Earlier this year A$AP Rocky toured Australia and New Zealand (read our review here and check out the photos here) off the back of his successful 2015 sophomore album, At.Long.Last.A$AP. While Rocky courted controversy after being allegedly attacked in Auckland, it was opening act Raury who made the best impression. The young and refreshing Atlanta talent was a revelation with this empowering lyrics and cross-genre instrumentation, incorporating soul, hip-hop, pop, rock and folk into his feel good sound. Not only was he a charming presence on the stage, but also off it, as seen in his newly released mini-doco of the tour.

Teaming up with creative agency LoveRenaissance, the behind-the-scenes tour doco follows Raury and his crew as they discover what Australia and New Zealand has to offer. From groupie tales, fish tacos, lost passports through to stolen golf carts, Raury and his band members offer a glimpse of what really goes down when rappers go on tour. Even old mate Rocky makes an appearance towards the end when Raury performs a cover of L.S.D. and wilds out on stage to Hella Hoes.

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NmrAp1iKj78]

If you’re digging the doco make sure you read our interview with Raury here and check out the awesome photoshoot he took part in for us here.

Image: Saintheron

At long last, A$AP Rocky returned to Australia in support of his wonderful 2015 release AT. LONG. LAST. A$APHis hugely successful, sold-out tour saw him perform to sold out venues across the country. On support duties was Atlanta native Raury, who was also promoting his genre-defying 2015 album All We Need.

You can read our live review of the pair in Brisbane here, and check out our photo shoot and interview with Raury.

Raury

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A$AP Rocky

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Photos: Dani Hansen/Howl & Echoes

 

It has been a long time between drinks at an Australian A$AP Rocky show, with the NYC rapper staying firmly in the Northern hemisphere since his last tour in 2013, so it was pretty safe to say that anticipation levels were increasing as fans’ patience was doing the opposite. Then, in 2015 he released AT.LONG.LAST.A$AP, and had fans thinking that exact sentiment; “At long last, A$AP might return.” He held out for a while, but towards the end of that year he came through as he always does – A$AP Rocky was returning to Australia.

Considering he released one of the best albums of the year last year, it was hardly surprising that the shows sold out pretty quickly indeed, and it was even less surprising that the crowd at his Brisbane leg were getting very excited indeed as the time ticked by until Pretty Flacko took to the stage. Supporting the show was up-and-comer Raury, who practically exploded onto the scene last year as a fully-fledged star with his debut album All We Need, and has been on the up and up ever since. He played his explosive live set to an already packed room, the crowd absolutely buzzing and screaming back the lyrics of his final songs. A particular highlight was the borderline-evangelical Crystal Express towards the end of the set; Raury running back and forth across the stage as the crowd boogied along to the rumbling rhythm section that lasted through to his finale, Devil’s Whisper. Having caught the then-newcomer at Laneway last year, it was awesome to see just how far he has come since then when he already had an impressive catalogue and live show. Even bigger things are on their way for this guy!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LoI2C6pW9AQ

After Raury was piggy-backed off stage by a security guard that looked like Action Bronson, there was nothing to do but wait for the main event. And wait we did. Over an hour went by and there was still no sign of A$AP Rocky, and the crowd was beginning to get restless. Finally, after many a chant of “AAAASSSAAAAPPPPP!” the sinister synth sounds of Lord Pretty Flacko Jodye 2 echoed throughout the room, and he was finally there. Any frustrations that were held by the audience up until that point were instantly forgotten, as A$AP Rocky blew the proverbial roof off Eatons Hill Hotel.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yEG2VTHS9yg

Hit after hit after hit, Flacko held absolutely nothing back as he tore through his back catalogue, performing an exception mix of all three of his albums. From the seductive L$D, the fucking banger that is M’$, even Electric Body in all its devotion to the female physique, Rocky’s new songs slotted perfectly into his existing set list that was already banger heavy with the likes of Goldie and Wild For The Night among others. There was even room for an A$AP Yams tribute, with the crowd getting one of the first ever performances of Yamborghini High.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1eWdbMBYlH4

