It’s a Friday, and this Friday presents a moment to you where you might walk in to a sandwich shop, feverish with your hunger and drool trickling from the corners of your lips. You peruse the offerings and wonder aloud to yourself, “Do I want a sandwich, or a wrap?”

The crisp tortilla calls to you, as it softly embraces a lettuce leaf, and perhaps a slice of tomato that seems far too thick for comfort. You know what you want — the wrap beckons.

Clams Casino, All Nite (ft. Vince Staples)

With Clams Casino set to drop debut full-length album 32 Levels on July 15, dance vibes collide with Clams’ penchant for dark cinematic sounds, while the frantic flow of Vince Staples tapers overhead. Set to be track 3 on the album, anticipation is already high for what may well be one of this year’s hottest full-length releases.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EhXE1fGrv_M

Usher – No Limit (ft. Young Thug)

Usher drops a surprise collaboration with Trap superstar Young Thug, which may be wholly surprising particularly given how listenable and enjoyable the track is. A Tidal exclusive for now (but will be made available on all services next week), the track finds Usher paying homage to both Master P and his own American Express card, and cops the enjoyable assist from the aforementioned Thugger to finally take the track over the line.

Listen here via Tidal

Young Chop – Ring Ring Ring (ft. Chief Keef & RiFF RaFF)

Young Chop is preparing the release of a new album, titled King Chop, today and, in advance, has let loose this collaboration with Chief Keef and RiFF RaFF ahead of the album. A trap offering existing on an arguably lower sound spectrum than the sub-genre is used to, it’s unclear if the track is a good indicator or not of what the album in its entirety will sound like.

[soundcloud url=”https://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/268344827″ params=”color=ff5500&auto_play=false&hide_related=false&show_comments=true&show_user=true&show_reposts=false” width=”100%” height=’166′ iframe=”true” /]

Wale – Her Wave

Taking cues and soundbites from Miguel’s Waves track, Wale has let loose a new offering titled My Wave, a smooth effort from the Maybach Music Group member. With album S.H.I.N.E. (Still Here Ignoring Negative Energy) slated for release later this year, it’s unclear whether this song will find its home on that project or being even the upcoming MMG compilation album Self Made Vol 4.

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Knox Brown – No Slaves (ft. Anderson .Paak)

UK/Jamaican artist Knox Brown has released a collaboration with one of 2016’s hottest hands Anderson .Paak, finding the two plying their trades on a soulful backing track, with the single taken from Brown’s upcoming EP Searching (releasing August 5).

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W2MazTuFhlY]

Image: Wale 

You can find James Schofield on Twitter and Instagram

Having just yesterday released Gangster Shit, his first solo track since he put out Slime Season 3 two months ago, Young Thug is back in our ears once again. This time, he is alongside Ty Dolla $ign on Friend Of Scotty. The keen Thug fans among us might recognise the track among the tonne of his songs that leaked late last year. Producer Dun Deal, who’s also worked with Future, Drake and Gucci Mane, and who’s sound-bite you’ll no doubt have heard, has graced the internet with the full version of the track via his Soundcloud.

Ty Dolla $ign’s verse is the only addition since the leak, but it’s all the better for it. Dun Deal’s beat is punchy. Real simple when it needs to be – full of bells, whistles and bass hits during verses – and extravagant in the chorus – with brass and strings perfectly executed among some San Andreas sounding guitar chords. Ty’s raspy voice works well over the instrumental, and compliments the high range of Thug on this track really well. Thug is as he always is, consistent, addictive to listen to, and sometimes hard to understand.

[soundcloud url=”https://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/266970601″ params=”color=ff5500&auto_play=false&hide_related=false&show_comments=true&show_user=true&show_reposts=false” width=”100%” height=’166′ iframe=”true” /]

While he’s released a tonne of mixtapes – just last month announcing I Came From Nothing 4 – we’re still waiting on that Young Thug debut album. Hy!£UN35 (or Hitunes) was meant to drop back in August of last year, but is as far as we know, still in the works. With Thug making so many tunes though, no doubt he’s saving only the best.

Image: Earmilk

Game of Thrones fans, batten down the hatches – Winter, finally, has come. Or to our US counterparts, summer is almost here, and in all honesty this has absolutely nothing to do with Game of Thrones. Instead, for this first day of our new season, this is the ‘Rap Wrap’. Not unlike Cling Wrap, this shit will stick. I can’t speak on whether any of the following will be of any considerable use in keeping your sandwiches from becoming stale, but you can be certain that all of the following will help your day from becoming stale. Day, or sandwich? You decide.

Smoke DZA, Beloved (Prod. Mac Miller)

The first to fall in to our winter’s lap comes from Harlem’s Smoke DZA, by way of his latest mixtape George Kush Da Button: Don’t Pass Trump The Blunt released to Soundcloud today. The track is produced by Mac Miller, who would appear to have stepped out from behind his Larry Fisherman moniker for now. A smooth offering, perfectly complementing both DZA’s subdued ‘weed’ rap flow, and Miller’s penchant for the psychedelic, Beloved is a laid-back offering, perfect for allowing the day to peacefully pass by and in to gentle oblivion. Or to light up a blunt to, it’s dealer’s choice, I should imagine.

