Tag Archives: Nick Grant

Nick Grant On The Current State Of Hip-Hop: “We Need More People Waving The Integrity Flag”

Nick Grant On The Current State Of Hip-Hop

Nick Grant gives us hope that real Hip-Hop is here to stay. 

Born and raised in Walterboro, South Carolina, a small town that hosted around 5,000 people, Nick knew he was destined for something greater early on. Being raised by his grandparents and growing up on Hip-Hop music, he’d soon find his own footing in the rap game. Soon, he’d explode onto the scene with his undeniable bars, soulful sound, and meaningful lyrics that do not go unnoticed. 

Now, the “FEDS” rapper returns with his first project in over three years, showcasing the most vulnerable side of himself fans have yet to see. Clocking in at 16 tracks, Sunday Dinner touches on a multitude of topics including Nick’s personal experiences growing up, such as turmoil in the household, his mom’s addiction issues, and much more. 

The Source spoke with Nick Grant in downtown Los Angeles to discuss his love for Hip-Hop, the new project, goals, and more!

What was the moment you fell in love with Hip-Hop?

When I heard Ready To Die by Biggie. It was “Juicy” and “Big Poppa” the single. That era, that time. Doggystyle was influential in me falling in love with Hip-Hop as well. But those two artists, Pac was always around. That era of music, the 90’s era of music. I had to be 5 or 6 when I was hearing this music.

You knew then that you wanted to spit?

I didn’t know I wanted to rap, they made it look fun to me. I just enjoyed it. By the time I got into Nas heavy, because he’s around the same class of artists. Jay Z. Those were the guys where you know what, I’ma try my hand at this and see how it pans out.

Where do you see the current state of Hip-Hop?

Man. [laughs] That’s a good question. We need more balance. We need more people waving the integrity flag, the skillset flag. Shining more light and giving more opportunity to the people that — and I’m not a person where it’s gotta be me. I’ve gotta be the guy you give the opportunity to. Nah, there’s kids younger than me that push the same thing I’ve pushed. That help the art form, help push the envelope and help it get to a more balanced place. 

We gotta shine more light on the people that are baring their soul, putting a lot of time and effort into making a statement. As opposed to “oh, this is my friend. This guy’s…” I think we gotta give it to the people that actually deserve it. I can’t say what somebody doesn’t deserve, but we should give it to people that wave a certain flag and have a certain skillset.

What are your thoughts on the female rap scene right now?

Oh they’re killing it. Killing it. A lot of them making us look bad. [laughs] They have more fun. The person that has the most fun is always gonna have more victories.

Sunday Dinner out now, what was the concept that inspired the project?

Sunday Dinner is an album about my experiences in the South, South Carolina to be exact. Living with my grandma, and my mom and dad having their own personal issues that they had to figure out. That led me to living with her. Her rules were school, church, Sunday dinner. That wasn’t a thing that was specifically said, but it was how she moved. She showed that was her purpose for me at that time. 

I’d go to school, I slipped up a few times. I’ll be outside hanging with the “wrong people.” Getting in trouble, doing a lot of things at school that she wouldn’t approve of. Going to church, she kept me grounded in a sense with these three things. But Sunday dinner, I’d see everybody. Everybody came over to the house and she’d cook. 

My aunt’s would also have Sunday dinner, we’d go over there. My family’s really big, so I’d see different characters come into the household. Whether it was my mom who had addiction issues or my cousin who went to college, or my cousin who’s a basketball player. Taking all these different personalities and applying them to who I am, enhancing my character in a sense.

How do they feel about the project, especially since it’s inspired by them?

I only spoke to immediate family, like siblings. They love it. They feel like it’s honest and truthful. My mom opens up the album, that was a conversation I had to have with her. Because it was her being represented in a light that maybe I didn’t want people to see her in. I wasn’t strong enough to put her in that position to be seen in that, but for me, nah you gotta be vulnerable. If you want to have a voice, not if you want to be the biggest artist in the world — but if you want to feel like your voice is important, you gotta say things that resonate with people. Attract people and bring them in, so that’s what that album is all about.

