April 09, 2026

Chino XL "Here To Save You All" (30th Anniversary)


New Jersey rapper Chino XL has had an underground following for years but now he's threatening to break through big time. Earlier this year, there was his "Kreep," an ingenious and haunting hip-hop groove based on "Creep" from English alt-rock band Radiohead. With his debut album for Rick Rubin's American label, Chino has delivered a knockout, a hurricane of ribald, rowdy rhymes and pummeling yet jazzy grooves. Chino XL is a throwback to an earlier generation of rappers who combined braggadocio with brains; their rhymes weren't just littered with profanities but often were genuinely clever. Some of Chino's lines should cause bursts of laughter among the pop-culture literate. In "Partner to Swing," he raps, "I catch more heat than a Hasidic Jew/ You catch two thumbs down like a Matty Rich movie review/ Your individuality's missing like Adam Walsh/ Your image is faker than the hair on Diana Ross." But Chino better watch his back; some of those he tackles aren't likely to be amused. Quincy Jones was so irked by Chino that he refused to allow any of his music to be sampled. Chino takes on everyone and everything: Naomi Campbell, D'Angelo, O.J. Simpson, teen pregnancy, Earth Day and even his own record label. Be warned: Some of the language and imagery are raw. The only question is what Chino XL can possibly do for an encore. As Chino says, he's so def, he needs closed captions. - Knight Rider News / Southern Illinoisan (Nov. 14, 1996). 



Rest In Peace, Chino XL.

April 06, 2026

Nas "I Am..." (Spin Magazine - June, 1999)


"My mom got me a typewriter when I was, like, 11," says Nas. "I got plenty good on it, too. I was up to 50 or 60 words a minute." Kicking back in his record label's Manhattan office, the 25-year-old Nasir Jones doesn't exactly look like he's headed for the typing pool. Decked out in the blue-and-orange haunte-urban color scheme of the season--in his own Esco line, of course--he's slouched in a chair, sipping bottled water, and talking in the airy tones of an after-hours jazz musician. "I used to freestyle all the time," he says. "Now I suck." But as any hard-core hip-hop fan will tell you, no one rocks the Olivetti like Nas. "With Nas, every lyric is visual," labelmate Wyclef Jean once said. "You could just take a song, write it down, put it in a book, and read it." Indeed, Nas all but invented a new school of hip-hop realism on his 1994 debut, Illmatic. A word-drunk masterpiece of ghetto reportage, the album describes baseheads, task force raids, and other facts of life in the projects in such quickly unfolding narratives that it defined a new genre: the book on DAT. Now, on is third solo album, I Am..., he's revisiting the early-90s New York aesthetic of spare sound and vivid imagery, leaving behind the Mafioso posturing and swooping crane shots of his recent past. In the years since emerging as hip-hop's messiah, Nas has released the more commercial solo album It Was Written, made a soundtrack for a bullet-riddled imaginary mob movie with rap supergroup the Firm, and learned a lot about the dangers of life in hip-hop's Playa's Club. "I think the big purchase I really regret was all the marijuana," he says. "I probably spent $2-3,000 a week on weed." Call this Nas's Hollywood period--he also costarred in Hype Williams's Belly as a credible, conflicted drug dealer, and even cowrote some of Will Smith's Big Willie Style. While Nas's recent projects have had their literary high points--including "I Gave You Power," a song told from the perspective of a Desert Eagle semiautomatic on It Was Written--they stray from the gritty tales of the Timberland-shod street narrator who emerged in '94. "I was just flowin'," Nas says of his early years. "It was just straight from living in the projects, with all those ideas and music in my head." 



Though Nas grew up in the rap feeder school of Queensbridge Projects--fellow alums include Mobb Deep, Biz Markie, and Rakim--at least some of that music in his head came from his father, jazz trumpeter Olu Dara (who played on Illmatic). "My pops always had a lot of music around the house, so we'd blow the trumpet and play the guitar and the flute and all that shit," Nas says. His own musical interests took a less classical direction--"I always wanted my mom to get me a Roland 808"--and Nas soon found his metier. Already writing his own comic books featuring heroes such as a boxer named Honey-boy and a superhero named Sea Man ("He was like Aquaman and Conan combined"), the young author inevitably gravitated to such hip-hop storytellers as Kool G Rap and Rakim. Nas once again looks to them for inspiration on I Am..., which he hopes will garner both the props of his first album and the multiplatinum chart success of his second. And while it does include trendy guest spots by the likes of Timberland and Aaliyah, it also includes sharp-eyed ghetto sociology, song-length metaphors, and a distinctly intellectual way with the boast. On the bombastic anti-playa-hater anthem "Hate Me Now," Nas claims not to be the richest or pimpin'-est rapper but rather the "most critically acclaimed / Best storyteller / Thug narrator." In the age of No Limit financial values, it's almost touching, as is the new song "Money Is My Bitch." "Yeah, I had a falling out with money," Nas says. "If she was a nice woman instead of a bitch, she would've treated me good. But she's just my bitch, so I can't really let her run my life." - Spin Magazine in June, 1999. 