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Bishop Nehru – Love What You Do

Bishop Nehru is a name which might still be unfamiliar to many – which is criminal considering how extraordinarily talented the nineteen year old New Yorker truly is. Still riding the high from his collaborative project with the esteemed MF DoomNehruvianDoom, Bishop Nehru offers a chilled throwback to hip-hop’s Golden Era with Love What You Do. From the scratches to Nehru’s confident flow, the offering is further in the vein of the track preceding it, with a calm, laid-back presentation to see the day away.

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Hopsin, Die This Way ft. Matt Black & Joey Tee

Having apparently done away with all connections to former label Funk Volume, of which he was a co-founder, Hopsin has hit his stride with new label Undercover Prodigy – as evidenced by latest release Die This Way featuring Matt Black and Joey Tee. For an artist who has perpetually been extraordinarily hit or miss, Hopsin has let loose one of his strongest tracks in recent memory, comparable to his storied Ill Mind of Hopsin series.

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Be8nu4w-NS0]

Young Thug, Gangster Shit

Only two months removed from his brilliant Slime Season 3 release, Young Thug has let latest single Gangster Shit hit the web. Not one to remain quiet for long, Gangster Shit is another in a long line of tremendous releases by the trap phenomenon – whose popularity, to this day, continues to climb at a frenzied pace. Having collaborated in previous months with such artists as Chance the Rapper and Lil Uzi Vert, it is surprisingly comforting to hear Thugger returning to solid solo cuts, proving himself a competent and infectiously listenable solo artist. One would stop short of saying they hope to hear a full-length project from Thugger soon, with such a project almost guaranteed considering Young Thug’s admirably consistent output of projects. Nonetheless, if Gangster Shit is anything to go by as far as expectations for the next project go, keep your eyes peeled and your ears ready. Sliiiiiime.

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e7g5JADcrSo]

So tell us how you heard it, what’s the best track of the new season to beat the cold? Or compliment the heat? Or keep the sandwiches fresh? Or… what else did I say?

You can find James Schofield on Twitter and Instagram.

A slew of new hip-hop video clips have hit the net today, so to make it easy for you, we’ve gathered together the best for your viewing pleasure below. Enjoy!

YG & Lil Nipsey Hussle, FDT (Fuck Donald Trump)

YG and Nipsey Hussle let their thoughts known about Presidential hopeful Donald Trump with the video for FDT (Fuck Donald Trump). The filming of the protest video was shut down by police a few weeks back, but that hasn’t stopped the two from releasing what footage they could gather. The black and white clip – with flashes of patriotic red and blue – opens with a short message reminding people of the advances made by President Obama and how if the wrong candidate is elected in the current race to the Whitehouse, all Obama’s good work could be reversed.

This isn’t actually a bad track. While the refrain, “Fuck Donald Trump,” isn’t the most positive of slogans, I applaud YG and Nipsey Hussle for using their position to advocate their political beliefs

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WkZ5e94QnWk]

Trouble, Ready (Remix Ft. Big Bank Black, Young Thug & Young Dolph)

Released last month, Atlanta rapper Trouble delivers the film clip for the remix of hit cut Ready. Joined by Southern alumni Big Blank Black, Young Thug and Young Dolph, the four MC’s kick it in the street with their posses as 90s visual effects flash on screen.

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iX34S53M4a0]

Bankroll Mafia, Out My Face

The latest in a long of hip-hop super groups, Bankroll Mafia is lead by the team of T.I. and Young Thug with able support from Shad Da God and Peewee Roscoe. While Roscoe is currently facing prison time following the shooting of Lil Wayne’s tour bus last year, the group look set to continue as a trio, as evident by new single Out My Face. Fellow Hustle Gang label mate London Jae joins the three on this trap banger, with the video showing the quartet hanging out in a warehouse with their crew while footage of money burning is intercut throughout.

Bankroll Mafia’s debut album is set to drop this Friday April 22.

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vLQtqMQYO1w]

Curren$y, Grand Theft Auto

Ahead of the release of Curren$y’s 4/20 celebrating project, Bourbon Street Secrets, the New Orleans rapper has dropped the visuals for new tune Grand Theft Auto. Produced by frequent collaborator, Purps of 808 Mafia, Curren$y’s smooth rhymes float over the bouncy production as he stands around some fancy cars smoking spliffs. What a life.

Bourbon Street Secrets is released this Friday April 22.

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fq8eidzw-ks]

Homeboy Sandman, Talking (Bleep)

Stones Throw Records’ Homeboy Sandman is less than three weeks away from dropping his new album Kindness For Weakness (May 6), and today sees the video release for recent single Talking (Bleep). It feels like a kind of parody take on the typical hip-hop gangster video, with boxing and martial arts, street shootings, running from men in black suits and so on.

Homeboy’s crystal clear storytelling lyrics slow down the video’s dramatic pace just enough to allow you to take in each scene. Remarkably surreal, mostly due to the small embellishments, like how some characters’ mouths are stretched wide, are creepy and eerie to say the least. The pace and lyrics work in an interesting way with the video, with the clear storyline essentially making the entire visual experience even more hyperreal and off-kilter.

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

Remi, For Good (ft. Sampa The Great)

Undoubtedly the best Australian hip-hop track of the year so far, Remi‘s For Good, featuring Sampa The Great, now has its own visual accompaniment. This is the first single from Remi’s forthcoming album with Sensible J titled Divas and Demons, and if it’s anything to go by, we’re in for something truly special.

The video splices scenes of Sampa and Remi dancing and performing with theatrical scenes of a lone girl sitting at a restaurant table, having been stood up on a date – by the guy we soon see riding in a car with two girls and a bottle of wine. He’s having a great time, she’s feeling incredibly low. After a minute he eventually shows up, so late that he sees another guy chatting to her. Fed up when he begins to argue with the other guy, she leaves, obviously distraught.