Sweaty, heaving, and frenzied by the time he was finished, the crowd was picking up all that A$AP was putting down, and giving it right back to him. When Rocky announced he didn’t feel safe to dance on stage anymore because the stage was wet with condensation from how hot and sweaty the room was, it was clear just how much fun everyone was having – A$AP Rocky included. Wrapping things up with a raucous, totally insane moshpit for Wild For The Night, it felt almost hard to believe that he was done, but it was probably a good thing considering how depleted all our bodies were after such an action-packed hour of his finest hits. Coming back on stage to throw merch into the crowd, it was this moment that provided the real highlight for me. Here was one of the biggest hip-hop stars of today, having just finished an incredible set and probably shaking with the adrenalin that would surely come from such a performance, taking time to interact with the lucky fans who had made it all the way to the front. No matter how big he gets, or how big his ego may seem, it’s insights like this that show the human side to the impossibly beautiful man that is A$AP Rocky, and the reason he has a cult-like following of millions behind him. A$AP FOREVER!

Image: Live Nation

Friday is still a while away but there have been a few top-notch videos to drop this week already. We thought we would smash the four best ones into a mid-week round up for you. Cop this:

Raury – Trap Tears (ft. Key!)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=9&v=ynmCgpaArOc

First up is Raury with the video for Trap Tears (ft. Key!), which sees him travel through an impoverished neighbourhood as he talks of the hardships faced by the underprivileged and overlooked. The song is taken from Raury’s LP All We Needwith the video noticeably shorter than the album version which is over five minutes long. Amidst the eerily desolate streets and run down houses, there is footage of a few dancers who pulls shape in the middle of the street cut with night time jaunts on quad bikes which leads into a group march lead by Raury. The clip wraps up with Raury and Key! performing on top of a truck, which Raury flips off in order to crowd surf the rest of the song out.

Wavves – My Head Hurts

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n0Guf94FQEs&feature=youtu.be

With WavvesAustralian tour dates mere days away, the video for My Head Hurts is essentially perfect. It’s a simple, roughly cut clip, opening with the band walking onto stage. What follows is a mess of live and tour life footage with the rush of the song pushing things along. The clip was directed by Jack Wagner and filmed during Wavves’ 2015 tour of the Northern Hemisphere recently in support of their fifth album V.

Personally, I reckon that some of the best videos are ones like this –  especially when they come out in the lead up to a run of live shows. They hype the shit out of the experience of seeing a band play live, show off some “behind the scenes” antics and generally instill a kind of anticipation. If you’re going to Falls or one of Wavves’ sideshows, this, my friends, is what you have to look forward to. And it’s going to be killer.

Tei Shi – Get It

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=llUKCRQO8a4

The stunning video for Tei Shi‘s latest single Get It seems super simple at first. It’s black and white, it opens with isolated close ups of the Brooklyn-based Argentinian singer, it’s soft, it’s pretty, it’s dreamy. Then there are these strange flashes of space-like footage. Then, you learn that it’s actual footage from outer-space. Contributed by NASA (yep), the  footage is from the Cassini Mission satellite that tracks Saturn and it’s moons around the clock. In short: it makes for a pretty badass video clip. The two separate pieces of footage are cut together to create this strange, spacey, black and white film which lets the focus shine on Tei Shi’s incredible voice, complimenting with an interesting visual, rather than taking away from it.

Having listened to single Devil’s Whisper possibly over a hundred times, there are few people who have been more excited about the release of Raury’s debut LP All We Need. With its pulsating percussion, haunting choral vocals, pounding bass, and lyrically dense content, the track is a standout, but not a trend, on this vastly diverse release. We recently caught up with the artist to talk about the angel and devil on his shoulder that inspired the song, and have spent the last week trying to figure out just how we feel about the album as a whole.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LoI2C6pW9AQ&w=560&h=315]

From the first line of the opener and title track, with the Prince-esque organ sounds, it is immediately clear that this isn’t the Raury that we came to know on Indigo Child. The singer/songwriter, still only nineteen, has done a lot of growing up in the last year. It’s most apparent through the deeply structured instrumental pillars that hold up the album, but also through the heavily spiritual and worldly lyrics. This is a guy who has a lot on his mind, and it spills out of him in sensitive and rhythmic bursts.