April 04, 2026

Big Pun "Yeeeah Baby!" (The Source, 2000)


Imagine the puzzle faced by a larger cat--slightly heavier than the average entertainer--tryin' to make a name in hip-hop. If you're one of the Fat Boys, you make light of your size, using your music as a way to run one long-ass joke about your weight. If you're Biggie or Fat Joe, you come with the raw, ice grillin' any and everybody who might even think about crackin' a "fat" joke. But what do you do when you're not only one of the sickest MCs in the history of the sport, you also happen to be a genuinely funny mu'fucka? Before he left to join our fallen heroes, Big Pun gave us the answer in the form of the latest, and sadly, his final album, Yeeeah Baby! As the re-up to 1998's Capital Punishment, the portly Puerto Rock's last haymaker at the world offers an even more in-depth peep inside the heart and soul of a man in constant struggle with himself. But don't get it fucked up. Like on... Punishment, you won't hear Big Pun feelin' sorry for himself on this album. Instead, you'll get a backstage pass to the all-out jam that was Pun's personality: street-wise, intellectually sharp, sex-crazed--and funny as all hell. The album's intro, straight outta late-night shock TV, features Lord Sear (R.I.P., of Stretch & Bobbito fame) playing a Dr. Frankenstein-type who's puttin' the finishing touches on his latest creation: The Punisher, the ultimate MC genetically engineered from equal parts Kane, G Rap and, believe it or not, Eddie Murphy. From there, Yeeeah Baby! unfolds like a road-map, guiding travelers in finding more and more ways to laugh at the good, the bad and the ugly aspects of life. "It's So Hard," the Donnell Jones duet y'all have been hearin' blowin' up your radios, contains just the right mix of yin and yang that made Pun, like B.I.G. before him, so popular. And when Pun proclaims that after losing a hundred pounds, he's "ready to live," you'll fight back a tear while crackin' a smile, knowing that he lived his tragically short life to the fullest. Cont'd below...



For those of y'all dirty-fingernail types, who've been hittin' the rewind button since "Dream Shatterer," check "Leather Face," which has been makin' the mixtape and club rounds since late January, along with "Off With His Head," featuring Prospect, "We Don't Care," with Cuban and "The Wrong Ones," on which TS newcomer Sunkiss helps Pun blow some steam. And just in case all the "Latino explosion," backlash made you think he would tone down his ethnic pride, the salsa-stained "100%," featuring Tony Sunshine, will have you paradin' up Fifth Avenue with damn near every proud Puerto Rican in the New York metro area come summa'time. From straight gangsta cuts like "You Was Wrong," with fellow BX battlecat Drag-On, and "Watch Those" to hilarious stabs like "My Dick," "Laughing At You" and "N!gga Shit," Big Punisher's last hurrah testifies his penchant for the punch line. Not so much the "clincher," as in "joke," but rather the witty, "one up on that ass" remarks from someone who has had his share of life--and gone back for the free refills. Ultimately, Yeeeah Baby! will be judged more for the unfortunate circumstances surrounding its release than for its collection of true-to-form hip-hop moments. Heads, however, will realize--or recognize, if they aren't already die-hard fans--that Big Pun was a master of his craft. And as for those pop-hungry neophytes who never would've thought to pick up on his music before his death, I'd bet all the unmarked bills in your favorite radio station's stash-box that Pun is lookin' at y'all right now--laughin' his muthafuckin' ass off. - The Source, 2000. Rest In Peace to Christopher "Big Pun" Rios.
 

Here's the Loud Records commercial for the release of Yeeeah Baby!

