I’m always going to love Australian hip-hop. It’s a fact I’ve come to accept, and it all started with three dudes from Adelaide. Growing up, one of the major debates was always Hilltop Hoods vs Bliss and Eso. Without question, I – like a majority of people around me – loved Hoods and hated Bliss N Eso. Though I’ve mellowed my stance on Bliss N Eso, my love for Hilltop Hoods is strong as ever, and a lot of that is because of State of the Art.

I first heard State of the Art back in 2010, having just started high school. I’d heard of them before, of course (who could escape The Hard Road, still their most notable release), but I’d never really delved further. Until State of the Art, that is.

What really struck me was that it was also my first real experience with really loving an artist. Sure, I had my Rogue Traders phase back in primary school (I even remember lining up to buy their albums at Borders, which feels like a very long time ago), but this was a whole new experience. I actively sought out the Hoods’ music, making sure that I had access to all their albums (which was a pretty hard task back then).

State of The Art feels like a career-defining album, which is impressive considering the songs and albums that came before it. Not may acts release their best work on their fifth album. The Nosebleed Section, The Hard Road and Clown Prince were all massive songs when they came out, and it’s true that the former two are bigger than anything on State of The Art. But this album held more influence as a whole, for a couple of reasons.

Firstly, Chase That Feeling was omnipresent when it came out, from radio to Channel 10 and beyond; even today, the opening piano riff is immediately recognisable.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uq8PyyMbrYQ

Secondly, Classic Example features Pharoahe Monch. This was huge at the time, one of the first Australian hip-hop songs to feature an American artist (to come would be Bliss N Eso with Nas, A.B. Original with Guilty Simpson, Killer Mike with Tkay Maidza and plenty more).

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6jrkmkn_xAY

 

We’ve come a long way in terms of accepting Australian hip-hop, but this was the first time an American artist really appeared to acknowledge one of our own. While we’re still waiting for an Australian rapper to break overseas (Iggy Azalea doesn’t count), it’s bound to happen soon, and it all began right there.

For me, it was the confidence of each song that made the album so great. To this day, Super Official is still my favourite Hilltop Hoods song; Suffa and Pressure deliver some of the best verses of their career, spitting back and forth over a powerful horn-led beat.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6n3D_3rOmiw

From the scratches to the accents (yes, I love Australian accents in hip-hop, fight me), on top of easy-to-follow lyrics that were perfect for a younger me to understand, all in all, this was an incredible album. It still is.

Every time I go back and listen to State of the Art, I’m still blown away by its timeless originality. Still Standing, for example, brings together a West Indian influence and orchestral instrumentation (they had previously released the orchestral The Hard Road Restrung reworking of their previous album). For me, those lyrics remain as relevant as ever to the groundbreaking group; We still sharp, still craft hip-hop that they played in the park/Still jamming, still paving the path/Still making our mark, still ain’t for the faint of the heart/Still standing, still state of the art”. In many ways, they created the sound that would dominate Australian hip-hop right up until a few years ago, when the whole scene started splintering off into countless new directions.

While many came before and even more have (and will) led the way since, for me, Hilltop Hoods are Australian hip-hop to a tee. No matter where their career continues to take them, they’ll forever be legends of the scene, and we might just look back one day at this album as their best.

Words by Ben Madden

Image: Seshanka Samarajiwa/Howl & Echoes (full gallery here)

It’s 2003, and the boys and I are playing wannabe gangsters. I remember trying to impress girls by rapping Bone Thugs and Ice Cube. We were shooting hoops and playing basketball video games on the weekend and blaring LudacrisRoll Out and Growin’ Pains on repeat – we simply idolised American rap culture.

That was until Obesecity hit our stereos. Obesecity was an album put out by Obese Records back in 2003. Earlier this year, Obese Records shut its doors; it was a sad day and I am still grieving the loss. We are now in a new wave of Australian hip-hop, and I am yet to find where I stand amongst it. So, while I grieve and sort through the new generation’s EPs, I thought it would be a good idea to look back at this culture-defining album and the impact it had on me.

