Artwork by Scott Donohue.

Earlier in 2011, we got a taste of Verbal Terrorist’s forthcoming album with their emphatic anti-cuts anthem, No Ifs, No Buts. The track, in which the group speak out against the government’s system of spending cuts, is an absolute belter which received airplay on a variety of independent stations including Rob One’s 20/20 Hip-Hop and Mr 13’s show on Bang Radio. Vehement but articulate, the track is exactly the sort of rabble-rousing hip-hop that needs to be blasted out of speakers at demonstrations.

The group, who operate in cognitive defiance of hip-hop’s appropriation by mainstream interests and the exertions of big business, stay true to the culture’s ideological roots, using rap as a form of alternative identity formation and as means to help change opinions. Heavily politicised, the group stand up and help give reasoned cause to the lowest echelons of society, sending out their message through a sound that is unmistakably independent.

Their latest album, The War on Terra is a musical and aesthetic patchwork – a transcultural bricolage of elements woven into an essentially hip-hop framework. Tightly fusing lyricism, beat and melody, with production ranging from African-inflected salsa to gritty urban UK dubstep, the album’s sound is unique and varied.

From the outset the listener is exposed to a very different sound to their more bass-heavy debut album, Small Axe. The first track Don’t Believe, features deft production from Joonipah who uses a haunting minor loop sample interspersed with snippets of Chomsky’s treatises on ‘Manufacturing Consent’ and corporate propaganda. Such excerpts show the group’s intellectual rigour – using reasoned analysis as opposed to simply churning out half-baked establishment-bashing clichés too often the scourge of incendiary hip-hop lyrics. As they put it “we need a network of global collusion, focussed and prudent”, providing insight into how we might go about combating societal ills.

Through cryptic vocal elements, double-entendres call-and-response patterns and multisyllabic rhyme schemes, the group put forward cogent arguments for their cause in the aptly named The Solution, a track in which the duo provide insight into what sort of ideas need to be propelled. These include “building lasting links between the workers and students”, and exhorting us all to forgo nihilism and to “get with the counter hegemony.”

Through their raw and insouciant lyrics, the group also deconstruct notions present in what has too often become a simplistic binary-coded struggle. Promoting unity instead of division is a key intention of the group’s, arguing for example, that fighting the EDL is the wrong way to go about tackling hatred. The group aims to represent all minority groups, both racial and class-based, living isolated in a host society, and this is particularly represented in the excellent Build Bridges, Not Borders. Rapper Drop Dead Fred delivers an exquisite introductory verse in the track – an explicit diatribe on the majority nationalism and racism inherent in the UK’s political system. The high-profile Akala also features on this and imparts some articulate lines on race and identity, suggesting we celebrate the diversity immigrants bring to the British Isles, while Nobull continues with the theme of victimisation and scapegoating of minority peoples: “We just need a scapegoat to distract from problems, like a microcosm of the Nazi problem.

Aligning themselves in the struggle with artists that are stylistically different, but essentially the same in their cultural aims, the group are earnestly aiming to widen their fanbase and thereby strengthen their cause. London-based hip-hop artist Cyclonious for example, features on Roots of All Evil, a track which discusses the evils of money, touching on various topics including the environment: “mother nature gets no maternity leave.”

A real highlight on the album is Viva La Terrorista, a track, which dips briefly into a mode of playful humour, featuring North-East hip-hop veteran group Dialect’s Rick Fury. The song strikes up a beautiful consonance between white working-class North-East vernacular and upbeat Afro-Cuban salsa rhythms, again fusing two marginalized cultures cutting across cultural boundaries in the face of struggle. This simultaneous interplay of the global and the local is what makes the album particularly special in my opinion.

War on Terra, the album’s eponymous track, features edgy, minimalist diffuse bass production which is utterly congruent to its stark political subject matter. Guest-featuring stic.man of US hip-hop duo Dead Prez, a group known for their activism and case for a better world, the track sees two groups unite to agitate the status quo of what rap music has become, i.e. a median that has been commoditised and which glorifies material gain, thereby counter-radicalising by a white bourgeois hegemony. Indeed the essence of their music-making serves as a specific base for the creation of a cultural and political identity.

