Review: Post Malone, ‘Twelve Carat Toothache’
Malone’s fourth album strips away the glamour along with the colour.
Bridging UK rap and hip hop
Malone’s fourth album strips away the glamour along with the colour.
The Kentucky rapper’s sophomore album is a mundane cringe-fest.
Rich in emotion and enchanting in sound, You Can’t Kill Me continues to showcase 070 Shake’s talent for remarkable aesthetic.
The young R&B prodigy returns from a four-year hiatus with her long awaited, hypnotic debut album.
The masked Brit’s intimacy wears thin on his debut album, supplying flashes of career highs bogged down by filler.
Knucks brings a classy touch to UK hip hop on Alpha Place, a thirteen-track tape with plenty stories to tell.
The Queen heavyweight returns with another action-packed project, leaving listeners with an adrenaline rushing journey into the mind of a maniac.
Ransom drops his first full-length release of the year, ‘No Rest for the Wicked’.
Jordy demands your attention on his second EP, a six-track showcase of a man who’s taking rap seriously.
The Compton star is plagued with trauma on his first album in five years; a conflicted oracle that finds Lamar at his most sincere, astute and controversial.
The Long Beach rapper’s fifth album finally closes the casket on his scarring past.
The West London export returns to form on his third mixtape, a showcase of organic drill and indelible bars that justify the hype.