Right now, I should give a disclaimer that those who come in expecting a rap record might be a little apprehensive at first. While there are plenty of great rap moments, they are not what make this record shine. Instead, it is a carefully crafted collection of work from an artist who self-professes that he does not identify with a particular genre. This “millennial kid” breaks out of all of the boxes and builds them into a cardboard forte to house his far reaching influences and ideas. Starting off with the title track mantra that “all we need is love,” optimism quickly turns to gloom on the highly charged Revolution. With lyrics that lament the destruction of our “burning earth”, it draws deeply on Gaia principles to the point of feeling preachy at times, but is saved by the awesomeness of churning tribal drums and rap-meets-reggae vocals.

Woodcrest Manors II has a distinctly Kid Cudi vibe, which is unsurprising considering he is name dropped in the track, and Raury recently credited Cudi’s music with saving his life. The ambling verse and shiny strings roll along with a mellow and hazy ambience, while the vocals reflect on the journey between youth and adulthood. Crystal Express stands out as a highlight that delves into the artist’s New Age sensibilities, but is so addictive and fun it might convert even the staunchest skeptic, refracting all its vibrant colours into a joyous rainbow you can’t help marvelling at. Slow track Her gives us a taste of the singer’s stunning vocal range and delves into more traditional themes of romance and love. We see a little more of this on track Demo 1: The Sea (not featured on the album) which came out just yesterday. Seems like this wunderkind is back at work already.

Second single Friends has been on high rotation for the last couple of weeks, with a surprising guest appearance from Tom Morello and a feel-good video to match its ode to good company. And that’s not the only killer guest appearance. Big K.R.I.T. gives a solid verse on recent single Forbidden Knowledge, throwing back to the sharp rhymes of his debut Krit Wuz Here, and RZA pops up for a slow groove on the soulful CPU.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QXGwDB3mWn0]

As we drift in to the euphoric horns of second last track Kingdom Come there is a strong sense that this feels like a campfire sing a long of a record. It takes your hand in an offering of friendship that is testament to an artist who wears his heart on his sleeve and tries to meet up with his fans in every city he visits. It might not be what we all expected, but the sooner you are okay with that, the sooner you can sit back and sway along as you lose yourself in the flickering flames.

Yeah, I’m drinking this cool aid, and it tastes good. You can experience it for yourself here.

Atlanta wunderkind Raury has delivered again, with track Demo 1: The Sea, demonstrating his effortless ability to integrate soul, folk and rap into his own unique blend of music. With his album coming out tomorrow, the demo won’t be featured on the album.

On Demo 1, Raury changes it up a bit, slowing it down and bringing it back to his guitar-infused roots. After the enormous scope and power of tracks like Friends and Devil’s Whisper, Demo 1 comes as a breath of fresh air to your ears, sweeping you away to a sunny dusk spent on a Georgia veranda, with the warm summer breeze grazing your cheek ever so slightly.

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The organic and bare bones feel of the song allows Raury’s vocal ability to take centre stage, and the organic feel of it makes it instantly timeless. Its emblematic of the 19-year-olds enormous talent, showing us he’s not just an adept rapper, but a soulful singer too, and hopefully we can hear some more stripped back tracks from the Georgian again.

Raury’s debut album All We Need comes out this Friday, October 16 via Sony. Read our recent interview right here

More: check out our exclusive photo shoot with Raury 

The Black Entertainment Television Hip Hop awards proved very fruitful for some, and for others not so much. Kendrick Lamar and Big Sean won big on the night with three awards each, which were pre-recorded over the weekend and was aired on Tuesday.

Fetty Wap took home the bacon, winning Song Of The Year for Trap Queen. However, the rapper couldn’t be there in person due to a motorbike accident he had in September which left him hospitalised.

Drake made bank, scoring two awards including including MVP of the Year.