I love the song “KNOW YOUR WORTH.” What is your favorite song and why? 

My favorite song is “GRANDMA SAID.” It’s still “KNOW YOUR WORTH,” but that’s my favorite song at the moment. It’s the soulful element of it, and how specific it is. Even my cousin saying, “yo Nick, you need to come in the house,” all of this stuff. I could smell outside. I could feel what that moment was like as a kid when I was recreating that song. That’s my favorite song at the moment. It changes every day, but right now that’s my favorite song.

Anything you were trying to capture in the cover art?

Man, I had a whole nother idea. It was based on the things that culture, TV, everything in the world that feeds our communities. It was gonna be a plate with a gun on it, I was gonna be super deep. Cocaine on it, a whole bunch of stuff. But it didn’t photograph well. It has to photograph well for this to come across. But I said yo, instead of being so deep and dark, just show something a little more warmer. Everybody likes women, everybody loves a beautiful girl. Everybody in the hood has had their hair cut outside or inside at some point. Something like you know, just more relatable for sure. And not so deep to where certain people say “what point is he trying to get across?” This album was basically just show us in a good light.

How’d you end up working with Tweet on “HEAVEN”?

Tweet is someone I always respect and looked up to. Since I was a kid, she’s been making music. Since I was really young, she’s always been somebody that I loved. I loved her tone, how her voice was. How she put her music together, everything. Her album, Southern Hummingbird, was a classic to me. Influenced me in a major way. 

I always said once I’m in the position and able to make an album the right way, the proper way, I want to reach out to her. See if she’ll do a song. I DMed her, she hit me back. She said “yo you’re incredible, I’d love to do a record.” She pulled up. Soon as I hit her, she pulled up. I was in Atlanta at the time, she pulled up to the studio. Chilled, had a few sips of wine. Made some records. We made a whole lot of songs. 

How important is Instagram in today’s day and age to reach artists?

Very important. Very important for me, because I got rid of the ego. I was always the “aw, i’m not reaching out to nobody like that. I want to meet them a little more organically,” but this is the times we live in. You gotta apply that to if you’re trying to get something done. A close friend of mine said “man, just reach out to people bro. Stop overthinking it and do it.” By the grace of God, that way it worked that time. 

What’s the most exciting DM you’ve gotten? 

[laughs] Man, I got a few. I’ll keep it PG, but another one was from one of my favorite rappers: Royce Da 5’9”. When I first came in the game, he’s like “yo keep it up. You’re dope.” After that, he sent me a record. He’s somebody I always watched and respected. Another one was Erick Sermon. Classic EPMD, legendary Hip-Hop producer. I’m young, but I’m really old at heart. These guys were, still are, superheroes to me. 

How does this project showcase your growth as an artist? 

For me, this project shows vulnerability. lt shows growth, it shows not hugging the tree of “man, I don’t want a motherfucker to see me like this. I don’t want people to have this opinion about me.” It’s all about not caring about opinions anymore. That’s the space I’m in. Excuse my language, but I don’t give a fuck about everybody’s opinion musically, about me in life. 

When I first came in the game, I wanted everybody to love me. 

It was really organic though, people naturally liked you. 

Yeah somewhat, but I still cared. I still moved in a way where I want you to feel like this about me, I’m the best and I’m this cool person. I still want you to feel like that, but I’m not forcing that. I don’t care about your opinion about who I am. If something connects and resonates, I’m always moving on respect always. But I’m not concerned about people’s opinions about me anymore. That’s the place I’m in.

That’s a very freeing place!

Yeah for sure, life is so much easier. Because I feel like that, I’m closer to my goals. Because I’m not letting the distractions of “man if I do this, this person’s gonna feel like this. If i say this, I’ma offend this person?” So definitely a freeing space. 

What are your goals? 