Before this album entered my life, I had no real tie or draw to the music of the city and culture I grew up in and surrounded myself with. It was too easy for me to identify with American culture: I was playing high level basketball (as well as a 15-year-old can) and listened to hip-hop almost exclusively (with a little Dr. Hook and Marvin Gaye and a ton of Mariah Carey thrown in). Basically, I thought I was gangster.

I rocked a 12-inch afro and wore And1 tracksuits; I even thought that if I met Snoop Dogg we would become best mates. Then a mate came around whose older brother, Pegz, ran a little record label/record store down in Prahran called Obese Records. My mate brought over a CD from there called Obesecity, a compilation CD of some of Australia’s greatest MCs of the time.

I hadn’t heard any Aussie hip-hop until this point, and I was immediately drawn to its vibe.

The first track, Now We’re Somewhere by Terra Firma feat. Pegz and Reason, was the reason my mate brought over the CD, as he knew I loved hard-knocking beats and clever dope lyrics and he wanted to show me his brother’s opening line.“Trap your mind in my right,” Pegz rapped over the Simplex beat and I was sold. We finished shooting hoops, stole a couple of dad’s stubbies and sat in my garage smashing the album again and again.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TC0VuVij_KY

Every track seeped Australian-ness and I started to become proud of where I came from. On track 5, Unsuspected, first of all – those horns! Secondly, Upshot says: “I live for my culture although I feel rejected,” and that’s what I wanted. I wanted to live for the culture, whatever that meant. I was still trying to find myself, and this song started to pave a way for me to join ‘that’ culture.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eFCZtq6bjsI

This was also the first time I heard Hilltop Hoods. Their track Riding Under One Banner summed up the love Australia had for its hip-hop scene. The hook for the song has the boys listing Aussie hip-hop artists and saying that they are “riding under one banner.” Regardless, of what your thoughts are on Hilltop Hoods’ new music, their skills in the early 2000s were undeniable and their impact on the Aussie hip-hop scene is everlasting.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ProbvyhmE5c

For so long, I’d been listening to American hip-hop and it’s all East vs. West and rappers beefing with each other and bragging about how they are quick to kill each other. Then, suddenly, we have this Obese family all pulling together to make this compilation and “Riding Under One Banner.”

That said, the album does feature one (perhaps Australia’s first and only) gangsta rap tune, featuring none other than the infamous crime legend Chopper Read. He is legitimately a dope rapper, and I’m not just saying that because he rapped, “Don’t care who you know or where you been, it’s not the point/ keep talking shit, I’ll do another 20 in the joint.” But his skills are probably heightened by the fact that I truly believe his lyrics. This track goes harder than most, and is always worth a repeat listen.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qv9QXkL4Deg

I was really drawn to Australian hip-hop, and as I got older I found a greater appreciation for it. I found that Aussies tried a little harder, their beats were impeccable and the lyrics were usually extremely clever and conscious (with the exception of Slop My Knob) and really spoke to my soul. Two tracks on this album especially spoke to me. They were Solomon Klepto’s And I Wish and Ethic’s Anguish. Maybe in the greater scheme of hip-hop I would have found this deeper level either way, but Sol and Ethic really brought it out more so than a lot of other artists at the time. The hook on Anguish spoke to my adolescent questions and feelings I was having about growing up: “have you ever felt this way?/ or am I the only one?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ihCt7G5_MCQ

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3qq3XERoJ4E

The reason this album had such a lasting effect on me is due to the doorways it opened for new rap music in my life. I can’t have been the only one either: later on in 2003, even JB Hi-Fi started expanding their hip-hop/ rap section to include an Aussie rack. As the Aussie section expanded further and further over the years, I started buying some of the best Australian hip-hop albums to grace the shelves, and the reason I knew which CDs to buy first was by giving preference to the artists on the Obesecity album.

