Big Boi - Sir Lucious Left Foot: The Son of Chico Dusty
By jagodahorowitz 14th Jul, 2010
Big Boi and the rest of the featured guests that highlight the Atlanta rap scene have put together one of the year's best rap albums.
Methodman Redman - Blackout 2
By Cameron_Elliott 20th Jul, 2009
The Killa Bees are back on the swarm! So far this year we have played host to Ghostface, and will do the same for Gza in September. But to tie you over until then, we have a new album from Redman and Method Man, 'Blackout! 2'.
Nas – Untitled
By Xpose 20th Aug, 2008
A certified star for more than a decade, Nas is one of the few voices in hip hop who can drive change.
Ghostface Killah - The Big Doe Rehab
By Alida 31st Mar, 2008
Ghostface Killah just keeps coming back with more. After celebrated '06 records 'Fishscale' and 'More Fish', Ghostface is now sending himself to 'The Big Doe Rehab.' Die hard fans can breathe a sigh of relief as Ghost is still razor-sharp.
Kanye West - Graduation
By Alida 9th Oct, 2007
With two incredible albums behind him, Kanye's devoted followers would naturally expect the world of third studio release, _Graduation_. Sadly, he has let his game slip in a major way.
Lady Sovereign: Lyrically challenging
By nictoupee 13th Mar, 2007
Sov dislikes interviews and the grind of media responsibilities and has a reputation of being a terror to engage, so the challenge of interviewing Sov is one nictoupee sidles up to hesitantly.
The Roots - Game Theory
By sickbuoy 26th Feb, 2007
The Roots return with ‘Game Theory’, a 47-minute collection of joints with an underlying sense of melancholy, their first release since signing to Def Jam.
Roc Tha Block with Jay-Z, Rihanna and Ne-Yo @ Rod Laver Arena, Melbourne (28/10/06)
By bongboy28 9th Nov, 2006
Jay-Z loved the Melbourne crowd and was in disbelief as the crowd recited almost the entire lyrics to the smash hit 'Mo Money Mo Problems'.
It Takes A Nation Of Millions - Public Enemy (classic review)
By Westwood 1st Jul, 2001
Franky, by comparison, hip-hop backing tracks of todays artists have become either simplistic loops of one or two obtrusive samples, or mooth FM radio-oriented R&B; no one has even come close to equalling the hectic sonic journeys that Public Enemy pionee




