based overhaul. All throughout the educational system, all throughout the whole country. It’s setting an ill precedent, so that’s something that has really helped the frequency in my own life as an individual, so I’m happy to see that picking up steam as well.

Homeboy Sandman Interview 2023 Hip Hop News
Homeboy Sandman (Credit: Balkar Singh)

I’m glad you brought up that transgression in the media. In your music, you come across as not just personal and open-hearted, but also as transgressive. What for you is the most rewarding thing about being so uncompromised in your music and putting bits of yourself within that for people to connect with and to share?

For me, being honest and being authentic generates all the magic in my life, you know? Makes everything about my world go better: my relationships go better, my creativity, which are works in progress for me, because I need to be honest with myself. It’s a continuing work in progress. But seeking and striving for authenticity and honesty with myself and others, all the abundance in my life is tied into that. And it’s so amazing how God just hits me with this abundance, like, I’m just going from making music to eating good food back and forth. It’s a really idyllic state. But that all comes from keeping it real, that’s what it all comes from, you know what I mean?

I want to get rid of all the toxicity that comes with being afraid of being different, or being afraid of whatever’s going on inside me. Llike, I connect with people for real. I put out a jam earlier today. And I’ve been building with people that I’ve never met before. We build because they know where I’m at, because I tell them. They could share with me and we could share insights with one another, learn from one another. There’s all different types of people doing all different types of things in this world. I’m trying to be an artist, I’m trying to express reality through my filter, through my artistry. So a prerequisite for that is keeping it real, you know?

I’m a bit of a newer listener. I started listening to you when you put out “Talking Bleep” in 2016. That was a record where you basically go over certain types of people that annoy you. With the context of 2023 in mind, if you were to rewrite that song today, are there any other types of people that you would work into that song that you’ve found since then?

I actually try to walk a fine line between– I don’t even know if it’s a fine line, maybe I’m just doing a very bad job. You know, between being judgmental and being expressive. The first thing that came to my mind when you asked me that, in the past few years, I definitely would have had– and I’ve written a lot in different songs, but just haven’t made a whole song. I would have had a verse about the term antivax. I would have had a verse about the word wars, the word wars are crazy. If a woman wants to decide if she’s gonna have a baby or not, she don’t get called anti–birth, you know what I’m saying? She gets called pro–choice. If a person wants to decide if they want to take a shot or not, they are called antivax, which is all the framing. It’s another pro-choice thing.

And I’ve talked about the word wars a lot. Me and my boy, we working on this “Amateurs” record. You nice with it. The word amateur comes from the word “amour,” which is to love. What it actually means is people that do it for the love, that’s what “amateur” means. And it’s only in this sick, crazy, twisted society, with things are regarded as meaningful or valuable because they’re tied to the generation of revenue, that that has gotten so twisted out of shape. And it’s like, “Oh, amateurs is not– no, we doing it for the love out here.” I wouldn’t have written a verse about that, that’s just a new insight that my boy put me on to, but I definitely would have had some word wars lyrics in there.

Oh: AI. Come on, B! Cats got so impatient waiting for AI to actually exist, you want to call every computer program AI. Artificial intelligence, it’s meant a specific thing my whole life, your whole life. It’s been popularized in sci-fis. When there’s artificial sentience going on, boom, then we fit AI in and everybody knows. They got the thing in Matrix: mankind marveled in their own magnificence as they gave birth to AI, whatever, right? I think it’s amazing. I think all the ChatGPT stuff is cool. all the filters, put somebody’s face in, make them look like they was Napoleon or whatever it is. This is all very cool, I’m not saying this isn’t cool, this is awesome. I think computers are great. But if you’re going to call this stuff AI, you might as well call a calculator AI. I mean, you might as well call an assembly line in Detroit in 1950 AI, you know I mean?

Computers imitate, it’s amazing the imitation that computers can do now. It’s amazing if you can have a computer that you can have a conversation, because it went and read every single conversation in the world and now it can make up a conversation based on every other conversation. But as long as it’s still making up a conversation based on every other conversation, stop calling the thing AI. It’s just a computer program. It’s just a computer advancement, it’s a tech advancement, it’s a tech update. We’re conditioned to associate the prevalence of AI with a major technological breakthrough, a major evolutionary breakthrough. So now everybody’s saying “AI” to each other, pretending that AI is here! So that would have definitely been another verse in “Talking Bleep.” I would have had to go off on all the people saying “AI,” you know what I mean?

You started off in the underground, putting out tapes before signing to any labels and being on radio stations from college ones to the biggest in New York. How do you think that the new tastemakers in the culture– be they publications, people on social media, et cetera– how do you think that they’re adapting to putting other people on? Especially people like yourself that have more transgressive content and aren’t falling into mainstream media. How do you think that they’re adapting to the algorithms, and to recommendations you’re getting off of a playlist generated by Spotify rather than a radio host?

I’ll give the best answer to that I can, but I’m a little further removed from even keeping a close eye on much of that stuff. Earlier in my career, it was very important to me to try to generate a certain degree of momentum, you know what I mean? Not only am I going to be making jams, but the dissemination of these jams and getting them into the right hands. At some point, I had a certain degree of exposure and reach that I was able to focus on the production. I still seek to get my music to every single person in the world, still strive to be a household name. I still want to be the Bill and Ted of real life, change the world with tunes, you know? When I was coming up, I was like, “Alright, this is the stations I got to try to get on. Blogs is big, you know, when I go to South By Southwest, I’m gonna try to link up with SK and say peace,” et cetera.

These days, I don’t really even know what’s going on as much. I do know that the playlisting is something that people talk about a lot. My manager Darien is, and I mentioned that in the jam today, I do know that cats are going to these…, if the question was how are people doing, I would like to say that just as much as ever, and maybe more than ever because they have more tools, it appears to me that people that love good music are sharing good music, so everything is great. It’s a great time to be making great music because all you got to do is give it to one person that loves great music, and they will give it to somebody else. They’re gonna have all types of ways to give it to somebody else, so that’s great.

You’re talking about tastemakers and you’re talking about trends. Lauryn Hill was the biggest artist, had the greatest record, was amazing. I like it when when the best art correlates, there’s two different wavelengths. One is what’s trending, the other’s what’s actually fly. And I like it when they intersect. That’s not to say they don’t intersect, they intersect a lot. There’s a lot of world-famous household names that are some of the most amazing artists that have ever lived, you know. That isn’t what’s primarily pushed to most people right now, the best art. So there’s a bit of a valley. The records that are most readily accessible to people are not at all the most creative records, not at all the most enriching records, you know what I’m saying? To that, I would have to say that the people that are sending the trends for most people are doing a terrible job.

But their job is not to give the best records out. That’s why I got the rhyme that say, “It’s not about sales, people; they don’t want artists, they want salespeople.” They’ll tell you what your culture is. So they’re not out here trying to get you the best records. They’re trying to make sure you buy as much stuff before you end up in jail, they’re doing a great job spreading that, getting to you what they want to get to you. In that song, I mentioned RapCaviar. The vast majority of the rap on RapCaviar, you could write raps probably better than just based off this conversation. There’s some talent on there, a sprinkling of talent in there, but there’s a lot of trash on it.