I don’t think I missed any classics. I got Terra Firma’s Waking The Past, Hilltop’s The Calling, Pegz’s Capricorn Cat, Bias B’s In Bed With Bias, A-Love’s Ace of Hearts, the fucking amazing Brad Strut’s The Authentic LP, and many more.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sgedpim1XZA

When I went to the States for basketball years later and was feeling homesick, I would throw on Obesecity and always ended up also throwing on Capricorn Cat and The Authentic LP. Living and playing with American basketball players led to all sorts of debates on the state of hip-hop, but once most of them got past the Aussie accent they were able to love and appreciate Australian hip-hop for the gem that it was.

Australian hip-hop just fucking exploded onto the scene after this album dropped, and it will go down as everlasting and one of the greatest posse albums of all time. I want to thank Obese Records and Obesecity for showing me the way, for making me a proud Australian and ensuring I didn’t lose myself when I moved to America. And I especially want to thank Obesecity for turning us teenage Australian wannabe gangsters into proud and (mostly) functioning members of Australian society.

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Image: Discogs.com

I will admit that I slept on Royce da 5’9″ for way too long. As in, until a few months ago. I know, I know. But I’m awake now, and that’s the main thing – just in time for his new album, Layers, which drops this Friday.

Interestingly, the album is coming out in Australia via Golden Era, an imprint label run by Australian rappers Hilltop Hoods. This marks the label’s first international release.

Royce’s involvement in hip-hop is long, prolific and remarkable, as I’ve come to learn in my brief but intense self-introduction to the Detroit rapper, who first rose to attention with Bad Meets Evil, a rap duo also featuring another then-unknown rapper who you might’ve heard of once or twice, Eminem.

The prolific collaborator has also worked as part of Slaughterhouse and PRhyme, as well as numerous solo albums, with Layers marking his sixth. While the seventeen track offering is predominantly solo, a handful of tracks featuring big names like Pusha T and Rick Ross add a dash of star power to the record, which will undoubtedly be hailed as one of 2016’s best by many.

Announcing the news via Twitter, Royce also revealed that an Australian tour was on its way:

Layers comes out this Friday, April 15. You can pre-order it here.

Tracklist:

1. Tabernacle (prod by S1)
2. Pray (prod by Mr. Porter)
3. Hard (prod by Antman)
4. Startercoat (prod by Mr. Porter)
5. Wait (prod by Jake One)
6. Shine (Skit)
7. Shine (prod by Nottz)
8. Lincoln (Skit)
9. Flesh (prod by DJ Khalil)
10. Hello (Feat. Melanie Rutherford) (Skit)
11. Misses (Feat. K. Young) (prod by DJ Khalil)
12. Dope! (Feat. Lauren W. Coden) (prod by Pain 1)
13. America (produced by S1)
14. Layers (Feat. Pusha T & Rick Ross) (prod by Mr. Porter)
15. Quiet (Feat. Tiara & Mr. Porter) (prod by Mr. Porter)
16. Gottaknow (prod by Mr. Porter)
17. Off (prod by Mr. Porter)

The Hilltop Hoods have long been one of Australia’s most well-loved local hip-hop acts, and last weekend they showed it off in true style, performing at the monumental Allphones Arena in Sydney. The stadium tour is going ahead in support of their recent release Drinking From The Sun, Walking Under Stars Restrung, an arrangement of their two double platinum selling albums, Walking Under Stars and Drinking From The Sun. The hit songs were reimagined with the help of the 32-person Adelaide Symphony Orchestra and the 20-person Adelaide Chamber Singers Choir, and follows on from the same idea as their similarly orchestral album The Hard Road: Restrung, released back in 2007.

Following opening support performances from A.B Original and Maverick Sabre, the Hilltop Hoods played an electrifying show to the mammoth crowd, with the unique, lush backing of the Sydney Symphony Orchestra, as well as the Sydney Chamber Singers. The musicians were led by conductor Hamish McKeich, who also conducted the orchestra during the recording of the album.