It’s not exactly a feel good clip. Here’s Remi explaining the song’s straightforward inspiration: I was a scandalous prick, and I wanted to outline how it went down and how it effected everyone involved. The best way to do this was to have both the male and female perspective.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UrW7GNFwPsM

Written by Tobias Handke & Lauren Ziegler

Image: Billboard

Young Thug has become one of the most divisive artists in hip-hop. Some see him as the poster boy for the death knell of hip-hop, coming to represent the antithesis of everything that once made hip-hop great. His growing success only mirrors the decline of true hip-hop. Where old school rap championed wordplay, Young Thug mumbles indecipherable nothings. Where old school rap detailed the struggle of urban life, Young Thug revels in the ‘hood rich’ lifestyle. Where old school rap had soulful crooning, autotune now works overtime to make Young Thug’s utterances barely listenable. At the same time, Young Thug is respected as a pioneer, creating a new type of music that transcends the need for words. Where the substance of music is more important than its façade. He’s said to be Shakespearean in his exploitation of language, stretching our understanding of how linguistics work. His music can capture a haunting loneliness that is uncommon in the boastful world of rap. So which is he, prophetic genius or talentless imbecile?

The phrase “worst freestyle ever” gets bandied around with some regularity. But there’s little doubt that this regurgitation delivered by Young Thug on French breakfast radio is a serious contender.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RS7ry38Kvvo

Delivered on 16 November 2015, this freestyle was the first of two atrocities levelled against the French people in one horrific month.

The freestyle is interesting because it features all the classic criticisms that are hurled at Young Thug: indecipherable mumbling, exchanging actual English words for a series of sound effects that would make Michael Winslow turn in his grave. Then there’s his tendency to warble off into the distance and leave lines unfini… The few bars that Thug does successfully deliver are either asinine or nonsensical. Futhermore, Young Thug cares for time signatures like his own children- neglectfully. It’s also inexplicably delivered over what sounds like the backing track from Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon.

It’s like listening to the Scatman trapped in a K-hole. And the scariest part is that it’s not that different from a quickly churned out studio recorded single. It’s not hard to image that with a bit of autotune tweaking and some thumping trap drums, it could become track 7 on Slime Season IV.

The internet is awash with rumours of Young Thug’s unique song writing process. Producer Dun Deal shed some light on Thug’s method in recording his first smash hit Stoner. Dun Deal examined the notepad which Young Thug had been consulting in the studio. Instead of finding written words he found “weird signs and shapes.” When questioned, Thugger responded, “I don’t need no words.” In an interview, Thug then told Dazed Magazine that he can “write a perfect song in ten minutes.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5-0kZ_jeIHI

Now had these claims of savant-like recall come from say, Kanye West, they would be quickly dismissed as childish boasting. But I personally don’t doubt for one second that Thug is being prompted by pictures of crop circles, and is producing songs in exactly double the time it takes to sing them. It would go along way to explain the manic, unconventional, and occasionally, shoddy nature of his work. There is little doubt that Young Thug is at his absolute worst when squeezing out B-sides to fill his voluminous collection of free mixtapes. The complete lack of structure or accountability means an overall drop in the quality of Young Thug’s work.

If you don’t know what I’m talking about then please look no further then Track 9 from the third 1017 Thug mixtape, You The World.

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

To call it a poorly mixed supercut of Young Thug’s best adlibs would be generous. You The World does contain two of Thug’s most popular adlibs, a noise to express someone’s failure (rraeegh) and a P.C exultation of shock short of blasphemy (sheesh). But one adlib is notably missing: SKRRRT, Thug’s charming impression of a car skidding uncontrollably off a bridge.

Instead, You the World sounds like this internet farting sound board played over the beat from the start up menu on Dance Dance Revolution. In fact, Thug himself finds the perfect word to describe the song right at the 2:29 minute mark. Garbage. I can say with confidence that it’s one of the worst things I’ve ever heard.

For many, hip-hop is fundamentally about one thing: verbal excellence. Many rap fans consider the mark of a legendary MC to be a razor sharp tongue, a head for poetics, and a crisp delivery. In fact, it could be said that rapping, by definition, means to speak clearly and coherently over music, as distinguished from singing which involves bending or warbling words to fit music. It’s easy to see why so many people think that Young Thug, with his Marlon Brando mumbling and use of Pentacostal gibberish, can never fit this traditional mould.

The rise of the “warble rapper” is not a phenomenon that has gone unnoticed or unmocked. Hip-hop satirist Hopsin was quick to spoof the scarily growing trend, taking particular aim at Future and Young Thug.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IiNNBc557OQ

Hopsin picks up on the hip-hop devolution currently in progress. We went from “consciously unconscious” lyrics, where rappers like Chief Keef and Wacka Flocka flaunted their “ignorance” for street cred. Now the latest trend is a further reduction; not even lyrics, just a collection of utterances heavily reverbed. Rhyming hasn’t been a precondition of hip-hop since 2005. In 2016, English isn’t a precondition either.