I actually went on there to find out what were the playlists I was supposed to shout out on that jam. So they’re good at spreading trash, and they got all these ways of spreading trash, but we got all these ways of spreading good stuff. And big shout out to you for being involved in it. If you love rap records, you want to listen to the best rap records whether they the biggest or not, you know? You was talking about the the algorithmic everything. I think that’s a pretty cool thing, if you pull Homeboy Sandman into the Spotify, I’ve discovered artists based off listening to artists that I like. So I think that’s another cool advantage.

You’re also as prolific of a collaborator as you are a solo artist, working with artists as big as Aesop Rock, Quelle Chris, and so on and so forth. Rich just came out, your collaborative project with Mono En Stereo, and I wanted to ask you if you could recall some of your favorite memories while working on that.

First of all, Mono is my guy, man, that’s my dude. We’ve been rocking for so long. I get to make records with so many talented producers [and artists], but there’s something about me and Mono that has always been there from day one. It’s just a warmth that’s always been there. When I was writing “Fine,” before my lady and I moved in together, she lived in Queens, I lived in Brooklyn. In the summertime, I don’t like taking the train. So I take these long walks. A lot of writing, I do while I’m walking, you know? So I took a five five hour and 13-minute walk to get from Brooklyn to [Queens]. And it was a beautiful day. I had that beat, and Mono En Stereo, his real name is Rich. Rich has a lot of meanings. Much of it is about the richnesss, it’s about true richness, but his name is also Rich, and that’s not a coincidence. So I had that beat and I loved it, and I was like, “We got to do something with this.”

It was on that walk that I found the entry point to it. Once I find that entry point, boom, we’re off, but sometimes it takes a little while to just find that access point. So that’s a real beautiful memory for me. Taking a five-hour walk in the beautiful sun as that song kind of unraveled in my head. Seeing all the things in New York, all types of different neighborhoods. So that’s the first one that comes to mind. I had been in a long relationship that had ended. I was really grateful for kind of the levity that writing “Then We Broke Up” was able to ground me in. Breaking up is hard to do. As far as thinking about good memories associated with that album, it’s easy to say “look on the bright side,” you know what I mean? A lot of the time for me, when I’m trying to short circuit habit or short circuit negativity, it takes a lot of repetitiveness and redundancy. We’re gonna change our attitude about this. I just feel that like being grounded in a record, which is something that I have to write and really brings my creative process into, it was really so helpful for me at that time.

Homeboy Sandman Interview 2023 Hip Hop News
Homeboy Sandman (Credit: Misshattan)

I can’t wait for Rich 2 and 3, like you mentioned. I also wanted to talk about one of your other recent projects, which was with the Oakstop Alliance in Oakland. You teamed up with a nonprofit, you worked with around 20 local artists, and made a really great compilation of it, Royalty Summit. There is such a myth around the hip-hop group or collective. Particularly when working with the Oakstop Alliance, what is one myth about that group dynamic that you found to be true, and another one that wasn’t?

It is challenging to work with others, you know, I find that to be true. Even though I do collaborate a lot, I’m a solo artist. When it comes down to it, I want for everybody to love everything. So if I don’t feel right about a thing, I can’t sign off on it because somebody else does. If somebody else doesn’t feel great about something I feel great about, that’s been more challenging for me, but in the end, I gotta remind myself, “Hey, I’d be the same way.” I fly solo, but I got love for all my collaborators. A lot of the turmoil that come with needing to have a bunch of cooks in the kitchen, that’s something that I could definitely relate to.

I think that, “This cat, he took this jam,” I think that’s a real thing. I’m not going to speak on any jams that I’ve taken, but I did a jam with Kurious George and J–Live called “Enough.” And I love Kurious, that’s my boy, we rock all the time. I didn’t mention his record Monkey Man that came out in 2023. But J-Live took that joint. It’s funny because we actually did “Enough 2,” “More Than Enough,” which is not out yet. And J took that one too, man. Always keeps taking the freaking record you know, what are you gonna do? But these guys are the best rappers in the world. Ain’t no shame in it. I still feel I would never ever go to rewrite a verse. You know what I mean? If your verse is not good enough, then it ain’t good enough. You should rewrite before you even hear the other verses.

As far as working with Oakstop, it was just fun. There wasn’t a whole lot of that competitive spirit, I think we were really blessed to have such a wide variety of eclectic talent in there. Like, this cat Mike Sneed, so amazing. His style was so brand new. It’s so melodic. Like, I love his energy. What a fascinating talent. I wasn’t familiar with a lot of these artists, but then through Oakstop, through Damon Johnson, who’s the head of Oakstop Alliance, he shared with me different things and I said this is fly. Being able to mix those energies of a dude who’s just an established legend with a cat who’s just so hungry. Putting out beautiful energy.

The artists that were all in the room, they were all very unique people already on their own. There was a degree of curation before we all got together inside a room. Damon did also seek to cultivate an environment of creativity and unique artists. That was a great time, man. We got so much done in three days. I can’t remember everybody who was on it. It was a great room. It wasn’t any competitiveness. It was people that were excited to be there, that were excited to shine. I love the energy of cats looking to get on, you know what I mean? It remind me that it’s great energy for me to be around.

Maybe the myth about rewriting verses is something we can take off the board, then. I have a bit of a weirder question, but you’re just such a great and versatile lyricist. Let’s split lyricism into five categories: message, rhyme scheme, flow, punchlines, and character. Obviously, this is going to shift from song to song, but could you rank those from lowest to highest based on what you try to focus on or showcase in your writing?

For me, message is super important. I can’t flip no style not saying something. A lot of cats will come out and they’ll flip a style and they’ll say something so stupid, because it sounds fly. And I’ll be like, “Why did you say that?” They’d be like, “You know I don’t even really feel that way, but it just sounds so fly.” That don’t sound fly to me, you know what I mean? Message is key to me. Punchlines, I guess it determines how you define punchline. Is it the conventional, like, the bar ends in the thing that made the previous bar witty, or is it just saying something that wasn’t expected?

When Lupe Fiasco talks about Aesop Rock, and he talks about his punchlines, he has a thing about his punchlines being just one word, because nobody would ever used that word except for Aesop. And I think that’s a great point, because this cat made a word of punchline. It was Lupe that had that insight, which resonates with me, you know what I mean? From that definition of punchlines, which is just saying something that was unexpected, that’s very, very important to me. I don’t want dull rhymes. I do not want for my next line to be able to be predicted. I do not want that. My original slogan when I first came out is you know, “Homeboy Sandman, flow so crazy, you’d love him even if he couldn’t rhyme, and rhymes so crazy, you’d love him even if he had no flow.” I definitely tried to keep the flow in mind at all times.