With an obvious parellism between the white working class struggle in the UK and those of their Black and Hispanic hip-hop forbears in the US, the group produces its own cultural, social and political space within the “devilish hegemony”, and achieves this by recoding socio-political terms and accepted notions in a retaliatory and transgressive manner. Indeed, Verbal Terrorists and many artists in the same category are genuinely pushing the case as a form of educational literature and a force to be reckoned with, inverting the oppression and cultural restraint imposed by the rich and powerful, and adhering to a notion that community is not pre-given, but rather that it must be created in the face of threat and decimation.

In my view, The War on Terra epitomizes a conscious rap album; in the sense that it’s a form of rap pedagogy, minus a preponderance for self-righteousness and dubious conspiracy theorizing. In an ephemeral and superficial age, Verbal Terrorists will leave a lasting impression with their audiences, proving that incendiary hip-hop will continue to survive so long as it is adapted in the correct context. Their latest album is an inspired piece of art which fuses both modern political ideas and traditional folkloric musical sensibilities. In a nut shell – it’s superb.

Purchase The War on Terra from Verbal Terrorists’ Bandcamp page

http://verbalterrorists.bandcamp.com/

Innit Records founder Beit Nun is back with a new music video for his latest single Without Love. Produced by Chris Leese, with some bassy notes added by Dan Bull, the track is a fresh and honest concept featuring an everyman perspective on love and relationships. The single, which displays Beit’s affinity for raw, down-to-earth lyricism, is lifted from his forthcoming release Where The Art Is Vol.2, a compilation featuring 20 original tracks featuring collaborations with Cappo, Ramson Badbonez, SonnyJim, Dr. Syntax, Lego, RedEye, 777 and many more.

Without Love is available to buy now from iTunes, featuring 2 bonus tracks and a remix. http://itunes.apple.com/gb/album/without-love-maxi-single-ep/id497282188

If you’re a dubstep head or junglist, you may already know UK hip-hop artist Potent Whisper from 7-man heavy-bass collective We Are Dubist, a group with whom he has performed at numerous prestigious events. If you’re a UK rap fan who veers towards more conscious lyricism, you may have heard of him on account of his affiliation with The People’s Army, a Brixton-based hip-hop movement that aims to change opinions through positive lyrics. However, the London rapper of Greek-Cypriot descent first caught my attention back in April of last year with his groundbreaking debut EP ‘Meta-Phor-Play‘, a smorgasbord of hip-hop treats with an uncanny diversity of themes and emotions expressed through his own unique, free-flowing stream-of-consciousness delivery. His style is, at least in some ways reminiscent of Jehst’s, but set instead to faster rhythms and tempi, giving him a greater sense of urgency to that of the laid-back drawl of his UK hip-hop forebear.

Potent’s latest release, titled The 1 EP is another exhibition of his intricate emceeing skills, his penchant for the expressive rather than the punchline-heavy, and also his friendly, amicable personality. What I think really sets Potent apart from other artists in this category is that he achieves a careful balance in his music: lightly suffused with comedic sensibilities, Potent’s style isn’t overtly “conscious” or didactic, but with it I sense he aims to ensconce the listener into his unique perspective of things than imposing it upon them. His themes run the gamut from religious iconoclasm, the scars of past actions, to a highly innovative new concept in Potent vs Whisper, a track in which he battles himself, or rather, does battle with both the good and evil sides to his conscience.

For the most part, Potent’s lyricism is elusive and cryptic: meandering through creative narratives, skipping from one multisyllabic rhyme-scheme to the next with effortless fluency. It takes a lot of skill to rap like he does; cramming a lot of information in his verses whilst maintaining double-time precision is no mean feat.