April 02, 2026

Bahamadia "Kollage" (CMJ New Music Report, April 1996)


Philadelphia's Bahamadia isn't trying to go punch-for-punch with most of her male contemporaries. Her lyrics aren't the type to knock you out in one breath; instead they keep you off balance with a peppering of texture-rich rhymes that add up to a positively potent result. At a time when some MCs (Ol' Dirty Bastard and Busta Rhymes, for instance) seem ready for their own comic strip, Bahamadia remains in the shadows, honing her skills as if she's preparing for an MC battle to the death. Before we can say that she was discovered by Gang Starr's Guru in 1993, you'll notice her thick, earthy monotone flow, creeping up on you like a lyrical nerve gas that bears similar qualities to Guru's, as she remains resolute, confident and strong throughout her artistic debut, Kollage. With sparse, beat-drenched production courtesy of DJ Premier, Da Beatminerz and others, tracks like the infectious "Word Play" swoop you up in a sea of bass, while other cuts, like "Innovation," leave behind a jazzy residue as Bahamadia teaches her peers how to leave an impression without going into hysterics. "I Confess" is spiced by the use of Marvin Gaye's "Let's Get It On," making it the most accessible radio cut, but we favor her square-off with fellow Philly natives the Roots on the live "Da Jawn," inspired by Funky Four Plus One's "It's The Joint." - Glen Sansone (CMJ New Music Report, April 1996). Revisit this gem of an album below and you can still catch her live on tour.



A copy of the album review in CMJ New Music Report is below...

March 14, 2026

2Pac "Me Against The World" (The Associated Press, 1995)


"It ain't easy being me -- will I see the penitentiary, or will I stay free?" wonders Tupac Shakur, who calls himself 2Pac on his latest album, "Me Against the World." That question was answered last winter when Shakur was sentenced to a New York prison on a sex-abuse charge after a string of legal battles across the nation. But even behind bars, Shakur still remains a step ahead of the rap pack with "Me Against the World," a stellar mix of thought-provoking rhymes backed up by smooth base sounds and slick beats. In Shakur's mind, most of his problems are the cause of a troubled ghetto childhood and jealous people out to get him. His fury and anger are peppered throughout the disc, most prominently on "F The World," a fierce and foul rebuke of his many critics. But this album is more than a troubled man's outburst against the world; just when you think he is about to explode, Shakur switches gears and drops his guard to reveal a softer side. On the disc's most poignant track, "Dear Mama," a solemn Shakur gives thanks to his mother for supporting him through all the rough times. And "Old School" represents the album's rare lighthearted moment, as he gives props to all the old school rappers in a tune that will make any true-blue fan of the genre want to break out that old Run DMC or Slick Rick tape. "Me Against the World" is rife with contradictions; on "Young N!ggaz," he chastises young black males who see the thug life as their only way out of poverty; yet on other songs, he empathizes with drug selling and gang banging, a life he so often has embraced. But that doesn't take away from this disc's power, it just highlights the complexity of urban street life, and how hard it is to present difficult issues in black and white terms. - The Associated Press, 1995. My favorite song on the album: "So Many Tears." What's yours?



Arguably the best 2Pac album - yes or no?

February 27, 2026

Supastition & RJD2 "According To..." (Album Stream)


'According To…' marks the first collaborative release from critically acclaimed producer and DJ RJD2 and legendary underground rapper Supastition. Together, they merge their distinct styles to deliver an album that feels both familiar and unexpected, pushing creative boundaries while staying rooted in classic hip-hop sensibilities. The album was fully produced by RJD2, with Supastition delivering all vocals. Guest appearances include J-Live, STS, and E. Smitty. An incredible, genre-bending album from two phenomenal artists! According To... is available on Vinyl + CD HERE, and streaming below...

January 27, 2026

J.Cole "Birthday Blizzard '26" (EP Stream)


Birthday Blizzard ‘26 is a four-track surprise EP of freestyles released by J. Cole in celebration of his 41st birthday and in anticipation of his seventh and "final" album, The Fall-Off. The EP is hosted by Queens' own, DJ Clue. On the brief project, Cole raps over four classic Bad Boy instrumentals, particularly The Notorious B.I.G.’s “Who Shot Ya?,” Diddy’s “Victory,” and The LOX’s “Can I Live” and “Money, Power, Respect.” The EP was first teased by Jadakiss on his podcast, Joe and Jada, with Fat Joe, announcing that Cole would be tearing up some classic instrumentals from The Lox. Cole has utilized unique marketing approaches for his projects in past years, so I expect more of the same for The Fall Off. In past years, I've discussed DJ Clue's Birthday Blizzard '94 and Birthday Blizzard '96 mixtapes, so this is a nice nostalgic full-circle moment. Stay tuned for The Fall Off in February. 