I want to talk real quick about I Can’t Sell These Either, a sequel to your critically acclaimed Bandcamp tape that is one of many independent releases you’ve put out. Was there anything different for you this time around in terms of messaging or process when writing this sequel in comparison to the first one? How do you think that these installments fit in your overall discography?

These are mixtapes, so they’re a little different from albums to me, you know what I mean? I talk about “funny business,” it’s a term I’ve come up with. On I Can’t Sell These, there’s a couple of tracks that are funny business tracks. Funny business means that I make these tracks and I love them, but the music business is so funny that these tracks haven’t come out, so I’m gonna put them out on this mixtape. Some of those can be old, and there were tracks between I Can’t Sell These and I Can’t Sell These Either that, in the timespan between the two, have fallen into the category of funny business. So now, they’re eligible for the second one. I wrote them at a different time. The single that have been coming out [I wrote soon before they came out], and the next single that’s going to come out, I wrote also this year.

The driving force behind putting out both of them, like, the concept for both of them is, if I hear something that need to be rapped on, I’m rapping on it, and that still continues to this day. I’m gonna always have jams that I just felt I had to rap on them and they not really conventionally mine or whatever. I find some way to disseminate them if I could find a reasonable way. But I think that the driving force for this one is similar to the driving force for the other. I have 10, 15 new jams that I’ve written that I just wrote just because I was moved to write them, you know what I mean? I had to do it because I love rhyming.

Right now I’m writing a rhyme, I don’t even want to let the cat out the bag. There’s this jam that I used to love so much but it’s a lesser known jam, but the beat was so stupid. Finally found the instrumental the other day, been writing to it. Once I got those 10 to 15 new ones that I really want to share, then I’m like, “Okay, what else do I have that that also satisfies this work that I can’t sell, but I would like to share?” That’s kind of the difference between the two and the similarity.

“Banned in the USA” has one of the hardest like single covers, I’ve seen in a long time. You mentioned that 2 Live Crew was banned for being too explicit, and now you’re being “banned” for not being explicit enough. I wanted to bring up like a specific line: “Cue Instagram to cultivate a whole generation of kids that’s never moved to read about the movie Birth of a Nation.” It’s one of many bars that you have about identity and exploitation within hip-hop on the song. Can you break down some solutions to these big issues that you have seen proposed or that you’ve proposed yourself? Whether it’s for the industry or for the culture at large. Is there such a thing as a good and bad solution to it or are we all working towards the same goal?

I think that’s a great question. Before I answer it, I want to let people know that I definitely have solutions that work, that will work, that are guaranteed to work, and that we could all begin to get involved in today. I would like to share some of those, but before I say that, I would like to let people know that these are not easy. When I talk to people about solutions, they don’t always really want solutions. What they want is easy solutions. I can’t really think of any of those. I was talking to somebody the other day, and there are certain things in our society that are so horrific and despicable that we have a no tolerance policy. We have a no tolerance policy with pedophilia, as we should. That’s a nightmare. It shouldn’t be promoted, passed around, it ain’t cool. We ain’t gonna act like it’s cool.

“Killing n***as, I kill n***as,” that’s a nightmare, you know? “B***hes ain’t s**t,” that’s a nightmare. The misogyny, the money worship, the violence, just the degradation is a nightmare. It’s nightmarish stuff. It’s only because it is commonplace that people are like, “Whatever.” Racism is a nightmare. If I was back in New York, it wouldn’t even be up to me if I was hearing “kill a n***a, kill a n***a, kill a n***a, kill a n***a” walking down the street, blasting through the window. Why I got to hear that? That’s racism, that’s terrible, you know? When you’re at the gym, and the gym is playing “n***a, n***a, n***a” records, what’s going on here? Who’s choosing this jam? They’re gonna look at you like you’re crazy. You’re the only person that this jam bothers. But that’s okay. Because it’s not an easy solution to get out of a car if they’re playing terrible music, to leave a club or leave a party if they’re playing terrible music. It’s not an easy solution. But it is a meaningful and necessary thing to do to protect.

Children are impressionable– we’re still impressionable and we’re adults! It is so ridiculous for people to act like kids are going to be looking up to drugs, guns. Kids are just trying to figure out what to do. It is such a lie. So we need to stop lying to ourselves, and that’s a challenge, right? You need to check yourself every day. That’s a challenge. We could do it. Mega Ran just put out a kid’s record, he’s the artist that I told you about. Him and his wife started fostering a child, and realized that they don’t want to play the same music in front of a child that they listen to on their own. When people start having children, they’re like, “Yo, I can’t play this stuff for them.” It takes that sometimes in order to be the breakthrough, you know what I mean?

So we all do know that there’s toxicity of frequency that we’re absorbing, and that is affecting our life. My relationships was terrible for years because I had all this subconscious “b***hes ain’t s***t, f**k b***hes as much as you can,” the opposite of love, you know? I’m talking about things that are hard, and calling ourselves out on self-deception is hard. But they all fall in the umbrella of a zero tolerance policy. Do you care enough about your kids in your community? Do you care enough about yourself and your behavior and your activity, whether or not you could feel good living a life of integrity to have a zero tolerance policy about hateful things? Because if you can, then you could shut this down yourself. Because that’s what I’m doing, and you could do it, too.

I was recently watching an interview of yours with “The Boom Bap Chat” on Everybodys Hip Hop. To them, you mentioned how your growth had basically led you to reevaluate a lot of the content matter behind Mobb Deep and other classic hip-hop artists that you grew up listening to. How is the way that hip-hop is moving forward in 2023 impacting not just its current legacy, but the legacy of artists that have come before it and artists that already made their mark on the culture?

That’s a good question. I split things into two different categories. I’m seeing stuff in my records right now that I probably will be like, “That’s ridiculous, I shouldn’t say that no more” in a couple of years, you know what I mean? That’s why I try to toe the line between being judgmental because I know that I am steeped in fault and I’m an evolutionary. I’m evolving myself. You bring up Mobb Deep, or you bring up anybody. I brought up Mobb Deep, I grew up listening to Mobb Deep. I wasn’t out there robbing cats or nothing like that, but it’s like, “Yo, it’s cool, this lifestyle.” Like, M.O.P., “Ante Up.” This “we’re enemies “lifestyle, and like, “Yo, I’m ready, whoever’s coming out, I’m gonna take out.”

That infiltrated my psyche, it infiltrated my behavior, and I got to unlearn it. I’m not out here saying burn Mobb Deep at the stake, because I’m grateful to everybody who made art at a level of talent and skill that I was able to learn about talent and skill from them. I wouldn’t even be having a lot of the issues that I have now if censorship wasn’t a big deal. Like, censorship right now is crazy. And people think censorship… it’s another word war thing. People think that censorship is keeping bad things out. Censorship could be keeping good things out. That’s what we’re dealing with now.

