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75 articles found. Page 2 of 4.
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Streets, The: The Streets: Fast-moving UK Garage Geezer
Interview by Ted Kessler, New Musical Express, 6 October 2001
EVERYONE KNOWS THE future of dance music always comes from the streets. ...
Nas: Rap: Nas-ter Has Success 'Written' All Over Him
Profile and Interview by Amy Linden, New York Daily News, 25 July 1996
Speaking the Queensbridge English, recording artist is the city's No. 1 son ...
Review by Dorian Lynskey, The Guardian, 1 August 2003
JUST BECAUSE So Solid Crew are paranoid, it doesn't mean someone isn't after them. Since the 30-odd-strong UK garage cartel emerged from Battersea in south ...
Cookie Crew: Some Cookies Don't Crumble
Interview by Sheryl Garratt, The Guardian, 21 June 1989
British rap is taken seriously in the States largely due to the Cookie Crew. Sheryl Garratt found out why ...
Nik Cohn: Triksta – Life and Death and New Orleans Rap
Book Review by Charles Shaar Murray, The Independent, 9 December 2005
JUST AFTER THE first printing of this iconic writer's account of his cultural and musical misadventures in an iconic city, the situation changed almost beyond ...
Tyler, The Creator: Q&A: Tyler, the Creator
Interview by Rob Tannenbaum, Rolling Stone, 11 April 2013
The Odd Future leader on homophobia, Miley Cyrus and why Tumblr is "sad". ...
Beastie Boys, The: The Beastie Boys: The Most Horrible Group In The Universe?
Interview by uncredited writer, Smash Hits, 25 February 1987
They play ear-splitting heavy metal rap music, they throw food on the carpet, they throw eggs at Sigue Sigue Sputnik, they hate the Human League ...
Snoop (Doggy) Dogg: Snoop Doggy Dogg: What's Your Problem? Absent fathers
Interview by Lisa Verrico, Vox, April 1994
SNOOP DOGGY Dogg, born Calvin Broadus, was brought up by his mother in the working-class suburb of Long Beach, Los Angeles. From early adolescence, when ...
Interview by Caroline Sullivan, The Guardian, 6 October 2003
Fannypack are young, smutty and fresh — and they might just make hip-hop fun again. Caroline Sullivan meets them. ...
Beastie Boys, The: The Nature of the Beastie Boy
Interview by John Aizlewood, No. 1, 7 March 1987
Mad, bad and dangerous to know, it's THE BEASTIE BOYS! Loud, obnoxious, snotty and very very funny. ...
Akala: Exploding on to the scene
Interview by Stephen Dalton, The Times, 18 August 2006
Mobo nominee MC Akala is more than just Ms Dynamite's little brother. ...
Interview by Paul Lester, Sunday Times, 1 March 2015
Touted by Lorde and Kanye West, Raury has the nerve to live up to his billing ...
Loyle Carner: I believe in yesterday
Interview by Lisa Verrico, The Sunday Times, 26 February 2017
Losing his stepdad made him the rapper he is today ...
Ice Cube: Death Certificate (Priority)
Review by RJ Smith, L.A. Weekly, 21 November 1991
The Racist You Love To Hate Ice Cube has his reasons ...
John Singleton: How John Singleton's Soundtracks Brought The Black Experience To The Big Screen
Guide by Ben Merlis, uDiscoverMusic, 6 January 2022
Director John Singleton left behind more than just a cinematic legacy; his soundtracks brought the black experience to life on the big screen. ...
Nik Cohn: Triksta – Life and Death and New Orleans Rap
Book Review by Will Hermes, The New York Times, 4 December 2005
The Rap Before the Rain ...
Interview by Dele Fadele, NME, 29 June 1996
Having adopted the moniker of one Pablo Escobar, NAS ESCOBAR set about creating vivid lyrical depictions of life in his native New York tenement slums. ...
Ms Dynamite, So Solid Crew, Streets, The: The Streets: The British Can't Rap, Haven't You Heard?
Overview by Simon Reynolds, The New York Times, 20 October 2002
THE BRITISH have always had a flair for taking black American music, giving it a twist and then exporting it back, stylishly repackaged. Blues, R&B, ...
Snoop (Doggy) Dogg: Snoop Doggy Dogg
Profile and Interview by David Bennun, The Guardian, November 1996
"I'M GONNA live forever," says the man slumped in the chair opposite, his voice so soft it's barely more than a mumble. Nobody has ever ...
Schoolly D, Three Wise Men, The, Cookie Crew: Rhythm King Records: Hit Me With Your Rhythm Kings
Profile and Interview by James Brown, Sounds, 24 January 1987
Somehow, somewhere James Brown became a fast-chat, no-flab funker. And he did it with the help of Rhythm King, Britain's leading dance indie label. Since ...
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