Hiphop
25 25} tagged with "Hiphop"
Articles
25 25}

Whose Bay Is It? Mac Dre, Yukmouth, and the Enduring Politics of Regional Sound
Mac Dre, Yukmouth, and the hyphy movement forged a fiercely local Bay Area hip-hop identity — and the fight over who can claim it is far from over.
June 8, 2026

The Architect: How Zeebra Built Japanese Hip-Hop From the Underground Up
Zeebra didn't just rap — he engineered a movement, building Japanese hip-hop from Yoyogi Park cyphers to a globally recognised culture through King Giddra and decades of deliberate scene-making.
June 8, 2026

Tokyo Frequencies: How Chaki Zulu Is Rewriting the Rules of Japanese Rap
Tokyo producer Chaki Zulu is reshaping Japanese rap by blending jazz, R&B, and electronic music through a distinctly Tokyo lens — redefining what a beatmaker can be.
June 7, 2026

Shadowed by Streaming: How Green Dollar Assassin, BudaMunk, and the Underground Inheritor Generation Are Keeping Boom-Bap's Soul Alive
Japan's underground producers like BudaMunk and Green Dollar Assassin are keeping boom-bap's soul alive where streaming algorithms can't reach — and that's exactly the point.
June 7, 2026

The Archivist on the Decks: How DJ Mitsu the Beats Keeps Jazz-Rap's Soul Alive
Tokyo's DJ Mitsu the Beats and Jazzy Sport are keeping jazz-rap's intellectual tradition alive through meticulous crate digging, deep sampling craft, and Japan's uniquely reverent hip-hop culture.
June 6, 2026

The Invisible Architect: How DJ Okawari Built a Global Audience One Jazz Loop at a Time
Japan's invisible beat architect DJ Okawari has quietly amassed hundreds of millions of streams worldwide — no interviews, no persona, just piano loops that found their own way home.
June 5, 2026

Slow Down: DJ Screw's Archive, Houston's Cassette Underground, and the Long Politics of Black Music Preservation
DJ Screw's handmade cassette network in Houston's Third Ward was never an underground workaround — it was a fully realized, self-sovereign Black music archive built outside every structure mainstream culture uses to grant legitimacy.
June 4, 2026

The Terms of Visibility: Isaiah Rashad, Black Queer Masculinity, and Hip-Hop's Unequal Ground
Isaiah Rashad's forced bisexuality disclosure reveals how hip-hop distributes grace unevenly — shaped by commerce, race, and whose queerness the industry deems safe enough to absorb.
June 4, 2026

Lost in Translation, Found in the Groove: How BudaMunk Carried L.A.'s Soul Back to Tokyo
Japanese-born producer BudaMunk absorbed L.A.'s underground beat culture firsthand before carrying its warmth and philosophy back to Tokyo's thriving hip-hop scene.
June 4, 2026

The Archivist Who Built Japanese Hip-Hop: DJ Muro and the Philosophy of the Crate
DJ Muro, Tokyo's legendary "king of digging," shaped Japanese hip-hop through a lifelong devotion to vinyl — treating the crate not as a collection, but as a living archive demanding mastery.
June 4, 2026

The Machine That Built a Culture: How the MPC Rewired Hip-Hop's DNA
The MPC60 didn't just change how beats were made — it dismantled the gatekeepers, gave a culture its instrument, and rewired recorded music from the bedroom up.
June 4, 2026

The Silence Between the Beats: How DJ Krush Rewired the Language of Instrumental Hip-Hop
DJ Krush's minimalist approach to instrumental hip-hop — built on silence, texture, and turntablism — transformed a Bronx art form into something entirely his own from a Tokyo record crate.
June 3, 2026

Thirty Years in the Basement: Why Illmatic Still Sets the Standard for Hip-Hop Ambition
Thirty years on, Nas's Illmatic remains hip-hop's gold standard — a 39-minute masterclass in radical specificity, disciplined restraint, and the kind of lyrical ambition that time hasn't dulled.
June 3, 2026

Twenty Years Later, Lupe Fiasco's 'Food & Liquor' Still Shows Hip-Hop What It Could Be
Twenty years on, Lupe Fiasco's debut *Food & Liquor* remains a visionary hip-hop landmark — rooted in Chicago's South Side and reaching far beyond it.
June 3, 2026

Still Breathing: How Nujabes Invented a Sound the World Is Still Catching Up To
Shibuya crate-digger Jun Seba became Nujabes, crafting a jazz-rap sound so precisely his own that lo-fi music is still living in its shadow twenty years later.
June 2, 2026

The Elder at the Mic: Jay-Z, the Roots Picnic, and What It Means When Hip-Hop's Senior Figures Settle Scores in Public
Jay-Z's Roots Picnic freestyle was more than a performance — it was a cultural reckoning, forcing hip-hop to ask what it means when its elders settle scores on sacred ground.
June 2, 2026

Smoke and Static: How DJ Krush Turned Mo' Wax's Global Experiment Into Something Profoundly Lonely
DJ Krush transformed Mo' Wax's glossy cosmopolitan aesthetic into something rawer and more solitary — turning Tokyo's alienation and Japan's hip-hop history into profoundly personal instrumental worlds.
June 2, 2026

Two Worlds, One Frequency: How Nujabes and J Dilla Independently Arrived at the Same Soul
Two visionary producers separated by oceans, Nujabes and J Dilla built strikingly similar sonic worlds from jazz, soul, and silence — a convergence too deep to call coincidence.
June 1, 2026

Detroit as Frequency: How One City's Geography, Labor, and Loss Built the Soundtrack of the Modern World
From a family loan and a Ford assembly line job, Berry Gordy built Motown into a global force — one thread in Detroit's story of how geography, race, and industrial labor shaped modern music.
June 1, 2026

The Architect in the Shadows: How Issugi Built Japan's Most Vital Underground Hip-Hop Scene From the Inside
Tokyo MC and producer Issugi shaped Japan's underground hip-hop scene through dual mastery of beats and bars, building a world defined by craft, community, and uncompromising artistic integrity.
May 22, 2026

The Quiet Torchbearer: How Uyama Hiroto Kept Nujabes' Vision Alive
After the loss of Nujabes, flutist Uyama Hiroto carried their shared sound forward — crafting a solo career rooted in jazz, hip-hop, and quiet, uncompromising depth.
May 14, 2026

The Alchemist of Shimokitazawa: How Olive Oil Fused Free Jazz and Hip-Hop in the Margins of Tokyo
Tokyo-based producer Olive Oil built a singular sound in Shimokitazawa's underground, fusing free jazz and hip-hop through a neighbourhood that made that fusion feel inevitable.
May 13, 2026

Monte Booker and the Search for Meaning in the Noise of a New Chicago
With his debut album 'Noise / Meaning,' the visionary producer behind Smino and Noname is stepping into the spotlight. He’s not just dropping a record; he’s cementing a new sonic identity for a generation, proving the architect is now the main attraction.
October 13, 2025

Normtronics: From Willingboro to L.A.—An Instrumental Hip-Hop Journey
August 23, 2025

The Roots: Hip-Hop’s House Band and Eternal Outsiders
From South Philly cyphers to late-night TV, The Roots have shaped hip-hop’s live tradition and cultural backbone for over three decades.
August 22, 2025