Lamar took home three awards, namely lyricist of the year, award for impact track and hip hop single Alright.

Big Sean scored the award for best collaboration for Blessings and best club banger for IDFWU.

After his massive year with the release of two number one albums – DS2 and his collaborative mixtape with Drake What A Time To Be Alive, it was only right that Future opened the ceremony.

The cyphers for this years performance incorporated a pretty wide range of artists, including Raury, Vince Staples, Tink, to veterans like Redman and Keith Murray and even Charles Hamilton.

P Diddy also took to the stage with Lil Kim, King Los and Styles P, debuting two new songs Workin and The Auction.

Travis Scott also made an appearance, following performances from Future, Puff Daddy, and Rich Homie Quan, the Houston rapper finishing off the night with an incredible performance with TI to help him out. 

Veteran hip hop performer and original Geto Boys member Scarface was awarded the “I am hip hop” award for his influence in the hip hop world. However his glory was short lived, as Houston-based rapper was scooped up by the cops after the ceremony for not paying child support. He travelled to Atlanta to attend awards despite reportedly not being able to leave the state.

Check out the full list of winners – and losers – below.

Best Hip-Hop Video

Big Sean feat. Chris Brown and Ty Dolla $ign – Play No Games

Big Sean feat. Drake and Kanye West – Blessings

Fetty Wap – Trap Queen

Kendrick Lamar – Alright — WINNER

Nicki Minaj feat. Beyoncé – Feeling Myself

Best Collabo, Duo or Group

Big Sean feat. Drake and Kanye West – Blessings — WINNER

Big Sean feat. E-40 – IDFWU

Fetty Wap feat. Monty – My Way

Nicki Minaj feat. Beyoncé – Feeling Myself

Nicki Minaj feat. Drake and Lil Wayne – Truffle Butter

Best Live Performer

Drake

J. Cole — WINNER

Kanye West

Kendrick Lamar

Nicki Minaj

Lyricist of the Year

Big Sean

Drake

J. Cole

Kendrick Lamar — WINNER

Nicki Minaj

Video Director of the Year

Alan Ferguson

Benny Boom — WINNER

Chris Robinson/Lil Chris

Colin Tilley

Director X

 

DJ of the Year

DJ Drama

DJ Envy

DJ Esco

DJ Khaled

DJ Mustard — WINNER

Producer of the Year

DJ Mustard — WINNER

J. Cole

Kanye West

Mike Will Made-It

Pharrell Williams

Timbaland

MVP of the Year

Big Sean

Drake — WINNER

Future

J. Cole

Kendrick Lamar

Nicki Minaj

Track of the Year

Alright – Produced by Pharrell Williams and Sounwave (Kendrick Lamar)

Blessings – Produced by Boi-1da and Vinylz (Big Sean feat. Drake and Kanye West)

Commas – Produced by DJ Spinz and Southside (Future)

IDFWU – Produced by Dj Dahi, Dj Mustard, Kanye West and Key Wane (Big Sean feat. E-40)

Trap Queen – Produced by Tony Fadd (Fetty Wap) – WINNER

Album of the Year

Big Sean – Dark Sky Paradise

Drake – If You’re Reading This It’s Too Late

J. Cole – 2014 Forest Hills Drive — WINNER

Kendrick Lamar – To Pimp A Butterfly

Nicki Minaj – The Pinkprint

Wale – The Album About Nothing

Who Blew Up Award

Bobby Shmurda

DeJ Loaf

Fetty Wap — WINNER

Rae Sremmurd

Tink

New song from Raury

19-year-old Atlanta native Raury has been making waves since the release of his first mixtape, Indigo Child, last year. Hailed as an important new voice-of-a-generation, he’s quickly risen to prominence for his uniquely insightful mindset, his incredibly diverse musical range, He’s already amassed an international cult following, largely via social media and electrifying live performances – and we have a feeling this is only the beginning. The singer/songwriter/rapper/instrumentalist was last in town for 2015’s Laneway Festival, and returned this month to perform at Optus RockCorps in Sydney, as well as to promote his brand new album All We Need, which drops this Friday.

