rap
Rhythm and Poetry; rap music is a genre centered around speaking truth to power with style.
King Von's Growth Was Stunted
Dayvon Daquan Bennett (August 9, 1994 – November 6, 2020) This was the real King Von. A real street nigga. Somewhere along the way that term has been confused with a guy that is reckless, doesn’t care about much and does anything to get where he wants to go. A guy that disregards the law, takes lives and is unable to change. By November 2020, King Von was a rapper on the rise, that could’ve easily settled into a life free of whatever troubles he was conditioned to think was a way of life. He beat a murder charge, came home to a friend already established in the music industry (Lil Durk), that wanted nothing more than to see him succeed, his credibility attached and etched in stone, a look that fit the part, a following inherited from all the attention his side of town was receiving, and most importantly, a natural talent for music and charisma to be everything required of a star in today’s hip hop world. But with all that, also by November 2020, he was killed in the streets, virtually alone, holding on to the last bit of his life. To me King Von was well on his way to becoming the best story telling artist in the game and household name. What happened? Here are 3 reasons King Von’s growth as a musician was stunted.
STUNTED GROWTHPublished 3 years ago in BeatWhy We Love Juice
Juice Wrld (born Jarad Anthony Higgins) was born December 2, 1998, and sadly died due to a drug overdose on December 8, 2019. When listening to Juice's music now is almost eerie knowing what happened to him, because in most of Juice's music he talks about taking pills and drinking lean, and from an outside view many people see Juice as a terrible influences on the younger generation but i'm here to tell you why he isn't. Juice's music doesn't only just talk about taking drugs and being with women, no Juice did much more through his music then that. In many of Juice's tracks he talks about many relatable troubles of a young adult and teen. In his first album 'Goodbye and Good Riddance', Juice's talks about dealing with heartbreak, and feeling numb and alone, like he has no one, songs like 'All Girls Are The Same', 'I'm Still', 'Candles', and 'Scared of Love' talk about dealing with heartbreak and have not only helped me but so many others get through tough times, and in my eyes is the best album ever made.
Jacob OkenquistPublished 3 years ago in BeatHow Megan Thee Stallion's New Album Ended Her Haters
Megan Thee Stallion recently released her new album titled 'Good News' and let me tell you girl, there are songs we can ALL twerk to. Megan managed to end her haters with the 17 different and unique tracks, whilst keeping it sexy! Here are my thoughts on each track!
- Top Story - November 2020
READY TO RUMBLE
I have found it. This is the perfect running playlist for my millennial/gen Z babies. It contains all the pop/rap hits from 2010-the present. It can't get much better than this and I am here to tell you why.
Beyond K-Pop: Rap
Hi, and welcome back to Silver Linings, where the maligned, forgotten, and ignored are at the mic. Thanks to my significant other Ally, I have gotten very acquainted with South Korea's music scene. Also thanks to her, my acquaintance with the scene doesn't start or end at K-Pop. I've already done four articles pointing to acts from the area worth listening to if you're sick of BTS or BlackPink, but there are so many more. Today, I'm turning the focus to the rappers. See, for the longest time, it was thought that, due to the unusual structure of the language, rap was impossible in Korean. However, people like Verbal Jint have proven otherwise, and the rap scene exploded over there. It got to the point that idol groups were making a point of including rappers in their line-ups. Of course, RM, Suga, and J-Hope from BTS are the most famous examples, but they're far from the only ones. Today, I'm turning the spotlight to ten Korean rappers who've got the flow to rival the best of our hip-hop artists. Some are part of idol groups, some are still underground, but they can all bust a rhyme like few can.
Adam WallacePublished 4 years ago in BeatWho is D'NME?
Rapper D’NME is never shy on confidence. The self-proclaimed "face of the rap game” and "greatest rapper in the world” is undoubtedly one of the most gifted and technically sound emcees to emerge in Hip-Hop in recent years. Roderick Anson, better known as D’NME was born in Toronto, Canada, home to many big artists like Eternia, Massari, and Jay Honest. As a completely independent Canadian rapper, he has capitalized on his complete artistic freedom and control over his music. Music has always been a psrt of his life for many reason. He has taken on some daring moves as he creates music featuring raw lyrical content. He also has experimented with his unique rapping style to give the listeners a different feel when they hear his songs. All these have landed him to where he is today.
Honk MagazinePublished 4 years ago in BeatSIX PACK OF RAP
It's been a minute since we've covered music but here are six women in hip-hop that we jammed out to while listening to Amazon Music Unlimited last night.
Winners OnlyPublished 4 years ago in BeatDax Recalibrates the Bar
You are in for a roller coaster ride into the truth about you. Truth as in truth you won't want face in yourself but in order to evolve you know you must examine your own shadow self and admit some things to yourself.
Jennifer LindPublished 4 years ago in BeatInfinite ILLIS - Accounts
Infinite ILLIS has a new track dropping called Accounts on 11/12/20 self produced, written, recorded and engineered. Click on the link to here a same of what is to come. Here is the lyrics to the upcoming single
Infinite ILLISPublished 4 years ago in BeatSauce Walka and El Trainn team up for “Sauce Trainnathin”
About El Trainn: EL Trainn, is a rap artist based in Houston, Texas from the infamous Missouri City neighborhood.The artist has been passionate about music ever since he was eight years old at a young age, he started performing with an
@OCLEADINLADYPublished 4 years ago in BeatLet's Get This Straight: Freestyle Rap vs. Improvisational Rap
I know you have one or two freestyle raps you can pull up on YouTube that would impress your friends. What if I told you that those freestyle raps were written down prior and memorized?
Dylan P. McSheraPublished 4 years ago in BeatInterview with Accent Sorrow
So, to begin with, I met the artist who would become Accent Sorrow about 5 or 6 years ago through one of my closest friends. I didn't have too many initial reactions of him, though I did know I wasn't a tremendous fan of his taste of music. Coincidentally, it was indirectly through this particular set of musical tastes that I came to determine that my thinking about music had ossified, and I'd reached the age where I thought the music "of my generation" was the best, and everything new sucked.
Creativity RiskPublished 4 years ago in Beat