So as a kid, when when hip-hop was younger, and the presentation of it was younger and different, the variety between an “I’ll shoot you in the stomach” Kool G Rap, “I’m the coolest cat in the world, I clearly have a lot of women issues,” Slick Rick. You know, they called A Tribe Called Quest and Native Tongues “hippie rap.” The spectrum of life is real. Hip-hop started off with a variety. So when it’s all presented– actually, that’s what I really would like to see. I don’t want uniformity. For me, for the people that feel that it’s going so left of center into the horrific world where people are selling drugs because it’s cool, not because they have no other means of supporting themselves, and going to jail, I’m gonna take a no tolerance policy, and I invite everybody to get involved with me.

For the people that don’t feel the same way, the next best thing is making sure that everything we absorb is talent-oriented, because talent will be the great equalizer. It’s not true that everybody that can rap is a killer. Killing and music got nothing to do with each other. A lot of people that can rap cut grass for living or wash windows, you know what I’m saying? So we need to make sure that we got the window wash rap, and the killer rap, and the race car rap, and the whatever. We need to make sure we have variety, and variety will be based off talent. I personally think that when I look at the evolution, I believe that mainstream media even goes to test how far they could go.

When they came out with Soulja Boy, they were saying, “Yo, it’s been kind of crazy that these people, these listeners, we’ve been giving them this stuff, and they haven’t turned against it. Can we really give them anything? Let’s see if we can really give them anything. Let’s see if they’ll turn it off.” You know, I’m targeting that, but I think it was an example of that. But there’s other things. Some stuff I hear now in the background, I’m like, “People haven’t turned this off?” So I think that they go to see how far can we go. Once they see that you don’t turn off the Soulja Boy, “Oh, we got these cats, you could just give whatever.”

You can make a record that is every bit as skillful as the majority of records on RapCaviar. Something’s wrong with that. I always bring up Stevie Wonder. People didn’t listen to Stevie Wonder and say, “Oh, I could do that, too.” ‘Cause it’s a God-given talent. People don’t listen to Homeboy Sandman or any of the other rappers that I revere and say, “I can do that, too,” because you can’t. It’s not supposed to be “Anybody could do this” because everybody can’t do this. So when you hear somebody doing something that sound like a zillion other things, let that raise a red flag for you.

Homeboy Sandman Interview 2023 Hip Hop News
Homeboy Sandman (Credit: Art Morera)

Is that something that you’ve noticed more, that the negative attention is also fueling a lot of this interest?

Yo, I hear about rappers because people tell me they can’t stand them. This is why I hear about rappers, B. “Yo, have you heard this new rapper?” That’s the way I hear about mad rappers. It’s a “There’s no such thing as bad publicity” thing. If it was really about pushing what people liked when they heard it, it’d be mics getting murdered instead of Pop Smoke, you know what I’m saying? Because they’re not out here trying to give cats the most hottest record, they out here trying to generate whatever anger, hate, whatever emotional click bait or whatever gets people angry, gets people sad, gets people talking. They really playing to the lowest common denominators in our nature.

They playing to the parts of our evolutionary brain that are just the furthest away from where we’re at and the society we’re trying to live in. Yeah, absolutely, they definitely picked up on that. If these people are going to engage with this garbage, and if they’re going to engage more with it because they hate it, that’s why we got to take it on ourselves, B. If they had a festival, you know, Summer Jam Hot 97 Annual Trash Festival, and nobody went, they’d have Homeboy Sandman on it the following year. It ain’t about me, though. I mean, they’d have Quelle Chris on it the following year.

From January 2008 to August 2009, you hosted “ALL THAT! Hip Hop, Poetry and Jazz” open mic sessions at the Nuyorican Poets Café in Alphabet City, NYC. It’s been home to not only hip-hop legends like Bobbito García and MF DOOM, but also great Puerto Rican and Latine minds and poets like Martín Espada and Sandra María Esteves. How did that intersection of art and culture across national and ethnic boundaries have an impact on you as an artist, as a writer, and just as a person?

All the flavor. I haven’t been to the Nuyor in a while, but all the flavor in New York was congregating at the Nuyorican. Before 9/11, my sister was there. My sister used to do poetry. She was at the Nuyorican the night that Black Thought and Common dropped in. They used a pseudonym like “Lesbian Sex Party,” or something like that. Called them up and they came up and it was Common and Black Thought. I wasn’t there, but Cool Bob Love hosting and Flaco Navaja hosting after that. I was the third host after Bob and Flaco. I felt very proud, and it was the longest-running open mic and probably still is the longest-running open mic in New York City.

Everybody was coming through. There was a lot of tourists in the crowd because it’s a global spot that is well-known. All five boroughs was in there, everybody from every different shade was in there, with every different identity and whatever nation. It was a melting pot of flavor. I really love how we had the live band. Having that warmth and that real instrumentation going on, and everybody had to use it. The one that I did, we had the live band, I did the one on Wednesday, which was the “ALL THAT!” One of them, you’re able to bring some tracks, right? But at the one I was doing, you had to play with the band. So even though you had all these different energies in there, the band was the constant that took everything and held it all together.

That was an amazing time. I met so many amazing rappers, I made so many amazing friends. I mean, that time in my life when I was first starting to come out, that was such an amazing time in my life. I think back to that time often with great joy. And it’s so funny, like, I was listening to Engelbert Humperdinck. “The Hungry Years,” I don’t know if you know that jam. But he talks about, “I missed the hungry years.” Like, we thought we didn’t have nothing, but we had everything. These are the times I was 60 pounds lighter than I am now, B. Sleeping on everybody couch. These are very lean years to me, trying to get a rep. And I was having a ball the entire time, and I would always look forward to that Nuyo that Wednesday, you know?

Speaking on that growth and looking back on those hungry years, how would you describe your relationship to your music once you release something? Are there certain songs and albums or eras that rank highly among your favorites from your discography, do you just quickly move on to the next project, or is it all part of the same connected narrative for you?

I feel most comfortable kicking it with the records that are where I’m at, you know what I mean? And what I mean by that is I want to cultivate a frequency strong enough that I could go in anywhere and have my frequency affect the room rather than have it affect me. But I do love kicking it with folks that be on the same wavelength as me. So right now, I’m loving Rich, I’m loving the recent. There’s a line of demarcation or delineation for me, like, [and that] was Dusty. I don’t like that record at all. Like, that record had to get right out the house. But leading up to that, there started to be a lot of deviation from who I wanted to be.

Don’t Feed The Monster was like a return to trying to have the message that I wanted to have and trying to be in touch with myself like I wanted to be, but I wasn’t as strong with a rapping because I was so weak as a person. I feel like I’m not really flipping styles until the final song on that album. There, I catch a little bit of style. I really love that art, and I feel like it was meaningful to me. I love that album; to me, that’s one of my most important albums in my career. Everything before The Good Sun was kind of a pinnacle of my immaturity for me. That was the best of me before I learned a bunch of important life lessons, you know what I mean? There was a lot of ways I had to be tested and fail in order to grow, so that I could move on as a person. I look at everything before Dusty as, “All that stuff was cool.” Like, a jam like “Couple Bars.” I love that jam, I love the writing, it’s fly, but what did I really know about love?