Is this a new language only understood by its practitioners? Doesn’t seem to be. In fact, Thug’s lyrics seem unintelligible even to himself. GQ had Young Thug read out his own lyrics to Best Friend in the hope of deciphering them for fans.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IVRXJ1Gd33g

You would maybe assume that in recording and performing a song the lyrics, whether actually written or largely adlibbed, would quickly become burned in your memory. When Thug is handed that piece of paper, his careful analysis and lack of confidence really suggests that this is the first time he has seen any of this information. Several lines he reads with an inflection at the end, as if questioning whether that really is the actual wording (or alternatively, if he really could have authored something so ridiculous).

You know it’s a bad sign when lyric annotation super database Genius has trouble deciphering your lyrics. Surrendering, the Genius annotators behind Young Thug’s Foreign simply left several lines marked with a (?).

thuglyrics

If you think this was an act of laziness, please listen to the song and appreciate the Rosetta Stone level of archaeological translation that was required to illuminate even the first 4 lines. Having said that, collaborator Yakki Divioshi kills Thug on his own track, with an impressive 9 recorded (?)’s instead of actual words.

But is Young Thug’s vocal style simply lazy mumbling, or is it a revolutionary new approach to music and wordplay?

To hear some critics describe Young Thug’s vocal style, you would think they were reviewing The Marriage of Figaro. Will Stephenson from the Fader describes Young Thug “feverishly contorting his voice into a series of odd timbers like a beautifully played but broken wind instrument.” Paul Thompson from Vulture notes Thug’s “guttural bark” which “bleeds into a falsetto” on the track 2 Cups Stuffed, which yes, is a song about having more than one cup of codeine-infused lemonade. Young Thug blends sounds and syllables in a manner that, meaningless or not, simply sound good to the human ear. It’s not very different from a modern form of scat (as in the type of singing, and not faecal matter, although you could be forgiven for thinking the latter). And say what you will about the overuse of autotune, and its ability to transform a terrible singer into a passable one, but Young Thug only uses it intermittently, and its absence often shows that he has perfect pitch.

Young Thug might be seen as the next step in a linguistic evolution. He uses a new form of primal screaming to express feelings for which there are no words; convey emotions that cannot be articulated. For Charlie Locke at Wired, Young Thug strips back extraneous words and leaves us with pure sound, in order to “distil a feeling.” Young Thug “doesn’t explain; he expresses.” Sheldon Pearce notes Thug’s unique ability to “do an entire song without words and we’d still get it.”

For example, look no further than Young Thug’s greatest song Best Friend. The lyrics are either nonsensical (I’m bleeding bad, like a bumble bee) or filled with meaningless gangster rap platitudes (hundred thousand dollars inside my pants, my shit on fleek). But the message of the song is loud and clear. Young Thug has transcended the need for words. With the literary assistance of a sensational video clip, the feeling of Best Friend is inescapable: a promenade through a Grimm-esque forest where an unseen danger stalks you through the dense trees. A boom of bass emerges ex nihilo from complete silence indicating the suddenness of capture. The effect of the song is haunting, but rugged. All these different feelings elicited from a song with the actual lyrics “me a horny goat, I’m boolin’ at the bull shop.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tz6OUIjtM6E&nohtml5=False

Much like Future, one of the most remarkable things about Young Thug is his ability to imbue his music (intentionally or not) with a tragic quality. The mumbling where words trail off into the distance almost exhibits a lack of confidence. The inability to look someone in the eye, the lack of conviction in your own words. Thug is at his absolute best when doing tragedy, some haunting piano keys behind him, and a weak longing in his autotune coded voice. Check is ostensibly a song about how Young Thug has in his possession, a personal cheque, presumably for a lot of money. But the soft wavering beat combined with Thug’s soft wavering voice, undeniably suggests the hollowness of this type of existence. Thug has a wad of cash in his hand, surrounded by faceless retainers, but is he happy? Again, the song Numbers presumably refers to dollar figures, but the piano keys and incoming thunderclouds make this song thoroughly depressing. Love Me Forever is as good as any rappers’ ode to a lover. But the vaguely oriental beat and Thug’s crooning give the song a stalker-ish eeriness or a death mask beauty. For a rapper talking so much rubbish, there is a dark resonance to his music.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RAzzv6Ks9nc&nohtml5=False

It’s also simply undeniable that Young Thug has been responsible for some of the hardest cuts of the past two years. If trap music is the future, it has been inextricably tied to the fate of Young Thug. The Metro Thuggin’ partnership is responsible for more than just one of the best shoutout DJ tags in the game (before it was cruelly usurped by ‘if young metro don’t trust you, I’mma shoot you’). Hercules and The Blanguage are two Metro Boomin bangers, where Young Thug’s falsetto pierces through the deep bass for a stunning effect.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2TOB2McGSVw

Young Thug is more disciplined under Metro’s guidance. You can automatically hear a noticeable improvement in lyrical quality. Whilst Young Thug is at his worst when filling B-sides, he is at his best when shackled by more mainstream collaborators. Preparing a song for the radio with Travis $cott or Kanye West serves to rein Thug in, and enforce a stricter work ethic. Young Thug was the standout on Travis $cott’s Maria I’m Drunk, his signature apparent on the memorable line “call your friends and let’s get druuuunkk.” Similarly, Young Thug earned his spot on the guest-heavy The Life of Pablo, a refreshing break from gospel choirs. On an album curated by a 38-year-old rapper, Young Thug’s was a moment of vitality and an effort to connect with modernity. And who can forget the surprise collaboration of Young Thug, Popcaan and Jamie xx on the dancehall smash I Know There’s Gonna Be Good Times? Thug somehow manages to ride the reggae beat, creating one of the most innovative and memorable hits of the summer.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BjLBB-TMa84&nohtml5=False