My whole mentality has always been to get in a space, and help like-minded people. Of course I love money, I want to have money and I want to be successful. But always for me, the thing that’s most important is you’re not gonna live forever, so you gotta create a cycle of helping people and lifting people up. That’s what I want my contributions to life to be. When it’s all said and done, it’s “man, he helped so many people.” It’s my whole mentality of lift as you climb, get to a better place. Help this person, hopefully they keep the cycle going. But I get a lot of flack for it. “What they doing for you? They wouldn’t do that for you if they were in position.” That’s basically what it’s all about.

Anything else you want to let us know? 

Sunday Dinner out right now, go get it. It’s my most personal album, my best album. A lot of people agree with me. I had a hump as far as 88 being my first project. Everybody was saying “yo, this is your best project.” But this project got me over the hump. Showing people nah, he made a project better than that. And I actually know who he is. Because it was at a point where “Yo, he’s one of the best rappers. What else? What’s the story? How can I relate to this person? Of course, I love the punchlines. I love the verses, all this shit. What can I take and connect it with?” That’s what this album is about.

The post Nick Grant On The Current State Of Hip-Hop: “We Need More People Waving The Integrity Flag” first appeared on The Source.

The post Nick Grant On The Current State Of Hip-Hop: “We Need More People Waving The Integrity Flag” appeared first on The Source.

Click Here to Discuss in the Forums

Spread the love
             
 
   

Audio Push & Nick Grant Look Down On MCs That Just Can’t Keep Up (Video)

Just over one month ago, Inland Empire, California Rap duo Audio Push released their seven-track EP, Audio Mars, featuring Buddy, Rose Gold, Stacy Barthe, and Nick Grant. The drop marks the MCs’ first release since 2018’s, Inside The Vibe 2, and their first of 2019. With their latest project spinning on the net, Audio Push and South Carolina spitter Nick Grant revisit their Audio Mars single, “Keep Up,” and bring it to life.

As the video opens, Oktane is found sitting in the backyard on a diving board and brings the lyrical heat over an open pool to keep things cool. Oktane flows, “Twenty women hit me to get some dinner, no lie / They know that I’m single, they need a winner, I’m inside / That black thing hidden in plain sight / Got my mind frame right, it’s ugly / Jeans still little get the paper on junky / Just fly sh*t / In public she on my privates / Live massages, yeah / Act, gimme the remote and let me park it and ni**a ride sh** / I’m Batman where I come from ni**a / And don’t too many ni**as come with us / Nobody can guard us, no one to pick up.

Westside Gunn & Nick Grant Make Other MCs Pay The Price On A Soulful Collabo

Back inside the house, Price gets to tending bars like his Audio Push counterpart, laying waste to MyGuyMars’ slow rolling instrumentals with some slick braggadocio. Then, Nick Grant steps in to showcase his skills and close the track out. Grant does not disappoint.

Grant raps, “You can make me run a circle round a legend / Mob boss in the desert / Boy you ain’t a leader, ‘less the hard times become a lesson, check it / No other entity can keep up / Make the money stretch you lookin’ for me ni**a reach up / Slick as church ladies with the vodka and the tea cup / Try’na make my point like the Pyramids of Giza, ease up / Kill everything I touch, gentrified / Boy the flow A.I. clutch in overtime, yeah / All this green you would think I mowed the lawn / And I never been a hater my ni**a I hope you shine, sh*t / That don’t change the fact you garbage / Lyrically Jesse Owens run a marathon on all of them / Keep up with who?

Just over one month ago, Inland Empire, California Rap duo Audio Push released their seven-track EP, Audio Mars, featuring Buddy, Rose Gold, Stacy Barthe, and Nick Grant. The drop marks the MCs’ first release since 2018’s, Inside The Vibe 2, and their first of 2019. With their latest project spinning on the net, Audio Push and South Carolina spitter Nick Grant revisit their Audio Mars single, “Keep Up,” and bring it to life.

