The fraternity brothers who wear Mitchell & Ness throwback basketball jerseys need lifestyle music, too.

Almost every time you log on to YouTube, the Bronx rapper has a new song or mixtape ready to go. MenPath is reader-supported. By doing so, they’ve created an environment in hip-hop with enough room for someone like The Forty-Year-Old Version’s Radha to explore her creativity without being laughed at or, even more traumatizing, getting age-shamed on a diss track. I would listen to an entire tape of Keef remixing classic Gucci records. This one reminds me of Back From the Dead 2-era Keef—my personal favorite.

The ad-libs are endless, the beat sounds like it should be performed by a full orchestra, and his rapping is hilariously bleak: “I told my daughter stop breaking off her Barbie heads.”. Get the hottest music, news and videos delivered directly to your inbox.
This low-fuss hairstyle is perfect for those with naturally wavy hair. In 2020, hip-hop is more accepting of oldish rappers than ever before. YoungBoy’s refusal to step out of his comfort zone is part of what makes his remix to JAY-Z’s “The Story of O.J.” so surprising. For years, Houston’s TisaKorean has been soundtracking the constantly evolving Texas dance scene on YouTube. On “Tyler Herro,” Harlow leans into the bit, but not nearly enough. Find Jack Harlow discography, albums and singles on AllMusic. Regardless of what you think about Jack Harlow, you can not deny that he had the summer on smash with "What's Poppin."

The World 2. If you have a natural curl and texture, embrace it. Papi raps about “Obama runtz” and claims he looks like King Tut over a beat that could soundtrack a trippy episode of Adventure Time. Will he tackle an ATL trap throwback that sounds like it was made in Zaytoven’s mother’s basement? On “Doonie Van,” the Flint rapper spends the bulk of the song’s one-and-a-half-minute runtime trying to find the power to repeat his signature bars from “Coochie Land”: “How are you doing today, I’m the Coochie Man/I just pulled up with 10 hoes in the doonie van.” In the process, Jay repeatedly stops, starts, and interrupts himself with anxious words of motivation like, “No you said it like that last time, Jay!” and “No man!” But eventually he manages to cooperate with himself and smoothly raps the two familiar lines. “My homeboy Tyler he play in South Beach/He told me this summer he gon’ fix my jumper,” he raps over trendy production, like he’s just repeating the first conversation the two ever had.

This site uses cookies.