I didn’t know anything about love. If I brought a jam like “Not Really” now, it would be “Really.” Even though I’ll be able to integrate, I’m the same person and I keep it the same in these ways, but these are things that that have shifted. Because I’m a different person, because I’ve grown as a person, you know what I mean? The records that are resonating with me the most right now, I’m chilling here with my peoples. I got I Can’t Sell These right here, I Can’t Sell These Either right here, Rich, Still Champ, and we all kicking it. And we’ll be here. Until I shed this skin for hopefully a more advanced skin, and then I look back at those other joints. I know there’s things that I don’t understand, always. I’m trying to figure out what they are, you know?

Looking forward to the next year, what’s something that you want to challenge yourself with in 2024, and what’s something that you have been challenging yourself with that you want to leave behind in 2023?

Well, I’ve been working on using any negative emotion, whether it be fear, jealousy, anxiety, as a light on a dashboard. You know what I mean? The other day, I was in a cab right? Dropping me off at the airport. The cat, he didn’t take card. I allowed myself to get a little vexed. Not vexed, but I allowed myself to get a little defensive to the point where it broke my frequency. I feel like I could have negative feelings and emotions without it breaking frequency if I just maintain awareness, and I’m able to see what it is. I’m able to think, “Where does that come from?” And try to use it as a learnable moment for myself, you know?

That’s something that I am working on on a day-to-day basis right now, and would love to try to cultivate in 2024 to the point where I’m not even looking at anger as a bad thing. I’m looking at it as a good indicator. I don’t need to respond angrily, I don’t need to respond with any type of aggression, and it’s just awareness. So vigilant self-awareness is something that’s becoming more and more important to me. The first thing that comes in before for what I’m shedding, like, I’ve always listened to rap and I think “This is so ridiculous.” Everybody out here listening to these songs saying “You ain’t nothing, you ain’t cool.” Who they talking to? They ain’t talking to me.

It’s just so strange to listen to records of “You ain’t nothing,” you know? I would say, probably in 99% of my records, you can’t hear any of that. When I do use “you,” it’s a very specific thing. So I’m kind of naming either a behavior or a group or something like that, right? What does that say about us listening to it that we just listen to ourselves get dissed all day? But that’s something that I feel I’m starting to come into more leniency with. I’m still talking to specific energies and specific people, but before, I would have found another way to reframe it just so that I don’t play into that “you” stereotype. I’m thinking to myself maybe I can have some leniency with myself on that. Maybe it’s been a hindrance to some expression. So that’s something I’ve been letting go of.

We’ve been hinting at it throughout this whole conversation, but we are in 2023: 50 years of hip-hop. We have a whole history to debate and discuss and celebrate. As an end to this enriching conversation, what got you into hip-hop and its history? What would you show someone today if they wanted to get into hip-hop and its history in 2023 in order to inspire that same spark that inspired you?

That’s interesting because I have the same answer to both of those questions. I grew up in a very diverse area of New York City. As a kid, my uncle Sam played the sax, you know, jazz. My father loved jazz, my father worked in clubs. We used to live on top of a club called The Maurice on Queens Boulevard. It was like a rock club. We lived in a little spot above that when I was a little kid. Salsa was big, merengue. Freestyle music was big, there was soul music, disco. There was so much different music that I liked music, but hip-hop wasn’t truly my thing, you know what I mean? My father had hip-hop records, but what brought me to hip-hop for real– this is, like, in the third grade. I always did good in school, it was important. My father told me, “You got to do your homework before you go play.” That changed my life, you know, can’t go play in the building, can’t go play basketball, until you do your homework. So I did the homework, I knew what was on the test, my life changed.

As a result of that, in the third grade, I left my zone school, which I grew up in Elmhurst, Queens, a very diverse area. There’s really everything in the whole world there, so it isn’t like we’re lacking for anything. But it isn’t at all a homogeneous area. In the third grade, I was able to get into this program called the Beacon Program. I went to a completely different neighborhood, everybody was a light-skinned person. It was a very homogeneous thing. All of a sudden, I was the darkest kid in the school. I’m not the darkest cat in the world, it was uncommon to me. There was two brown kids in the school, me and Courtney Sorenson. We felt at that time, we’re kids, we’re really identifying very strongly. These days, I like good people, you know what I mean? I’m happy to find a good person of whatever variety. You cool, let’s talk about God. But at this time, we’re feeling out of place, these people don’t look like us, you know what I mean? Of course, we gravitated to one another and became great friends. And he brought in Jazzy Jeff and the Fresh Prince, He’s the DJ, I’m the Rapper.

This was in 1988, okay, I’m eight years old in the third grade. Up until that time, my older aunts, my father’s younger sisters, my uncle Bobby, my father’s younger brother, they went to put me onto Big Daddy Kane or Boogie Down Productions. But I’m thinking, “I can’t relate to that, I’m a kid.” I can’t relate to Slick Rick talking about these sexual exploits, I didn’t know what’s going on. But Jazz Jeff and the Fresh Prince was talking about school shopping and watching Nightmare on Elm Street, but the production on that album is amazing. And the thing about it is, that album brought me into hip-hop and it was not only the album being great, but that was the first time hip-hop became my identity. I saw myself as different in the environment that I was in, and I was like, “This is my music, it’s not their music.”

I went to junior high school back in a very diverse part of the city. But then I went to high school in New Hampshire. And then New Hampshire was another example of me having to leave where I’m from, to get a better education. As a kid, there were these times when I had to leave where I was from to my academic betterment. When those things would happen, hip-hop was something that made me feel connected. I would be up in New Hampshire, and I’d be like, “Dang, I’m so corny. Everybody’s in New York having mad fun. I’ma listen to Ill Al Scratch. I’m gonna feel like I’m home.” Was that telling me what home was, or was that actually what home was? But that’s when hip-hop really solidified for me.

I do love the art form and I do love the craft, but a lot of it was identity when I first began. I identified that this is my stuff, these are my folks, these are my people, you know what I mean? If anybody were want to get into rap now, I would give them that tape and I would show them that this is a cat that was one of the best rappers out at that time. I lived in Philly for four years, hosted open mics, heard stories about the Fresh Prince and how cats used to try to clown him because he was smiling and having fun. He would say, “Oh, yeah, you want to rap?” And he would shut cats down rapping. I think that was a big influence on me and the style I try to have. I want to keep it love and I want to keep having fun. But if you think you can rap with me, you know you got a better chance straightening out Porky Pig’s tail. So I would give people that tape to show them rap is about being able to rap, and the Fresh Prince knew that.

Homeboy Sandman Interview 2023 Hip Hop News
Homeboy Sandman (Credit: Misshattan)

Homeboy Sandman, thank you so much for this! Really looking forward to everything that’s down the pipeline. Is there anything else you want to add, reflect on, shout out, or anything you’re looking forward to for the next few weeks?