People seem to be perfectly split on whether Young Thug is a genius or a moron. Each camp has a variety of reasons for making their choice. Many fans of ‘intellectual hip hop’ cannot abide Young Thug. But just as many of the same fans love him, and can see how he slots in with their own paradigm of what makes hip-hop “intellectual.” There are countless articles on the Internet that make the “for” and “against” case for Young Thug. At the risk of leaving this open-ended I will offer this writer’s opinion. In the course of writing this article, I listened to many, many Young Thug songs. I listened objectively and with an open mind. I think the vast majority of what Young Thug produces is steaming garbage. With occasional flashes of absolute brilliance. His mixtapes are littered with some of the worst songs I’ve ever heard. But when pushed by a collaborator or talented producer, and when Thug expends slightly more energy on the making of a song, he is capable of something both revolutionary and profound. As he collaborates with more respected artists some of his “eccentricity” (read: ineptitude) will be watered down. As Young Thug continues to escape the underground and move further into the mainstream, this brilliance will only become more apparent.

Screen Shot 2016-06-08 at 4.40.45 am

Image: GQ

Azealia Banks – Slay-J

Unfortunately for Azealia Banks, her penchant for Twitter feuds has overshadowed her musical talent over the years. While continually in the news for calling out everyone from Action Bronson, Iggy Azalea, right through to Australian festival goers, Banks’ long awaited debut, Broke With Expensive Taste, went generally unnoticed, which is a shame as it’s a terrific album. After quitting Twitter for a few weeks, the controversial artist returned to announce the release of free mixtape, Slay-Z, after her engineer began leaking tracks (she’s since deleted Twitter again).

Slay-Z – its name a tribute of sorts to Jay Z – is a mixture of hedonistic 90s dance, bubblegum pop and trap inspired beats that illuminate Banks’ ability to navigate all genres. Riot is something you’d expect from a Charli XCX and Nicki Minaj collaboration, while Skylar Diggins and singles The Big Big Beat and Used To Being Along are huge dance anthems featuring Banks rapping and singing. Kaytranada produced the slinky album closer Along The Coast while Rick Ross gets shown up by Banks’ rapid fire Lil Kim-esque flow on Big Talk.

Verdict: Forget the beefs. Banks proves her artistic worth with this one.

[soundcloud url=”https://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/247900258″ params=”auto_play=false&hide_related=false&show_comments=true&show_user=true&show_reposts=false&visual=true” width=”100%” height=’450′ iframe=”true” /]

The Joy Formidable – Hitch

A throwback to the early 2000s alternative rock scene, The Joy Formidable‘s third album, Hitch, finds the Welsh trio’s sound maturing, with vocalist Rhiannon Bryan reaching her lyrical peak as a songwriter. The group’s love affair with hook laden rock numbers is still a big part of TJF, with the frenetic guitar rock of A Second In White opening the album before things change gear mid-album.

Although not a break-up album, Bryan and bassist Rhydain Dafydd‘s relationship broke down before recording this album and you can tell it’s influenced Bryan’s writing and TJF’s approach to this album. While there are plenty of rock and roll numbers littered throughout Hitch (Radio Lips, Blowing Fire, Running Hands With The Night) to please old fans, it’s the slower, more understated tracks (The Gift, Underneath The Petal, Liana) where the band come into their own and accentuate Brayn’s personal lyrical themes.

Verdict: Another great release from one of Britain’s most underrated acts.

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

Young Thug – Slime Season 3

It’s here. After weeks of hype and delays, Young Thug finally delivers the third and final instalment of his wildly successful Slime Season series. A more concise effort than previous editions, Slim Season 3 is everything you want from Thug, with the Atlanta rapper in typically creative form.

A number of tracks leaked over the last few days, so if you’re a Thugger fan you’ve no doubt heard the London On Da Track produced banger Digits and Kanye West-hyped With Them, complete with classic Thugger ad-libs.

Cropping up on the snare snapping Slime Shit, Yak Gotti is the only guest, and that’s fine by me. While Thug can conjure chemistry with just about anyone in the game, it’s his solo tracks where he really shines. Worth It slows the beat down and allows Thug to flex his singing voice, Memo and Tattoos are typical trap records, while closer Problem finds Thug in scatter brain flow, claiming he feels like Marilyn Manson, wants a Grammay, shouts out Nelly and urges the authorities to free Offset. It’s ordered chaos and that’s what makes Thug a rap enigma.

Verdict: Worth the wait. Now hurry up and drop Hy!£UN35 Thugger!

[soundcloud url=”https://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/254893175″ params=”auto_play=false&hide_related=false&show_comments=true&show_user=true&show_reposts=false&visual=true” width=”100%” height=’450′ iframe=”true” /]

SBTRKT – Save Yourself

Two years on from his spectacular sophomore album, Wonder Where We LandSBTRKT has returned with surprise project Save Yourself. The eight track collection coincides with the launch of the website, saveyourselftv, accompanied by a mission statement explaining Save Yourself is not an album, but a complex aural and visual experience addressing SBTRKT’s thoughts and fears about the world and music, reflecting what’s come before and where we are headed. Very heavy stuff.