I interviewed Raury last September, not long after Indigo Child was released. It’s made for a really interesting comparison, gauging how much has changed and shifted for one artist in such a relatively small space of time. For a young artist, still so green to the music industry, his career progression, not to mention wisdom well beyond his years, is nothing short of remarkable.

We sat down in the gorgeous surrounds of Sydney’s Hyde Park for a chat about the new album, having a devil and an angel on his shoulders, being a messenger to the people, and why he wants to become a scientist.

I wanted to start by talking about the new album. I’ve given it a couple of listens now – I really wasn’t sure what would follow Indigo Child, as it tackles so many styles – but I think it’s such a strong release.

To tell you the truth I have no idea what I’m doing, haha. I just go into the studio and hope that it happens. Nah, I kinda know what I’m doing, but then again, making this album, I purposely got into a space where I’m not gonna worry about who I am or what this album’s gonna be, genre-wise. I’m gonna be completely fine with the fact that I don’t know who I am or what kind of artist I am, and just make stuff. So that’s what I kept doing. I realised that the connecting thread throughout everything in this album is gonna me and my voice, and how I see things and talk about it. I feel like it’s leaps and bounds from Indigo Child, man, it’s much better.

In what ways?

Everything. Writing, production, everything. When I finished Indigo Child, I was like 17, 18. I barely had the resources to record outside of a closet. But this time, instead of Justice [Baiden, manager] spending the last money from his paycheck, we’ve got Sony backing us, and we’ve got other artists who are fans, who I’ve talked with and learned from. The producers that I’ve been going in with, be it Jack Knife, Danger Mouse or Daytrip, I go in with them, and these people act like senseis that help me crystallise all this creativity that I have. I’m much closer to mastering it. I felt like with Indigo Child, I had way more creativity than I knew what to do with. It’s all about tapping into it, and mastering it.

I want to talk about Devil’s Whisper. Did you come up with that track at the same time as God’s Whisper, or was it in response to the track or even its reception?

I tried to name that song everything BUT Devil’s Whisper, I tried to think of a million other names, but it had to be named that. It wasn’t like, ‘I wrote a song called God’s Whisper, now I’ll write a song called Devil’s Whisper’ or anything like that. It just happened, because…. That’s what happened! Earlier in my career I had this voice in my head telling me, go chase your dreams, you can do this, you can shake the world – and that was god’s whisper, the angel on my right shoulder who believed in me. But I also have an antagonist within me, and I get conflicted within myself. I’ve been out here in the game, I’ve seen things and I’ve experienced stuff, and I could’ve fallen for so many pitfalls along the way, or taken so many of the wrong paths and not even realised it. There were times when I thought of making music for profit, vs. making music for the people. And that’s what inspired Devil’s Whisper: ‘Young boy, you’re trying to rule the world, I see… Well I can give you everything, diamonds, everything can be golden, if you do this and do that.’ And the second verse was that self-realisation: fuck that, I’m not making music for that reason, shit that I could easily market.

It’s so easy to be brash or to be rebellious and self-indulgent. It’s difficult to make music with a message and still have it be cool. It’s really difficult. It’s a whole other ball game. I can’t release a project every week, haha, I can’t release mad mixtapes, I’m not a person who’s here to do a club walk-through for $10 000, stuff like that, or to have foursomes all week! It all sounds so cool, right? It all sounds so dope! And Devil’s Whisper is like, you can have that, you can do that if you want to. But I decided not to, and that’s what that whole track was about: me almost changing, but choosing not to.

And what have you chosen to do instead? What path are you walking down? 

Hmmm. I decided to continue to make music that people could find themselves in. This album, All We Need, and every other album will be made because one album changed my life. Ever since then, I’ve wanted to change lives in the way that Man on the Moon [by Kid Cudi] affected me. We’re all in crazy, transitional points in our lives. A lot of kids, including myself, are still somewhat lost. I’m successful right now, but I don’t know if I’m an artist. Sometimes I just feel like someone who wants to change the world, and happens to know how to make music. But a lot of us are lost, and finding ourselves, making a home in that negativity, darkness, resentment, ‘Fuck this’, ‘love doesn’t exist’ type thing. I wanted to release an album that helps that kind find themselves in self-belief. Belief in humanity around them – AND in questioning it, too.