Peace and love! Thanks so much for taking the time to help spread the word. I do got the Patreon, we have a lot of fun on there. patreon.com, Homeboy Sandman. And I do got the email lists. I don’t be on online that much, but if you want to be on the email list, just email [email protected]. Say, “I want to be on the email list.” And we got all types of fun we be having that I be disseminated through that. But beyond that, yeah, just good looking up.

The post Homeboy Sandman Dishes On Artistic Growth, Lyricism & The State Of The Culture appeared first on HotNewHipHop.

10 Wildest Hip-Hop Beefs Of 2023

Aside from music, something that almost always manages to grab fans’ attention is, of course, drama, especially hip-hop beefs. When artists clash, their supporters typically follow suit, only causing things to heat up. With the rise of social media, fans often get a front-row seat to their favorite performers’ beef, resulting in rumors, speculation, and more.

2023 has been no exception, with countless hip-hop figures putting their drama on full display. The year’s been jam-packed with sneak disses, messy social media posts, shady bars, and more. Check out a list of some of the most notable hip-hop beefs of 2023 below.

Drake Vs. Joe Budden

Photos by Prince Williams/Wireimage, Shareif Ziyadat/Getty Images

When Drake dropped his eagerly-anticipated LP For All The Dogs this year, Joe Budden was less than impressed. He weighed in on his podcast, advising Drake to stop hanging around people so much younger than him. He further claimed to have missed when Drake “was rapping for the rappers.” Budden did note that Drake is something of a “golden child” in the hip-hop world, and will continue to see success no matter what. Drake fired back hard regardless.

He responded to Budden with a lengthy Instagram roast, claiming that he’s just jealous of his career. Essentially, Drake accused him of only criticizing his work because his own path as a rapper didn’t pan out. This got pretty ugly with subliminal social media shade, friends jumping in the mix, and more. It’s also speculated that Budden’s critique is what inspired Drake to drop Scary Hours 3. It looks like this beef, at least, had a silver lining.

Chrisean Rock Vs. Blueface

Photos by Bennett Raglin/Getty Images, Randy Shropshire/Getty Images

Chrisean Rock and Blueface welcomed their first child together, Chrisean Jr., in September. The two of them went their separate ways in the months leading up to his birth, with Blueface deciding to instead focus his attention on the mother of his first two children, Jaidyn Alexis. Blueface had a lot to say about Chrisean’s parenting skills when their son arrived, however, taking aim at the new mother on social media.

He and Jaidyn have since gotten engaged, and Blueface takes every opportunity to remind his followers that she’s a “star.” Chrisean, on the other hand, insists that their romance is nothing but an act to make her jealous. This is a notably messy beef, which includes allegations of cheating, child neglect, and even pedophilia. Fans have held out hope throughout the year that the duo would find a way to work out their famously tumultuous relationship for the sake of their son, but have yet to see them return to civility.

DJ Akademiks Vs. Saucy Santana

Photos by Earl Gibson III/Getty Images, Eugene Gologursky/Getty Images

This year, DJ Akademiks accused City Girls’ Yung Miami of perpetuating homophobia by calling him a gay slur amid their feud. He claimed that her use of the term was disrespectful to her gay friends, name-dropping none other than Saucy Santana. Saucy Santana made it clear that he was on Yung Miami’s side, slamming the personality for dragging him into things. From there, the two of them traded some jabs on social media. Saucy Santana eventually threatened to “beat” and sexually assault DJ Akademiks.

Ak responded with an emotional, and viral, livestream. He claimed that he couldn’t fully unleash on Saucy Santana the way he wanted to out of fear of getting canceled. This prompted a lot of chatter online, with some social media users highlighting noting how Ak’s never been afraid to take aim at Black women. Saucy Santana’s since dropped a diss track about DJ Akademiks, “Meet Me In Da Skreets,” which boasts a similar sentiment.

Gunna Vs. Everyone

<a href=Young Thug and Gunna” class=”wp-image-737967″ srcset=”https://wp.hnhh.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/Gunna-1024×829.jpg 1024w, https://wp.hnhh.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/Gunna-300×243.jpg 300w, https://wp.hnhh.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/Gunna-768×622.jpg 768w, https://wp.hnhh.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/Gunna-1536×1243.jpg 1536w, https://wp.hnhh.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/Gunna-2048×1658.jpg 2048w” sizes=”(max-width: 1024px) 100vw, 1024px” />
Young Thug and Gunna attend Onyx Monday Nights hosted by Young Thug at Onyx Nightclub on May 17, 2021 in Atlanta, Georgia.(Photo by Prince Williams/Wireimage)

Gunna was released from prison in December of last year, following a major RICO indictment. It saw the arrest of over 25 alleged YSL members, including Young Thug. He took a plea deal on the day of his release, prompting countless peers and fans to speculate that he betrayed his co-defendants by providing information to authorities. Gunna has vehemently denied this, but regardless, the rumors remain. Fans continue to call for Young Thug’s release, as he sits behind bars awaiting trial.

Gunna seemingly addressed the snitching allegations on his album A Gift & A Curse, which he dropped in June. Once again, he denied having turned his back on his co-defendants. “Know you hearin’ the lies that your lil’ brother might fold (Gunna Wunna) / Yeah, I had copped out, but don’t let ’em say I told,” he rhymes on “I Was Just Thinking.” The project was fairly well-received and managed to quiet at least some of the speculation. Nonetheless, in a genre where loyalty means everything, the debacle has left a considerable and lasting mark on Gunna’s reputation.

Coi Leray Vs. Latto

Photos by Dia Dipasupil/Getty Images, Marcus Ingram/Getty Images

Latto’s hit track “Put It On Da Floor” quickly became one of the songs of the summer, gaining even more attention when Cardi B hopped on a remix. One of her fellow female MCs, however, took issue with a few of the song’s lyrics. “Smokin’ on that gas, blunt big as Coi Leray /
B*tches like to run they mouth, but I’m the type to run a fade,” Latto rhymes in the second verse. Coi made it clear that she took the bar as a dig at her body. In response, she fired off a series of Tweets, calling Latto out. Latto later told her crowd at Coachella that she has nothing but “love” for Coi’s body. Unfortunately, the “Players” performer wasn’t buying it.

Coi Leray seemingly responded on her Blue Moon EP’s lead single, “Isabel Marant.” “Yeah I’m on they a** (Yeah) / Hop up out that couch and roll up Latto out the bag,” she spits on the track. Latto was later featured on a remix of Young Nudy’s “Peaches & Eggplants” with Sexyy Red, and appeared to throw shade at Coi’s dad, Benzino. After the remix dropped, Coi posted some screenshots of a chat she had with her father, Benzino. The Source icon told her that Latto simply “admired” her, advising her not to worry about it. Latto defended the bar in a subsequent livestream, but didn’t say if it was intended as shade to Coi. Social media users, of course, have their suspicions.