As a backdrop to his lyrics (which I’m sure would translate seamlessly to spoken-word poetry if he were so inclined) is some beautiful and evocative production. Divine Rights emcee/beatmaker Cystic especially, brings accompaniment that is both crisp and atmospheric: an irresistible mix of soul samples (including an eccentric Russian female vocal sample in ‘L.I.I.D.I’) , boom bap and lurching instrumental sustains. Jamey Pearce crafts a delectably simple beat spun by a loping string sample in ‘Dried Rivers’, while Dirty Stanz (also of Divine Rights)  adds an edgy and synthy malaise to  ’Potent vs Whisper’. Other, guest features include Bamalam (also of Divine Rights), female singer Nanci Correia who bestows her gorgeous vocal work to the mix, and U.S. emcee Cr0okKid.

The 1 EP is a quality release and, quite refreshingly for an EP, is a decent and concise length. Though there are some minor issues with mixing and mastering in there, the overall package is weighty and its contents assertive and powerful. Overall, this is really unique and innovative hip-hop from an artist I’m sure will continue to make waves in the scene, so long as he carries on in his characteristic, highly creative vein of form.

www.potentwhisper.com

Manchester-based grime/rap artist Blizzard is tipped for big things. Creating a major buzz after an impressive string of freestyle videos, (most notably his two recent SB.TV Warm-Up Session and F64 videos which have so far garnered well over 100,000 combined views), the prodigiously gifted 17-year-old emcee and producer practically has “the next big thing” stamped to his forehead. Already making waves in the scene, it’s impossible for fans of both hip-hop and grime to ignore  the young Mancunian, who combines devastating grime flows with punchlines, lyricism and a maturity beyond his years.

TC: For those who don’t know you, sum yourself up in sentence.
Blizzard: I’m a 17 year old MC and producer from Manchester, UK and I’m just trying my hardest to push my music to the depths of the earth and be up there with the best.

TC: What sort of artists initially inspired you to get into making music?
Blizzard: The music I listened to as a kid was mainly what was playing around the house; rap and grime music didn’t come to me till I was exploring myself, but rappers like The Game, Eminem and LL Cool J along with groups like Wu-Tang Clan, Outkast and A Tribe Called Quest. My production is inspired by stuff like Brian Eno, Philip Glass, Aphex Twin, Massive Attack and Autechre, so a wide range of stuff really.

TC: You’re primarily known for grime, but you also affiliate closely with the UK hip-hop scene. When did you cultivate a passion for rap?
Blizzard: When I started secondary school really. Before that it was whatever was on display, or whatever I heard, but that was the point where I understood it.

TC: You’re working alongside independent grime label Launchpad Records. Tell us a bit about the label’s ethos and what you want to achieve with it.
Blizzard: Launchpad is a great label. They do their work and as a result of that they’re steadily becoming a prolific name in the grime scene. It’s deserved as well; it’s not like they’ve had the formula given to them with colour-coded instructions. They (George Quann-Barnett and Louis Serrano, the founders of Launchpad) worked it out. In the future I’ll most likely be releasing something with them.

TC: Which artists (not necessarily limited to grime or hip-hop) are you feeling most at the moment?
Blizzard: I’ve got a few. I go through phases but at the moment I’m feeling The Weeknd, Frank Ocean, Jhene Aiko, Lana Del Rey and Jhene Aiko, as well as many others. For hip-hop, it’s Jehst. ‘Dragon Of An Ordinary Family’ is all I’ve been bumping lately.

TC: If you could collaborate with anyone, who would it be?
Blizzard: I’d love to collaborate with The Weeknd. The guy has a hauntingly good voice, and hypothetically it would be interesting to see how he’d adapt on a song with a UK artist.

TC: Since the age of 11 you along with Shifty and Slayer have formed part of Manchester grime crew Mayhem. Is this still an active operation, and do you still maintain close ties with both crew members?
Blizzard: Yeah, Mayhem are still active, but we’re more like a firm of MCs that work together but away from the crew do solo stuff, if that makes sense. We’ve been talking about a future CD but we’ll always be screaming the name, regardless if we have a new project out or not.

