Rap artists have been quietly creating an underground kingdom, and you haven't heard of him yet. They could be the most slept on rapper out there right now. On first listen, you'll notice their Eminem influence with the similar beat choice and also flows, but some cannot be wiped off as another Shady clone. Hailing from different cities, their dark, bouncy, emotional, lyrical, melodic and sometimes crazy delivery can only be summed up in one word, RAW.
One has climbed to the top of the hip hop scene and also has produced a number of mix tapes, which includes his latest. He has sold hundreds of thousands of mix tapes and just lately was signed to a big label. He may be just recognized by being on the magazine cover, featured and interviewed by some of the lesser known publications. Underground, it is still best to initially form a fan-base before heading all the way.
Another artist, the man at the heart of an enigmatic rap project, is also known as front-man of the hip-hop group of his own. But he would choose not to talk about any of that. The truth is, he would prefer to not speak at all. He'd initially reject interview request, replying that he would prefer to read a writer's take on his group's music rather than offer his personal answers. He'll not name the other individuals in the project. He wouldn't send out pics; rather, he asked that they run the music graphic of the group. They are a group happy to work in the shadows.
A group of artists downplay that point of mystery, but it works nicely with their music. On the tracks they independently produce, create a clanking, discordant form of rap a lot colder and harsher than anything ever produced. Drums hit at unpredictable intervals, John Carpenter synth-smears appear from nowhere, and tracks follow their very own internal logic, voices tripping over and also disturbing one another. But as heady and experimental as such tracks may be, they still act as straight-up head-knock rap music, as deep as anything on the new mixtapes. It is smart, tough music.
Another rap artist's music videos are being showcased on television, magazines have covered him and his online popularity keeps thriving; he's climbing the music charts. Getting into the booth comes with ease to him. Where he's today, is really a future he just imagined in the past when he was still in high school. And he used a great part of secondary school focusing on his music. His goal was to make music his job after college. To really make it something he could live off would make his day perfect as well as satisfying. He'd be fortunate to be young and be so successful, but still feel like he has to put in a lot of work to reach where he is at. He does not feel like he would just make a mixed tape and then out of the blue have a million views on YouTube.
One has climbed to the top of the hip hop scene and also has produced a number of mix tapes, which includes his latest. He has sold hundreds of thousands of mix tapes and just lately was signed to a big label. He may be just recognized by being on the magazine cover, featured and interviewed by some of the lesser known publications. Underground, it is still best to initially form a fan-base before heading all the way.
Another artist, the man at the heart of an enigmatic rap project, is also known as front-man of the hip-hop group of his own. But he would choose not to talk about any of that. The truth is, he would prefer to not speak at all. He'd initially reject interview request, replying that he would prefer to read a writer's take on his group's music rather than offer his personal answers. He'll not name the other individuals in the project. He wouldn't send out pics; rather, he asked that they run the music graphic of the group. They are a group happy to work in the shadows.
A group of artists downplay that point of mystery, but it works nicely with their music. On the tracks they independently produce, create a clanking, discordant form of rap a lot colder and harsher than anything ever produced. Drums hit at unpredictable intervals, John Carpenter synth-smears appear from nowhere, and tracks follow their very own internal logic, voices tripping over and also disturbing one another. But as heady and experimental as such tracks may be, they still act as straight-up head-knock rap music, as deep as anything on the new mixtapes. It is smart, tough music.
Another rap artist's music videos are being showcased on television, magazines have covered him and his online popularity keeps thriving; he's climbing the music charts. Getting into the booth comes with ease to him. Where he's today, is really a future he just imagined in the past when he was still in high school. And he used a great part of secondary school focusing on his music. His goal was to make music his job after college. To really make it something he could live off would make his day perfect as well as satisfying. He'd be fortunate to be young and be so successful, but still feel like he has to put in a lot of work to reach where he is at. He does not feel like he would just make a mixed tape and then out of the blue have a million views on YouTube.
No Responded To This Post
Leave A Reply