Nicki Minaj Vs. Cardi B

Nicki Minaj and Cardi B
Photos by Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images, Chance Yeh/Getty Images

Nicki Minaj and Cardi B’s years-long feud hasn’t shown any signs of slowing down. In fact, even their husbands got involved this year. Back in September, Offset and Kenneth Petty traded some jabs on social media. Eventually, Petty landed himself on house arrest for threatening the former Migos member. Nicki later took to social media to shed light on her swatting experience, insinuating that Cardi B was responsible. She further appeared to claim that Cardi was throwing shade her way because “Bongos” was a “flop.” Countless subliminal social media posts followed.

While it’s possible that Nicki and Cardi’s beef could only be a tactic to promote their new projects, many still believe that their animosity is very real. In October, Tasha K even claimed that she previously advised Nicki to squash the beef, telling her the two of them are more similar than they’d like to believe. Tasha K currently owes Cardi upwards of $3.4 million in their defamation case, so it says a lot that even she thinks it’s time that they throw in the towel.

Drake Vs. Bobbi Althoff

Photos by Prince Williams/Wireimage, Michael Kovac/Getty Images

Back in June, Bobbi Althoff of The Really Good Podcast dropped her interview with Funny Marco. The video gained some traction online, even capturing the attention of Drake. According to her, she then decided to slide into Drake’s DMs to ask him for an interview. To her own surprise, he was in. The video that followed went viral, creating opportunities for Althoff to interview Tyga, Lil Yachty, Offset, and more. The video in question, however, was later mysteriously deleted. Internet sleuths also quickly discovered that the two of them had unfollowed each other on Instagram. This prompted speculation that Drake and Althoff had some beef going on behind the scenes.

Neither of them has clarified why the interview was deleted. Althoff did, however, inadvertently clear up some rumors that they were romantically involved. She told Dave Portnoy “off the record” that the rumors were false. He then discussed it on his podcast, going against her wishes. Teasers for the podcast episode were also cut in a way that insinuated there may have been a romance between Althoff and Drake. This prompted her to share screenshots of the actual conversation on social media. While Althoff’s become somewhat of a controversial figure herself, her interview and rumored “beef” with the Toronto hitmaker continue to be what most people associate her with.

Keke Palmer Fans Vs. Darius Jackson

Keke Palme, Hip-hop beefs
(L-R) Keke Palmer, Leo Jackson, and Darius Jackson attend the “Big Boss” Closing Night Screening during the 2023 Atlanta Film Festival at Rialto Center for the Arts at Georgia State University on April 29, 2023 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Derek White/WireImage)

Back in July, Keke Palmer attended an Usher concert, and appeared to have the time of her life. The father of her son Leodis, however, quickly made it clear that he wasn’t a fan of her outfit choice. He sounded off on Twitter, seemingly shaming her for it. This resulted in quite a bit of backlash for the fitness trainer, with countless Keke Palmer fans going after him. Instead of apologizing, he doubled down, insisting that he was within his rights to criticize her attire. Neither of them directly addressed their relationship status in the months following, but it was speculated that they had gone their separate ways after Palmer appeared in Usher’s “Boyfriend” music video.

Things took a serious turn in November of this year, when Palmer filed for a restraining order against Jackson. She additionally filed for sole physical and legal custody of Leodis. Her filing came with a long list of abuse allegations against the 30-year-old. This, understandably, prompted even more outrage from Palmer’s fanbase. Nowadays, Palmer appears to be back to living her best life while navigating the difficult circumstances.

Boosie Badazz Vs. Yung Bleu

Photos by Prince Williams/WireImage, Johnny Nunez/Getty Images

This year, Boosie Badazz took aim at Yung Bleu over a dispute surrounding the young rapper’s Empire Records contract. According to the Louisiana-born MC, Yung Bleu signed the contract without his permission, alleging that his own brother forged his signature. The dispute has been around for a few years now, however, Boosie took things to a whole new level this year, making it clear that he wants the money that he feels he’s owed, and won’t back down.

Yung Bleu’s made quite a few headlines over the year for domestic violence allegations, a cheating scandal, and more. Boosie’s taken every opportunity to weigh in, reminding the Alabama native of his alleged debt. He’s also thrown some jabs at Empire Records CEO Ghazi Shami, accusing him of being a “snake” for going through with the deal. Yung Bleu doesn’t seem keen on paying Boosie back, but he did challenge the 41-year-old to a boxing match back in September.

Sexyy Red & Sukihana Vs. Khia

Photos by Derek White/Getty Images, Ray Tamarra/Getty Images, Prince Williams/WireImage

In October, Khia went on a rant about being compared to current artists like Sexyy Red and Sukihana, claiming that they’re nothing alike. Known for her hit “My Neck, My Back,” Khia said that those drawing comparisons have got it all wrong, insisting that her music sends an entirely different message to that of the aforementioned MC’s. While still notably raunchy, Khia claimed that her songs work to empower women, whereas Sexyy Red and Sukihana’s work is demeaning.

Sexyy Red was quick to fire back, however, calling Khia a “hater” and accusing her of being “washed up.” Sukihana followed suit, threatening to “knock Khia tf out.” Unfortunately, it doesn’t look like fans will see any resolution to this beef, though countless commenters and peers have come to the “Hood Rats” performers’ defense. In general, many think there’s been enough Sexyy Red slander online since she rose to fame with “Pound Town,” and just felt as though Khia’s argument was tired.

Which of these hip-hop beefs hit you the hardest? Let us know, in the comments section below.

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Spotify Wrapped: Lil Durk Angers User By Taking Over Her Round-Up Despite Not Streaming Him

Lil Durk’s distinct sound isn’t for everyone, but those who love the Chicago native consistently go hard for him. Unfortunately, amid Spotify Wrapped season, the 7220 artist is facing accusations of using streaming farms to boost his numbers after an angry content creator revealed that he completely took over her annual round-up despite her never personally listening to his music from her account. “I am literally so mad right now,” the young woman ranted while sitting in her car.

“Whoever hacked into my Spotify account and listened to Lil Durk for 21,000 f**king hours this year, I hope you rot,” she continued, moving closer to the camera as her rage builds. “You have ruined my entire life!” According to her story, she woke up earlier this week eager to reflect on her year in music but was sadly disappointed when the results didn’t match her expectations. “All I listen to is like, Noah Kahn, and like, Taylor Swift, Just some cute granola stuff with a little bit of SZA sprinkled in there,” the OP explained her usual taste.

Read More: Kanye West Is Attempting To Buy Out Lil Durk’s Label Contract: Details

Lil Durk Comes Through with a Christmas Surprise

Through tears, she continues, “I wake up this morning to all my top songs, and my only artist being Lil f**king Durk!” At the top of the list is “All My Life” featuring J. Cole, followed by more new titles from the 31-year-old’s Almost Healed album. “I thought I logged into the wrong account like I don’t know. This is not me!” Now that the clip is circulating on social media, others are sharing their similar experiences after allegedly having “some dude in Ukraine” taking over their profile.