TC: You’re strongly associated with the Manchester grime scene. How do you feel about the scene in general? Is it getting the praise and recognition it deserves?
Blizzard: It’s an issue of interpretation really. To some people it’s a breath of fresh air, yet to others it’s like a page out of a dystopian novel. It’s down to how you, as an individual, choose to work. In the next few years I think Manchester artists going nationwide will be much more commonplace.

TC: The grime scene is often accused of being too London-centric. Do you think it’s harder for grime artists from other cities to gain recognition?
Blizzard: I think so, mainly due to the fact that the general consensus of grime fans only pay attention to London artists most of the time. Just getting acknowledged is a big enough feat, but there’s nothing to say that it isn’t possible.

TC: The Manchester rap scene is a burgeoning one. Which artists should we be looking out for?
Blizzard: Sin-Seer from Manchester is ill. He’s bringing back the old-school, laid back lethargic 90s style that I miss. Also Red IQ, which is a rap trio that is made up of D’Lyfa Reilly, C Aye Monk and Bo’Nidle. They’re ill.

TC: You’ve battled a few times on Don’t Flop, most recently defeating H-Bomb. What do you like about battling, and how do you feel about the current state of the UK battle scene?
Blizzard: Don’t Flop is the only thing that is really worth paying attention, but they’re doing their work and it’s paying off. I was at an event on the 19th November (Blood In The Water 5) which was insane. Rappers from the US, Canada, Holland, Sweden and even Malaysia flew out to take part in that event.

TC: Many of us will have no doubt seen your SB.TV Warm-Up Session and F64 videos. How important do you feel your online exposure has been in getting your name out there?
Blizzard: I think online exposure is important because it’s available for everybody. When I started out the only way artists used the internet was Myspace, and now it’s became bigger, and it’s a way for artists to become established.

TC: In addition to emceeing, you’ve produced various beats, including the infamous ’Soundboy Killer’ for Wiley over which he sends for Dot Rotten. As your career as an emcee progresses, do you see yourself continuing to produce for other artists?
Blizzard: Yeah Soundboy Killer was the start of it; I was always making beats for myself and my close circle of friends but it never really took off, and I never saw a big demand for my beats, so I was quite reluctant to bring stuff out. But for sure, I’d love to take production to the next level and produce for big artists.

TC: Are there any new projects of yours in the pipeline?
Blizzard: Just the mixtape that I’m in the process of making at the moment, called ‘The Social Network’. I don’t have a release date but it’ll be a free download project and I will keep you all updated.

TC: And finally, where can people best find you online?
Blizzard: My Twitter (@iamblizzard), my Facebook fan page (www.facebook/blizzarddubs) and my Soundcloud (soundcloud.com/iamblizzard).

For those of you who might not know, Natural Selection is a UK hip-hop duo composed of producer Brother Beatbox and emcee Deeflux. A like-minded pair who each bear similar stylistic aims, their raison d’être is essentially a shared love of music and a volition to create a hardcore, non-synthetic sound. Flying well below the mainstream radar, the duo remains steadfast in staying close to the essence of the art form; both in their adherence to and reverence for old-school techniques, as well as in their spontaneity of musical experimentation.

Rendered by an MPC and co-opting the talents of musical peers fluent in various musical disciplines, their debut release, ‘Rhythm By Numbers’ showcases the duo’s long-time collaborative efforts and the fruit of many hours of sampling sessions. There are a myriad of compelling musical elements at work in this album, but they don’t detract from its main aim: to get heads nodding. Displaying an obvious penchant for old-school boom-to-the-bap flavour mixed in with lyrical skill, Rhythm By Numbers establishes a commonality between Deeflux’s previous collaboration album 1984, but is much fresher and more experimental in sound. There’s a strong emphasis on fun and spontaneity within basic hip-hop parameters here; emanating an exuberant sound which is both retrospective and modern at the same time.