January 23, 2026

Awon & Donnie Propa "The Street Jazz Mixtape"


UK's Donnie Propa is back with another one! His latest offering pays homage to Virginia-based MC Awon, aptly titled The Street Jazz Mixtape. The Don't Sleep Records MC has released some of the best jazzy hip-hop records in recent memory - consistent and prolific, Awon has countless projects you can throw on and listen to, front to back. Now you can run through 30 of his finest offerings on The Street Jazz Mixtape, which is also released on colored cassettes for those who enjoy physical copies. After, dig into the archives for countless Donnie Propa mixtapes and Awon albums.

January 15, 2026

Gang Starr "Step In The Arena" (CMJ New Music Report, 1991)



Gang Starr Step In The Arena (Chrysalis, 645 Madison Ave., New York, NY 10022) -- It's been quite a turnaround this year for the Brooklyn-based duo known as Gang Starr. After a falling-out with their old label, Wild Pitch, the duo took their show on the road, made appearances on "Back To Back Rhyming" from Lord Finesse's LP and soon thereafter caught the attention of Spike Lee. That resulted in a collaboration with jazz saxophonist Brandford Marsalis on "Jazz Thing" from the Mo' Better Blues soundtrack and an eventual deal with Chrysalis. Their second LP, Step In The Arena, borrows the more stylistically sophisticated, classier samples of jazz, funk/soul and straight-up streetwise hip-hop. DJ Premier's extensive musical knowledge helps him to create sparse beats that rousingly mesh with distinctive samples, loops and scratches to create sharply enticing bass-lines which range from early Motown funk on "What You Want This Time?" to hypnotizing jazzy textures. Overall, his DJ work is the perfect backdrop of G.U.R.U.'s lyrics that promote the group's positive philosophy in "Street Ministry," "Say Your Prayers," "As I Read My S-A" and "Precisely The Right Rhymes." Gang Starr reminds us just how creative and boundless rap can be. Also experience: "Step In The Arena," "Form Of Intellect," "Execution Of A Chump," "Beyond Comprehension" and "Here Today, Gone Tomorrow." - CMJ New Music Report (January 11, 1991). Images: Hip Hop Connection.

January 11, 2026

Smif-N-Wessun "Dah Shinin'" (You Better Wrekonize!, 1995)


Brooklyn: Population 2,231,000. The New York City borough is a veritable capital of hip hop culture, with high profile residents including Digable Planets, MC Lyte, Jeru the Damaja, the Notorious B.I.G., Gang Starr, The Fugees and Black Moon. The latest b-boys to stomp out of this rap mecca and make a move on the rap scene in their unlaced Timberlands are rappers Tek and Steele, better known as Smif-N-Wessun. Their biggest hit, "Bucktown," is a pseudonym for the music hotbed. "The environment of Brooklyn has always been to take what you need to succeed," says Steele. Like the Wu-Tang Clan of Black Moon, Smif-N-Wessun's style is strictly hardcore. Typical of West Coast rap, the cuts on Dah Shinin' (Nervous), their first album, are heavy on lyrics and light on R&B backbeats. Dah Shinin' debuted at number one on the rap chart in its first week of release. The hit "Bucktown" jacked the rap charts for a solid month. Keeping it real is a philosophy Tek and Steele picked up from their mentors in Black Moon. The duo get to perform as guest MCs on Black Moon's Enta Da Stage and open for Black Moon and Das EFX on their nationwide tour. Their opportunity to "shine" in that tour precipitated the album's title, Dah Shinin'. Summing up their style, Steele says, "We're just conversatin', speakin', talkin', puttin' facts into a rhyme so that they sound good to the ear.  