Despite the hefty themes running throughout Save Yourself, it’s the music that’s front and centre, and as you’d expect, SBTRKT doesn’t disappoint. The compilation weaves its way through R&B (Good Morning), two-step (Ready Or Not) and experimental electronica with flourishes of pop (I Feel Your Pain). SBTRKT enlists an eclectic array of guests, with The-Dream‘s smooth and sultry croon making its presence felt on three tracks, the best being the sullen album closer Bury You. Regular contributor Sampha lends a hand on TBD, but it’s the pairing of new comers D.R.A.M. and Mabel on the aformentioned I Feel Your Pain that had me coming back for one more listen.

Verdict: Save Yourself continues to push the boundaries of not only SBTRKT’s approach to making music, but the way we consume it as listeners, and we are all the better for it.

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=05edLSr0KDE]

Love him or hate him, Young Thug is one seriously interesting artist – and the sentiment stretches far beyond his music. Just last week, he literally rode around Atlanta on a horse to promote an upcoming tour, and now, a Young Thug casket has been spotted travelling down 6th Street in Austin Texas, where SXSW is currently taking place.

Indeed, 300 CEO Lyor Cohen recently revealed he would be “burying” Thugger’s upcoming album Slime Season 3. “We’re going to have a funeral procession right through South By Southwest,” he said in a video posted to Twitter.

He wasn’t lying. A funeral procession has genuinely been spotted travelling down the Austin street. The casket is adorned with decorations and graffiti tags, with a series of revealing details, including “Slime Season” and the date, “3.25.2016.” It’s now been confirmed that this date will in fact see the long-awaited release of Slime Season 3.

 

So, what is the significance of the casket and references to death? Is he foretelling the death of his own career (ha)? Or that of his contemporaries? Perhaps it signifies a new incarnation of the artist, who has developed such a ferociously unique, impossible-to-ignore identity for himself. Thugger’s video director, Be El Be, has shed some light: “What Lyor meant [buy ‘burying’ the album] was, dropping SS3 and getting past all the talk and this era of thug… Moving forward to dropping albums and hits SS3 OTW.”

Check out some fan-shot footage below:

https://twitter.com/DeviBrown/status/711021932959772672?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw

https://twitter.com/DeviBrown/status/711021932959772672?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw

#SlimeSeason3 March 25th #SS3 #Youngthug #SXSW

A video posted by CRESCENDO1 (@crescendo_one) on

Young Thug’s Slime Season 3 will be released this week on March 25. Tour dates are expected to follow.

Image: Twitter

It’s video roundup time! Once again, Howl And Echoes are coming in hot with the freshest, most eyeball stimulating music videos to be dropped by the artists you love and some of the artists you don’t know you love yet, of this week. We do all the dirty work and herd them all into one convenient web-based location for you to enjoy every Friday so that you don’t have to. Have yourself a good old gander at the latest offerings from:

Dear Plastic – Zero

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1duzFJa78Fo&feature=youtu.be

Here with the debut single from their forthcoming EP Heaven Machine are Melbourne five-piece pop experimentalists Dear Plastic, whose video for Zero is a visual delight. The track is killer, a sweet little slice of electro-pop full of cosmically warped synths and ethereal vocals from Scarlette Baccini that all of a sudden turns it up to 11 for the chorus, those dreamy lullaby vocals all of a sudden transitioning to shrieks, the synths adopting a somber and almost funereal tone. It was enough to have me go bolt upright in my chair.

The video is a fantastic trip, a moving portrait directed by Leigh Young and featuring artwork from Nadia Toukshati. Pastel colours and shapes kaleidoscope their way across some frankly unsettling close-ups of the band, really complementing the sound and atmosphere created, I was hooked instantaneously.

Look for Heaven Machine to arrive later on this year.

Gypsy And The Cat – Inside Your Mind

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j_QUQ1Kj_Xw&feature=youtu.be

Sticking in Melbourne for this next one from duo Gypsy And The Cat, the first taste of their upcoming album due this year. Inside Your Mind is the name, the sparkling acoustic guitars blending magnificently with breezy synths and some cloud-soft percussion, this is some of the easiest listening you’ll ever do.

The video was shot in Tokyo and features the duo in cat-catcher mode, going full cartoon donning jumpsuits and carrying oversize nets around as they search for a terrifying creature with the body of a slacker and the head of a cat (the famous cat head of Housetu Sato no less). Cat lovers will go ape for this, I find that head remarkably unsettling though. Nonetheless a clever video.

Catch Gypsy And The Cat on their Inside Your Mind tour of Australia when it kicks off next week.

ANOHNI – Drone Bomb Me

ANOHNI is a name you may recognise as being behind the vocals of Antony And The Johnsons. She has a new album HOPELESSNESS on the way, a joint collaboration between herself, Oneohtrix Point Never and Hudson Mohawke, so you already know production is going to be galactically good. To mark the occasion she’s released the first single and video today for the politically-charged Drone Bomb Me.

Haunting, almost operatic vocals tell the bonechilling story of a young girl whose family have been killed in drone attacks. It’s absolutely heartbreaking and the delivery by ANOHNI is full of emotion. The video features supermodel Naomi Campbell clad in camouflage and seated in a dimly-lit room. Shots of her openly weeping are interspersed with frenetic dancing and create an entirely jarring experience that warrants multiple views and listens.

HOPELESSNESS is out May 6th via Rough Trade/Remote Control Records.