It’s interesting that you’re releasing an album to help others find themselves, while you can still feel lost yourself.

Yeah, it’s up to someone to decide to say something. I feel like whenever it comes time for something to happen, everyone is waiting – on a bigger scale, obviously – for a Gandhi to come along or a Martin Luther King to come along, but then you realise that those people are just normal people, and they were lost themselves, in the middle of leading others. It’s up to you to decide to say something or to take a step, you know? So it’s never about completely knowing who you are, but it’s always about moving and keeping going.

And about knowing what you can be for other people.

Mmhmm.

So when you’re writing, are you writing to get your message out there or because you feel that you can be the voice that people want?

I just write completely from experiences. I know that as long as I keep it real and talk about things I’m thinking about, someone else is thinking the same thing. Like, I don’t need to make a song saying, ‘Yeah I’m Raury, I wear a hat, and I represent the conscious hippie community of Atlanta,’ and whatever, and make songs literally talking about incense and auras and all that – people already know what I’m about! I don’t have to be that voice for this group people and to claim that identity, because then it becomes inauthentic. I have to get into the mindset that, I don’t know who I am, so I’m just gonna make the song that’s in my brain right now – and still somehow be one thing. It’s not even really thought through, haha.

So are your songs and that identity more for yourself, or your fans?

Sometimes it is for the fan, if the situation I was in calls for it. For example Peace Prevail, it was a story about what it was like for me to grow up in Atlanta, and wondering why didn’t I fit in. I followed the rules in that era, I just wanted to fit in, but at the end of the day I didn’t. That’s me talking about me, but there’s someone in Australia here going through that right now, trying to follow a trend that they don’t fit in with.

I think the track that resonated the most with me was Forbidden Knowledge.

It’s about the nature of man.

What inspired that track?

I had a conversation with my friend, talking about this man who is in the 17th century in Florida. Or maybe it was France somewhere. This may be a completely skewed story, haha.

He had this technology. His house has like five-tonne doors, but with a touch he could move it. He built this castle by himself. People were always like, how the fuck did he do it, always spying on him, trying to figure out how he worked. And the next thing you know, you wake up one day in the castle, and it’s moved 30 miles over. How? And we were then talking about how there’s some things that people know and it could’ve been forbidden knowledge – things we shouldn’t know.

And I thought, yeah, you’re right. Like, the Internet. What if, for years, people were trying to hold it back, killing people, like ‘don’t you ever let this get out!” And now you have 14-year-olds who can access everything on the Internet. You know, it’s forbidden knowledge. We shouldn’t have learnt that.

So I was just tying it to a lot of things that are going on right now. What if psychic ability truly does exist? What if you could lift a car? We shouldn’t know it, because if someone knew it they’d use it to their advantage. Somewhere deep in the root of man there is good and evil. Maybe there’s some things we shouldn’t know.

So do you think ignorance is bliss?

I believe in disbelieving. I’m so sorry I’m so vague, but I just see both of those sides. I think it’s because I’m a Gemini, but I’m all about balance and understanding both sides. Are there any things that you think were forbidden knowledge that we know now?

Well, you say that 14-year-olds can access the Internet, and I don’t necessarily think it’s a bad thing. There is so much freedom to learn about anything and everything – I don’t think the good has to be roped in with the bad.

Yeah! That’s what I talk about. After Indigo Child, I could take the highway to success, which is what I chose to do. Or, I could learn all the wrong things and go completely downhill.

And that’s ignoring the devil’s whisper.

Yeah. It’s within me, but I want people to know, I’m not perfect. I want kids to know that I’m a normal kid too. Sometimes I try to fight against this separate thing, like I’m so special or some shit. But I don’t even know how I made the album! I take pride in saying stuff like that, because I really don’t. I’m comfortable enough to say that.