Lil Durk may have made several non-consensual appearances on the playlists of Spotify users in 2023, but he still couldn’t top the numbers done by Drake. Thanks to the release of his For All The Dogs album, not to mention his It’s All A Blur Tour, the 6ix God racked up over 11 billion streams on the streaming platform alone. Read more about that at the link below, and check back later for more hip-hop/pop culture news updates.

Read More: Drake’s Streams Reach Over 11 Billion On Spotify This Year

[Via]

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Ice Spice Hilarious Reveals She Is Her Own Most Listened To Artist Of 2023

It’s officially Spotify Wrapped season, the time of year when fans and artists share details on how they streamed music on the platform this year. For fans, it’s an opportunity to show off which songs and artists spoke to them the most this year. As a special treat for 2023 wrapped, Spotify got dozens of popular artists to record messages thanking their biggest fans. But those artists themselves also get Wrapped statistics telling them how much their music was streamed.

It’s pretty common to see major artists sharing the numbers they achieved online. But it’s a lot rarer that artists give an actual sneak peek of the music they were listening to themselves. Enter Ice Spice, who was more than comfortable sharing her listening habits. Among her favorite artists this year were Lana Del Rey, Drake, Lil Uzi Vert, and Kali Uchis. But it was her most listened-to artist that had fans cracking up. Her number-one artist of 2023 was none other than herself. Check out her full wrapped post below.

Read More: Ice Spice Celebrates Her First Grammy Nominations

Ice Spice Loved Her Own Music This Year

In addition to your top 5 artists, Spotify Wrapped also shares your 5 most listened-to songs, which Spice also shared with fans. That was even funnier as they were all five tracks that she appears on. “Boys a liar Pt. 2,” “In Ha Mood,” “Princess Diana,” “Munch,” and “Deli” round out her top 5 list.

Ice Spice found herself in the midst of a strange online controversy earlier this year. A video went viral on Twitter of her being handed a drink by a fan and instead passing it off to one of her friends. Her fans online certainly understood why she wouldn’t take a drink from a stranger. But many wondered why, if she was suspicious of the drink, she would hand it off to one of her friends for them to drink. What do you think of Ice Spice being her own most listened-to artist on Spotify this year? Let us know in the comment section below.

Read More: Ice Spice Teases Something Coming In 2024

[Via]

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Conway The Machine & Wun Two Deliver A Laidback Quickie With “Cosca”: Stream

Conway The Machine’s already had a prolific 2023, but do you think that this refined machinery stops at anytime? Well, if you do, you’d be sorely mistaken, as he’s gearing up for his next project PALERMO dropping towards the end of the year, which is a collaborative effort with producer Wun Two. Moreover, they’ve already dropped a couple of singles for the album, including “Montagna” with Goosebytheway. By comparison, this new single “Cosca” is shorter, more somber, but nonetheless fiery and dexterous on behalf of the Buffalo native. As such, it’s a short but welcome addition to the tracklist that could serve as your bite-sized introduction to PALERMO.

Furthermore, Wun Two came through with a dry and easy-going boom-bap drum pattern, and chose some wavy instrumentation to fit this vibe. For example, the infectious guitar loop throughout is what gives “Cosca” its more tender and laidback sound, as its woozy tone and playing invokes a haze of smoke. Still, the brightness and warm nature of the beat emerges with the watery and simple synth chords that appear more prominently towards the end of the song, complimented by some deep bass tones. As such, it’s well-contrasted and lush enough for Conway The Machine to sound boastful and relaxed on it while still delivering some animated ad-libs and inflections. Given his history of collaboration, one that his new Drumwork album exemplifies, it’s no surprise there’s a lot of chemistry here.

Read More: Busta Rhymes Labels Conway The Machine One Of His “Favorite MCs Ever”

Conway The Machine’s “Cosca” With Wun Two: Stream

Lyrically, the Griselda affiliate doesn’t tread any new ground here: his history in the streets, his proximity to women, using these as balances for his own mental struggles… you get the idea. Actually, it’s one of his simplest lyrical displays in recent memory, but given the short and breezy nature of this single, it comes as little surprise. Either way, these two were still able to provide another compelling taste of Palermo, which should close off the “We Outside” artist’s year with a bang. If you haven’t heard “Cosca” yet, find it on your preferred streaming service and check out some standout bars below. Let us know what you think of it in the comments and stay posted on HNHH for more on Conway The Machine and Wun Two.

Quotable Lyrics
In my mind, I’ma get it with the stove,
I’ma split it with the bros, y’all get a bag and spend it with the h*es,
They thought they had the drop, but a n***a on his toes,
Got switches on the Glock, bro gon’ hit him with the pole

Read More: Kanye West’s Odd But Meaningful Gift To Conway The Machine Explained

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Drake Puts Out “Scary Hours 3” Instrumentals, But With A Twist

Drake’s Scary Hours 3, also known as For All The Dogs Scary Hours Edition, was a tight collection of six tracks and a whole lot of bars. Whether it was his beefs in the industry, relationships with women, and so much more, he had a lot to say and said it in the most fitting ways possible. Moreover, Drizzy spit a lot of funny bars, some cringe, some poignant lines, and with an overall sense of confidence. However, given the incredible production from the likes of Conductor Williams and The Alchemist on here, plus many other names, it stands to reason that there’s plenty of potential for other artists to excel in this lane.

Furthermore, Drake knows this, and took it upon himself to challenge others to beat him at his own game. He’s officially dropped the instrumentals for Scary Hours 3 on his website– but, there’s a twist to it. The Toronto native designed a scavenger hunt of sorts on his website, where you have to click through various rooms and scour for these links to download the beats. We don’t see a lot of stuff like this anymore from artists, especially ones as big as him. As such, this is actually kind of refreshing and a fun idea for die-hards to engage with the music more closely.

Read More: Charlamagne Tha God Recalls Drake Pressing Him Over Criticism

Drake’s Scary Hours 3: Stream

Of course, just because Drake got bar-heavy on here over some classic beats doesn’t make Scary Hours 3 an automatic hit. Anthony Fantano of The Needle Drop, for example- who isn’t the biggest fan of his music but still gave For All The Dogs a six out of 10- hit the new collection of tracks with a score of five out of 10. Regardless, plenty of fans expressed a lot of happiness with the additional EP. In fact, it’s what many of them wanted for a long time. Maybe this means that these instrumentals will resonate with artists and listeners who feel inspired by the 37-year-old’s own adherence to the pen here.

Meanwhile, after big wins at the 2023 Billboard Music Awards, he’s probably feeling more on top of the world than ever this year. Sure, that’s quite the steep competition considering his touring success and all that, but it’s a challenge Aubrey Graham loves to keep up with. Will you accept his challenge and drop a 32 over the “Wick Man” instrumental? Let us know in the comments and log back into HNHH for the latest news and updates on Drake.

Read More: Drake’s “Scary Hours 3” Sales Projections Are Here

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