 

Cosmic Rays – Teen Bank Robbers On Heroin

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bp5kU0_SOP4&feature=youtu.be

This single from ScotDrakula side project Cosmic Rays hands down wins the belt for best song title this week. Teenage Bank Robbers On Heroin  is the latest single from Australian by way of Canada Matthew Neumann; the mastermind behind both ScotDrakula and Cosmic Rays. This latest single is taken from the latter’s debut EP Yeah, Cool that was released last year. Dark and atmospheric with downtuned vocals and an uncompromising rhythm section (featuring a bassline that just wants to drill its way into your skull) that finds itself offset by some positively bright and gleaming synths. It’s altogether an intoxicating sound.

The music video was entirely self-produced and follows the exploits of a Melbourne suburbs Bonnie and Clyde of sorts, featuring mini-heists and many intense staring contests between the two. For the cost of $70, Neumann has created a great visual story to go with a cracker track.

There’s a new ScotDrakula record inbound but you can check out Yeah, Cool for now out on Future Popes.

Sunflower Bean – Easier Said

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

The first international act on this week’s list are Sunflower Bean all the way from New York City. Their latest single Easier Said comes from their just released debut album Human Ceremony. Clean and spritely guitars are the order of the day here, accompanying some gorgeously lilting vocals from frontwoman Julia Cummings.

The video is filmed in what looks like a gloomy stretch of upstate New York in late Fall, grey skies and leafless trees scattered across the landscape. Cummings is the focal point, taking a dirtbike ride in a gold jumpsuit and blue angel wings before the rest of the band join her for a casual jam by a roaring fire.

Human Ceremony is out now on Fat Possum via Inertia.

Bugs – When I Know

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h5rXXebQWPg

I caught Brisbane duo Bugs when they played the Mountain Goat Valley Pub Crawl just a couple of weeks ago and was thoroughly blown away. Be it their stellar punk and roll covers of Cher’s Believe or the Hoodoo Gurus’ What’s My Scene to their own pop-punk infused tunes that had the crowd bouncing off the walls. The riffs were heavy and the lyrics honest and with that Aussie-accented twang that adds just that little extra flavour they were a highlight of the night.

When I Know is their latest single, released this week with an accompanying video. Sharp and punchy and with lo-fi guitars that jangle and fuzz, the soaring hook of the chorus will lodge itself in your head for ages and lay eggs there that demand you listen to more. The video is a rainbow-splattered, bedroom-quality collage of different shots of the duo singing and playing.

Catch Bugs launching When I Know in Byron Bay and Brisbane in the next couple of weeks. They are a fuck-ton of fun.

King Gizzard And The Lizard Wizard – Gamma Knife

https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=4&v=nC7ii3Ir-no

Experimental noisemakers King Gizzard And The Lizard Wizard are one of the most productive bands in Australia and they are on a roll. They’re just over a month out from releasing another album, Nonagon Infinity, and this week they’ve released a new single and video: Gamma Knife.

Working in a cancer clinic that’s just installed an actual Gamma Knife machine and knowing how cool it is (seriously, read about what they can do), I was expecting laser-sharp riffs and a warped out cosmic vibe from the track going into it and that’s exactly what I was delivered. The song is just a whirlwind of speed and sound and is the type of song that will have crowds losing their ever-loving shit live (the extended drum solo is utterly fantastic and harkens back to late-70s prog so nicely)

The video is what you would call wacky, the band playing in a circle in a sun-dappled field. It’s 360 degrees of King Gizz, the camera rotating around each member, all clad in black robes and faces painted. Multicoloured warlock looking dudes soon join the circle before the entire thing ends with everyone lying motionless beside a gigantic egg. Like the drum solo, it’s a very prog-rock affair and it just rules.

Nonagon Infinity is out April 29 via ATO.

Young Thug – My People (ft. Duke)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ObXGRPNzX60

Summer vibes abound in the latest single and video from Young Thug. My People comes from his recently released mixtape I’m Up. It features Duke and is a sweltering hot track full of island rhythms, Young Thug spitting fire across all of it.

The video features Thugger leading a band of black clad militants in ski masks. They stand resolutely on a bridge, fists to the sky, as Young Thug raps around them. Striking visuals that contrast with the party feel of the song but an excellent clip all the same.

Look out for Young Thug keeping productivity sky high. Having just dropped I’m Up, he’ll be releasing his debut LP Hy!£UN35 to kick off May and arguably having an even bigger year than he had in 2015.

(Image via Rip It Up)

In what is arguably the greatest sign that trap-influenced rap is almost undecipherable, Young Thug has attempted to recite the lyrics to one of his best known hits; with hilarious results.

“Young Thug’s songs are often great. They are also often difficult to understand. Here, the rapper reads his hit Best Friend like a bedtime story—clearly, slowly, and using words you can actually comprehend,” serves as the introduction to a GQ video where the Atlanta rapper tries his hardest to make sense of his own lyrics.

While GQ would like to believe that Thugger uses words that are fit for human comprehension, what follows is a video that fails to make any of the following lyrics any more understandable:

“I’m gon’ skeet off, lil nigga come catch me, catch me
And that’s my bestie, my bestie, my best friend, go best friend
Nigga livin’ TTG and everything is still on fleek”

Let’s be honest; there’s only so much you can do with a verse that includes the word ‘fleek’. It’s around the 45 second mark where Thugger Thugger starts to have trouble reading, and I am still none the wiser as to what this song is actually about:

“Take them boys to school, swagonometry
Bitch I’m bleeding bad, like a bumble bee”

It is also slightly worrying how many times Young Thug has to refer to his handy notes to remember the lyrics to his own song:

“Eat on that coochie, lay that bitch down like “let’s do it”
No Tiger bitch, eat that wood, eat that wood
Supplier, bitch, I got pistols, no wood
I want them tacos that are Meagan Good”

On second thought, I don’t like my chances of remembering that either. Thugger definitely has enough on his plate, from public custody battles with his assortment of baby mommas, to public stoushes with Lil Wayne, Rich Homie Quanand basically everyone else in hip-hop.