What do you want your fans to see you as? As a leader? A voice?

I don’t want them to see me as an artist, and only an artist. I want them to see me as a person who came to this world with a purpose. A purpose to push things forward for humanity. It may not come in one form throughout all of my life – I have dreams of becoming a scientist. I want to set things up so that I have enough time to just go and study for a while. I’m really into this type of stuff, I’m really curious about energy and environmental sciences. I want to read up on it, I want to learn about Thomas Edison and Tesla. I want to be seen as a mind, a human mind.

Raury’s debut album All We Need comes out this Friday October 16 via Sony. Order it here.

More: check out our exclusive photo shoot with Raury 

Multi-talented singer/songwriter/rapper/musician Raury is set to drop his highly anticipated new album All We Need next week, and we couldn’t be more excited! Coming off the back of Devil’s Whisper and the recent folky single, Friends featuring Rage Against The Machine‘s Tom Morello, is the insightful Forbidden Knowledge, featuring Big K.R.I.T, who was just in town for OutsideIn Festival.

I’ve had a listen to the album and I can straight up admit that this is my favourite track on the entire release. I’ve already listened to it about ten times. The lyrics are powerful, honest and demonstrative, without being preachy or condescending in any way. Considering his age, Raury has a lot of interesting stuff to say – and it’s well worth taking a listen.

Forbidden knowledge can destroy mankind, Raury boldly begins, setting the conscious tone right off the bat.

The verses are mostly backed by a really simple beat, with eerie synths that kind of sound like angels underwater. It slowly builds and grows, with guitar strums and new instruments filling up the atmosphere.

Big K.R.I.T’s guest verse is slick and so refined. While he hails from Mississippi, his distinctive flow is reminiscent of Atlanta natives OutKast and Killer Mike. Both KRIT and Raury have a kind of confident yet delicate tone, and they just bounce off each other so perfectly.

Raury’s album All We Need comes out next Friday October 16. Pre-order that baby here.

More:
PHOTO SHOOT: We spent an afternoon taking photos with Raury
INTERVIEW: Big K.R.I.T, ‘I believe in energy and I believe in passion’

Donald Trump has met his fare share of critics over the years, but none so good with their words as Atlanta rapper/singer Raury. In his first ever late-night interview, Raury (full name Raury Alexander Tullis) used the opportunity to make a statement about one of the most divisive presidential candidates in history on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert.

Exploding into his performance of Devil’s Whisper, Raury exudes a soulful musicality that somehow manages to eclipse its recorded counterpart. Midway during the performance, Raury turns around, and emblazoned on his green soccer jersey is the word ‘TRUMP’ with a red cross through it. Not satisfied with his exemplary display of vocal gymnastics, Raury picks up the drumsticks and goes to town.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F9uh1LQv4gk&w=560&h=315]

Interestingly enough, the green soccer jersey is that of Mexico’s, which could be a savvy political criticism of Trump’s plan to make Mexico pay to erect a border between the US and itself.

“We are going to build a wall. You’re going to pay for the wall,” the bloated human carrot said he would tell the Mexican government. “The wall itself, we own.”

Ambitious.

Speaking to Vice, Raury explained that his decision to wear the jersey was because “Trump embodies separation, solving problems with anger, fear and personal differences”.

“I’m all about the opposite, about being inclusive and open,” said Raury.

Choosing to sing Devil’s Whisper was also a bold choice, singing in the chorus ‘You better run, run from the devil’. Wonder who the devil is…

Even bolder was the fact that Donald Trump was on the show earlier that evening. The GOP forerunner was roasted by Colbert, who personally thank Trump for running, saying, “I’m not going to say this stuff writes itself, but you certainly do deliver it on time every day.”

Raury joins a long list of sensational hip hop acts to grace The Late Show stage recently. Run The Jewels and Kendrick Lamar appeared in the first two weeks of Colbert’s debut as host of the Late Show. Whoever is organising their musical guests is doing a bang up job.

More: check out our interview and photo shoot with Raury!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LoI2C6pW9AQ