Basingstoke-based Brother Beatbox employs his talented beat craftsmanship to an eclectic range of instrumentation and melodies, while some truly masterful scratching is provided by Bristol-based DJ Fingerfood and DJ Juice. Disparate musical elements in this album include the flickering synth chords which add futuristic modes to joints like ‘Tell ‘Em’, a track featuring underground Detroit rapper Guilty Simpson, and the reechoing bassy textures of ‘Whomp’ an energetic take on the party track, which impresses with its beguiling musical intricacy. Hook-laden choruses are also a prominent feature of most tracks, and are, for the most part, carried off with real flair. One of the best examples of this the dope old-school call-and-response chorus in ‘Bomb Proof Style’, an acoustic guitar-spun joint featuring Lootpack’s Wildchild who laces his smoothly hypnotic vocal drawl all over some beautifully wrought musical accompaniments.

Sometimes the profuse musical layers in this instrumentals can smother the vocals, but for the most part they are subtle enough to cede spotlight to them. The live session material means 100% organic input, and you can certainly sense this, with judicious stabs of acoustic colour, percussive riffs and various instrumental stands often leavening the analogue intensity — honing an honest style which, sadly, very few hip-hop music practitioners, bar a select group of underground heads are still capable of producing. Fittingly, there’s no shortage of underground hip-hop featurings here, too; each selected to compliment and enhance the duo’s sound. ‘All Across the World’ for example, enlists LA-based Rebels To The Grain, who sling so many quotables back and forth that it’ll make your head spin: Too many flash emcees with too much oestrogen / Society’s my illness, and this my medicine. 

Conscious raps play a big part in the album, but aren’t your usual preachy, heavy-handed rants. Deeflux’s social commentary is delivered from a genuine, down-to-earth perspective, challenging society’s woes with refreshing equanimity. In ‘Hard To See’ for example, he reflects on the negative mindset of today’s youth, but remains refreshingly sanguine in his outlook: Nature or nurture – but what about the choice itself? Peer pressure is a bitch, but you have a voice as well.

Thematically, Deeflux stays true to familiar lyrical modes of hailing his own exemplary work ethic and staying level-headed amidst the chaos of modern life. ‘Real Shit’ is an exemplar of the album’s overall character; featuring  an anthemic chorus, wherein he laces some intricate stanzas set to an infectiously head-nodding beat: Paralyzed in the cavalcade / Known disciple lost, but still find a way.

Without creeping towards anodyne mediocrity, the duo deliver a transcendent message that can easily be felt beyond the confines of hip-hop. The album is also bold in its music as much as in its willingness to explore an occasional mundane humanity rather than legend or caricature; because of this you genuinely feel yourself connected to Deeflux’s commensensical outlook. His authenticity sustains him throughout the album’s duration, but occasionally his lines about his respect for hip-hop tradition are a tad overwrought.

Listening to Rhythm By Numbers is definitely an album-length experience; there are no real stand-outs, but as a whole it’s a solid and expertly rendered hip-hop album. In an age of ephemeral pop rappers with little appreciation for the fundmentals, both Deeflux and Brother Beatbox stand out with their abiding passion for the art form, and prove that they are in the game for the long haul.

http://naturalselectionuk.bandcamp.com/

Don’t Flop battler and Prison Planet co-founder Flex Digits laid down an emphatic blueprint for his brand of Northern-heavy hip-hop when he released Intergalactic Flu back in ’09. Infused with overstatement, violence, sex and drugs, and bolstered by an arsenal of polysyllabic rhymes, soaring choruses and huge grandiose beats, the album is a must for the hardcore hip-hop enthusiast.

