Review: Little Simz, ‘Sometimes I Might Be Introvert’
Little Simz’s fourth album is a dreamy musical that crowns the rapper as the most talented artist of her class.
Bridging UK rap and hip hop
Little Simz’s fourth album is a dreamy musical that crowns the rapper as the most talented artist of her class.
The underground’s most ambitious duo returns with another cutting-edge project.
Nas and Hit-Boy show that sequels can be better than the original, reinstating Nas as a cross-generational Midas.
Fredo’s second album in six months signals a fresh start, donning a skeletal shell of a man that’s still processing his traumas.
Harlem native, Dave East and Brooklyn-bred producer, Harry Fraud, come together to bring a new energy into the lost art of mafioso rap.
Logic returns with a half baked project that doesn’t do much except tarnish his acclaimed “final album”.
For its 10-year anniversary, we reflect on the impact and quality of Jay-Z and Kanye West’s ‘Watch the Throne’.
Isaiah Rashad’s return finds him reoccupying his lane of chilled out, lowkey hip hop.
Unknown T’s second mixtape lingers in cruise control, occupying the Homerton rapper’s usual Gotham settings.
Wolverhampton rapper Danny Zealous has released his latest track, “No Shame”, as he preps for his upcoming EP.
All solo Aesop Rock albums ranked from worst to best.
We jump back twenty-five years to see the impact of UGK’s magnum opus, Ridin’ Dirty.