The combination of their immediately recognisable brand of hip-hop with orchestral and choral sounds is unique and intriguing to hear, and Hilltop Hoods pulled it with the confidence and experience of a group who truly know how to command a stadium crowd.

A.B Original

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It’s here! 2,099,701 votes tallied from over 188 countries and we have our Hottest 100 of 2014. A lot of us will be attempting to piece together which songs we heard when, with blurry memories from our Australia Day celebrations. Let’s rummage through and dig out which artists had major wins. 

First off, some honourable mentions:

Odd Mob#70 Is It a banger? – “If there are any acoustic instruments used? It is not a banger” Coming in at 70, Aziz Ansari’s voice mixed with a funky bassline – well deserved!

Flight Facilities #59 Sunshine feat. Reggie Watts, #39 Two Bodies feat. Emma Louise – Any song featuring Reggie Watts is sure to make the Hottest 100! Two huge tunes from Flight Facilities that I’m sure we will hear all throughout 2015.

Run The Jewels #72 Close Your Eyes (And Count To Fuck) ft. Zach De La Rocha – anyone who reads Howl & Echoes knows how much we love RTJ. We were a little upset that they weren’t higher up in the countdown, but fucking stoked that they were represented at all. Bring on RTJ3 (and read our interview with them here)

Alright. Here’s the Hottest 100 years of 2015.

Chet Faker – #8 1998, #7 Gold, #1 Talk is Cheap

Chet, we salute you. To have one song in the top ten is a massive achievement, let alone three. The only other artist to achieve this feat was Powderfinger in 2003. Chet is no stranger to the Hottest 100, this being his third consecutive year. However, this year Prince Chet arises King Chet – smashing the Hottest 100 to pieces and capturing a cultured Japanese Instagram in the process. 

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The Preatures#29 Somebody’s Talkin 

The Preatures have stormed in for their second year in a row at No. 29. The 5 piece from Sydney often fly under our radar but have slowly been gaining a huge rep. Opening for The Rolling Stones last year on their tour around Australia, it’s weird to think that none of them were alive when the Stone first formed in 1962. I’m sure The Preatures have some goodies for us in 2015, and no doubt I’ll be including them in next years wins of the countdown. 

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Peking Duk#5 Take Me Over (feat SAFIA), #2 High (feat. Nicole Millar) 

Peking Duk, we also salute you. Two songs in the top 5 is another incredible feat for the Canberra duo. Last year they tore up festival stages at Groovin in the Moo, Splendour in the Grass, Beyond the Valley and Stereosonic. Also a quick tip – if you haven’t seen them live, they often open with a personally recorded message from Karl Stevanovic – well worth a watch. When quizzed about they’re two songs in the top five they answered “we don’t write music to make lists, but more for the awesome feeling people get when listening to it.” Well guys, you achieved that and made the list, twice!

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Alison Wonderland#37 I Want U

Studies have said that the 2nd time you hear a song is the most likely point that it will resonate with you positively. The second time that I heard I Want U was at Alison Wonderland’s packed out show at the Metro Theatre last year. To say that it resonated positively would be a vast understatement. Hailed by Annie Mac and Diplo last year as “one of the best DJ’s coming out of Australia” Alison’s new album Run is coming out on March 20th, so keep your eyes peeled.

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Hilltop Hoods#57 Walking Under Stars, #36 Won’t Let You Down (feat. Maverick Sabre) #3 Cosby Sweater 

Hilltop Hoods are one of those bands that continually surprise us. Did you know their last 4 albums have all gone No. 1 in Australia? That’s a huge feat and they are deserve each place in the Hottest 100 of their last album Walking Under Stars. The Adelaide trio has been at the forefront of the Aussie Hip-Hop scene since they started out in 1994. Three years in a row at the third to spot…. Does that just sting a teensy bit though?

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