For a start, it’s production credentials are very impressive: Saint Bastard, Faceraper and the renowned Anno Domini who has produced for the likes of Immortal Technique, add some weighty production values to an album that certainly doesn’t disappoint with its rich sonic soundscapes. ‘Satan’s Symphony’ – a track drenched in full-on gratuitous horrorcore – stands out with its seamless orchestral sounds as well as its impressively epic hook-laden choruses. Not only does the album’s sound impress but individual tracks, bar a couple of filler numbers, bear very clear, well-constructed themes. Conceptually, the collaboration track ‘Faces of War’ is brilliant, telling the story from a fictional 1st person perspective of the woes of 3 characters leaving behind their loved ones and having to face to the horrors and inhumanity of frontline warfare. Guest spots on this include Sheffield-honed emcee, The Ruby Kid, and Vee Da I, a fellow Chesterfield-based emcee of South African origin. Vee tells shocking tales of rape and pillage in his African village with no small measure of aplomb and Flex delivers big, unabashed descriptions of war such as witnessing a “child sacrificed on blood-splattered samsonite”, which are both evocative as they are brutal.

At times, Flex’s multisyllabic rhyme schemes sound a little contrived and this can occasionally is to the detriment of his storytelling, which can come across as somewhat stilted. It would be nice if he could tone this down a little because he certainly shows he is a competent wordsmith with no shortage of verbal ammunition and lyrical skill. Such skill is particularly evident in ‘Rain Check’, the album’s more introspective number, with Flex telling his narrative as a wayward, unfocused school kid with a longing to fulfill his ambition of a rap career despite his dreams threatening to be crushed by the ugly exigencies of real-world life and the barrage of cynicism he encounters from his teachers. The track features a refreshingly simple piano riff set to a minor key with fluttering half-step trills lending deep, haunting gradations to the engrossing story. In contrast, ‘Spoons’ features some nattily eccentric Spanish instrumental and vocal samples (a nod perhaps to Flex’s Spanish heritage) as well as some blatantly explicit rhymes, which though seemingly a little incongruous when juxtaposed, actually work surprisingly well. The track has some very memorable rhymes, if only for their shock value (“I wanna fuck you on your doorstep/ Grotesque like the thought of Dawn French on a porn set.”) but at the same time, it’s not gut-wrenchingly horrific stuff either. If you’re so deeply offended by it that you fail to recognize its merits, then I suggest you forgo listening to ‘Intergalactic Flu’ altogether.

Flex definitely plays to his strengths with no hint of an allusion to more experimental sample sources and tempos as means of varying the album, and for that I applaud him greatly. He is a no-nonsense emcee with a bellowing vocal tone, a gravelly harsh North Derbyshire accent and an unambiguous “fuck you” attitude. His lyrics are flamboyantly amoral and completely without irony which, as such, draw many obvious comparisons to Necro. However, it wouldn’t really be fair to immediately pigeonhole Flex as a gore-rapper with yet another clichéd spawn of Necro-esque horrorcore because there are certainly some honest strands in the album without him ever getting overly mawkish or sentimental; that just ain’t his style, nor does would it especially befit his brash persona. In essence, ‘Intergalactic Flu’ is all about raw, unapologetic lyricism over densely layered melodies and boldly epic instrumentals with hard bass drum snares.

Overall, the album definitely has a more mixtape vibe as the tracks featured span various phases in Flex’s career, plus it peters out a little bit towards the end and could serve to go out with more of bang to leave the listener with a stronger impression and to give the album a more cohesive feel overall. Nonetheless, this is a really solid debut from the Prison Planet front man and an album definitely worthy of more attention.

To download ‘Intergalactic Flu’ for free, visit Prison Planet Records official website.

Northern Structure Records’ co-founder Disciple AKA Spider Jaroo has a new solo EP called Writing For Commission out on 12th December. Here’s an exclusive track taken from the EP titled ‘Who’s That?’. Featuring production and cuts from long-time NSR collaborator Pro P, this is typically dark, lyrical shit from the Blackpool wordsmith. As ever he’s lean, mean and hungry — straddling the line between sounding brutally focused and dangerously unhinged…

Video by Sumo Crucial.

www.northernstructure.bandcamp.com

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