Bucktown, the breakout single by Smif n Wessun of Brooklyn, NY, is one of those songs that rips into radio by sheer force of popular demand, bucking expectations and giving new meaning to the term "pop music." But "Bucktown" is no novelty, and its proud descriptions of Brooklyn as "home of the original gun clappers" sure isn't pop in the usual sense. The track has an underproduced skeletal appeal; the terse, muscular rhymes by 21-year-old rappers Tek and Steele are as compelling as they are simple and grim. "Bucktown" took off so briskly, selling 75,000 copies in just three weeks, that the duo was a long way from having a full-length album completed to cash in on the single's obvious appeal. "The inspiration for the song was straight-up Brooklyn, USA," says Steele. "Bucktown is everywhere. We've been to places like Missouri, and we can tell you it's the same shit goin' on as we see in Brooklyn." As far as explaining the song's runaway success, Steele says, "I think if the idea could be bottled, then everybody would be making hit jams and selling 75,000 in one week. We're just representing ourselves, and people pick up on it. That's why we say, 'All heads recognize real heads on the rise.' This is classic New York City hip-hop! Continue to revisit Dah Shinin' below...


Additional Reviews: The Source, OneNut, Vibe, Rap Pages. Art by Danial Kelly.

January 09, 2026

Don't Be a Menace to South Central... (Vibe Magazine, Jan. 9, 1996)


Shawn and Marlon Wayans's new spoof, Don't Be a Menace to South Central While Drinking Your Juice in the Hood, parodies the recent deluge of in-da-'hood flicks, while the film's soundtrack has a loose "Can't we all just get along?" - type theme. A compilation of songs from some of R&B's and hip-hop's most popular artists, Don't Be a Menace packs a loaded 17 tracks. Talented artists like R. Kelly and the Wu-Tang Clan reveal few surprises, but what they do - being a sex man, going lyrically buckwild - they do practically to perfection. The opening track is the Wu's hectic "Winter Warz," wherein the Shao Lin champs spout ghetto madness over RZA's hazy, nonmelodic production. By the end of the soundtrack, though, their contribution is balanced by the Island Inspirational All-Stars' lite gospel track, "Don't Give Up." Junior M.A.F.I.A.'s Little Kim indirectly puts Jodeci's wailing pleas for sex ("Give It Up") in check with her sharp, cool-as-a-cucumber delivery on "Time to Shine." And R. Kelly proves he's the perfect renaissance man with his production of the Isley Brothers' mellifluous "Let's Stay Together," as well as his seductive "Tempo Slow." It's when artists are placed together, though, that the soundtrack becomes disappointing. Things just get awkward. Keith Murray and Lord Jamar accompany Texas's UGK in "Live Wires Connect," and the East Coasters overwhelm a weak, pseudo-G funk track. And when Luke joins Doug E. Fresh for "Freak It Out," a New York-style party chant, Mr. Campbell takes too long to warm up. The soundtrack for Don't Be a Menace probably won't help many menaces to society get along with folks any better. But the collection is filled with bouncing production, new-fashioned love songs, and even some old-school flavor--maybe it will at least get the boyz and girlz in the 'hood to dance. - Vibe Magazine, March 1996. The single version for "Renee" by Lost Boyz (not featured on Legal Drug Money) and Mona Lisa's "Can't Be Wasting My Time" - in addition to the classic verse from Cappadonna on "Winter Warz" - made this totally worth coppin' back in 1996. Revisit the Don't Be a Menace OST below...



The original album Vibe review and additional promo items are below...

January 01, 2026

Skillz "2025 Rap Up" (Happy New Year!)


What began in the early 2000s as a clever year-in-review record gradually became something fans came to expect — a lyrical snapshot of the year’s biggest moments across music, pop culture, politics, and everyday life. While many artists have attempted similar concepts, Skillz’s Rap Ups stand apart because they balance humor, critique, and perspective without feeling disposable or gimmicky. "2025 Rap Up" continues that lineage, but with a noticeable shift in tone. This year’s installment is explicitly dedicated to D’Angelo (R.I.P.), and that dedication shapes the entire record. Skillz raps over D’Angelo’s “Lady” and the smooth, soulful feel of the track slows the pace and gives the song a more reflective atmosphere. Skillz still touches on familiar Rap Up territory — notable events from the year, cultural shifts, moments that dominated conversation — but the approach feels less like rapid-fire commentary and more like reflection. The humor is still present, but it lands alongside fatigue, awareness, and perspective rather than punchline overload. The result is a record that feels less about racing through headlines and more about acknowledging the [obvious] emotional residue left behind by the year. We needed this! Listen to "2025 Rap Up" below + happy new year!