Kudos to you Young Thug, for giving hope to everyone out there that they can make it big by saying gibberish really quickly!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IVRXJ1Gd33g

Image: GQ.

This week’s been particularly big for hip-hop releases, especially on the mixtape front, so don’t expect too much variety with the reviews I’m afraid. Young Thug dropped another mixtape out of no where, OVO Sound signees Majid Jordan released their self-titled long player and Kevin Gates finally dropped his debut Islah, but it’s Future’s EVOL that comes out on top.

Kevin Gates: Islah

Kevin Gates has been releasing mixtapes of varying quality over the past 10 years, building a loyal and dedicated fan base that will surely expand with the release of his long awaited debut studio album Islah. Named after his daughter, the album is a comprehensive collection of songs featuring the Southern street rapper’s introspective lyrics over thumping beats that conveys the best elements of the talented Louisiana rapper.

Gates’ greatest strength as an artist is his chameleon rap style that’s plastered all over Islah. There are trap bangers (La Familia, Thought I Heard), personal tales (Pride), experimental rock tunes (Hard For) and Drake-like pop numbers (Time For That, Really Really), all infused with Gates’ lyrical honesty and “don’t give a fuck” attitude. The lack of big name producers or rappers might hinder similar artists, but it has the opposite effect on Gates, allowing his personality to shine through.

Verdict: Not only is Islah the album we’ve been waiting for Gates to deliver, but it’s one of the best hip-hop releases of the year so far.

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

Young Thug – I’m Up

While he promises Slime Season 3 is still coming, Young Thug has gifted fans I’m Up in the meantime. As you’d expect from Thugger, the tape is all over the shop stylistically and contains a varied list of producers and artists, but above all, is entertaining.

Short at just nine tracks, including the previously released F Cancer (Thugger at his best over a bouncy Mike WiLL Made It beat) and Hercules, I’m Up is full of positive vibes. Thug appears to be in a good space that’s reflected in his lyrics throughout the tape. “I feel special” he raps on the hook to the piano laced Special, while Family, featuring his sisters Dora and Dolly, has Thug letting us know “Only thing more important than money is family.”

The roll call of rappers is varied, with Lil Durk, Offset and Quavo just a handful of contributors. While they all add something to the tapes overall feel, you can look past Thug and Lil Durk’s Ridin, a track that cements the two’s chemistry as they trade verses over booming beat.

Verdict: He might be raps weirdo but I’m Up only furthers Young Thug claim as heir to Lil Wayne crumbling throne.

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Majid Jordan – Majid Jordan 

Drake continues to build his OVO Sound empire with the release of smooth R&B pop duo Majid Jordan’s self-titled debut. Like their mentor, singer/songwriter Majid Al Maskati and producer Jordan Ullman ply their trade in soothing, emotional songs laden with R&B melodies and catchy hooks.

Ullman keeps the production minimal and tight with flashes of extravagance, allowing Majid’s sensual vocals room to explore the futuristic R&B soundscapes carved out. The majority of tracks are uplifting R&B pop numbers centred around big choruses, such as Something About You, Make It Work and Shake Shake Shake, but the two also show their softer side on the likes of Small Talk and Every Step Every Way. Drake makes his presence felt on the club hit My Love, but it’s the soaring King City, where Majid shows off his incredible falsetto, that’s easily the albums highlight.

Verdict: Majid Jordan have delivered an album that fits in well with their mentors sound without feeling restrained or too similar.

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eqJ-Shv3kEw]

Future – EVOL

No hip-hop artist is on a bigger roll than Atlanta’s Future. After 2014’s Honest failed to live up to the hype and his engagement to Ciara ended badly, things looked bleak for the self-proclaimed Future Hendrix. Then he dropped DS2 (Dirty Sprite 2) and all was forgiven. The sequel to his debut mixtape Dirty Sprite, Future laid bare his emotional pain over menacing beats with his familiar auto-tuned vocal delivery that became the first in a succession of successful releases (What A Time To Be Alive with Drake and last months absorbing Purple Reign mixtape).

Much like his project with Drake (were he overshadowed the 6 God), EVOL blurs the line between album and mixtape, being available to purchase on iTunes but more in the vein of a Purple Reign. Whatever its classification, the one word that will be associated with EVOL is fire. This is everything you’d expect from a guy who’s spent the past few years tweaking and refining his moody, drug-trap sonics, with MaybachFly Shit Only and Seven Rings offering the classic Future vibe. Once again he takes shots at former beau Ciara and current boyfriend Russell Wilson on the savage Photo Copied while lobbing subliminals at Young Thug on Lie To Me.

When not addressing his personal life, Future keeps things simple. Xanny Family, Lil Haiti Baby and Program all reference Future’s three favourite subjects; sex, drugs and his lavish lifestyle. The Weekend crops up as the only featured artists on the drug-sex themed Low Life, while beat makers Metro Boomin and Southside must take credit for cultivating the majority of EVOL’s dark and gritty 808’s heavy production.

Verdict: At just 11 tracks (including bonus cut Fly Shit Only), EVOL is on the short side but further solidifies Future’s trademark sound and position as a hip-hop heavyweight.

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