As the video opens, Oktane is found sitting in the backyard on a diving board and brings the lyrical heat over an open pool to keep things cool. Oktane flows, “Twenty women hit me to get some dinner, no lie / They know that I’m single, they need a winner, I’m inside / That black thing hidden in plain sight / Got my mind frame right, it’s ugly / Jeans still little get the paper on junky / Just fly sh*t / In public she on my privates / Live massages, yeah / Act, gimme the remote and let me park it and ni**a ride sh** / I’m Batman where I come from ni**a / And don’t too many ni**as come with us / Nobody can guard us, no one to pick up.

Westside Gunn & Nick Grant Make Other MCs Pay The Price On A Soulful Collabo

Back inside the house, Price gets to tending bars like his Audio Push counterpart, laying waste to MyGuyMars’ slow rolling instrumentals with some slick braggadocio. Then, Nick Grant steps in to showcase his skills and close the track out. Grant does not disappoint.

Grant raps, “You can make me run a circle round a legend / Mob boss in the desert / Boy you ain’t a leader, ‘less the hard times become a lesson, check it / No other entity can keep up / Make the money stretch you lookin’ for me ni**a reach up / Slick as church ladies with the vodka and the tea cup / Try’na make my point like the Pyramids of Giza, ease up / Kill everything I touch, gentrified / Boy the flow A.I. clutch in overtime, yeah / All this green you would think I mowed the lawn / And I never been a hater my ni**a I hope you shine, sh*t / That don’t change the fact you garbage / Lyrically Jesse Owens run a marathon on all of them / Keep up with who?

Source: AmbrosiaForHeads.com

Click Here to Discuss in the Forums

Spread the love
             
 
   

There Were Some Incredible Freestyles In 2018. Here Are The Year’s Best (Video)

For all the chatter about Mumble Rap taking over, there have been a number of MCs who put on incredible lyrical displays in 2018. Artists like Royce 5’9, Styles P, Pusha-T, Evidence, Benny The Butcher, Jay Rock, Logic and J. Cole released projects packed with punchlines and substantive verses, and several others like Rapsody, Kendrick Lamar and JAY-Z unleashed features that had Hip-Hop abuzz. And, a number of artists flexed freestyles with chips on their shoulders.

Typically, blockbuster artists have fallen back from freestyling, leaving the forum for underground rappers and up and coming MCs, but 2018 saw some of the biggest names in Hip-Hop stepping into the booth too. Will Smith showed the world that he’s still fresh on the mic, Eminem returned to his Battle Rap roots, and even Drake dusted off his headphones. Up and comers like Tierra Whack and ANoyd also showed and proved. Here’s a look at some the year’s best, in chronological order.

LL Cool J, DMX, Redman & Method Man Explain The Real Definition Of A Freestyle

Tory Lanez Rips The 5 Fingers Of Death

Tory Lanez has been at the center of a lot of controversy over the last several weeks, taking shots at everyone from Joyner Lucas to Royce 5’9, but he also has been absolutely fearless in backing up his words with rhymes. He got the year started in February with a fiery 5 Fingers Of Death Freestyle.

Nick Grant Freestyles Over Classic Erykah Badu

2018 was a relatively quiet year for Nick Grant, but he used an LA Leakers freestyle as an opportunity to remind folks that he is one of the most gifted MCs of his generation.


ANoyd Rules The World Like Lauryn & Nas On A Regal Freestyle

ANoyd might not be a household name yet, but he proved he could hang with Rap royalty, as he tore down Nas’ “If I Ruled The World (Imagine That).”

“Let me remind everybody who Will Smith is.”

Will Smith has absolutely nothing left to prove. He is a Grammy-winning artist, was the lead character on one of TV’s most iconic shows, and is one of the biggest movie stars to ever walk the planet. But, every once in a while, he likes to remind people of how he got his start, as a rapper. In May, he stepped in the booth, and flexed, just because.

Big Daddy Kane Freestyles Raw, Uncut & With A Chip On His Legendary Shoulders

Big Daddy Kane has never gone away, but he was more visible in 2018 than he has been in recent years, likely in celebration of the 30th anniversary of his debut album, Long Live The Kane. He kicked things off in February with a Tiny Desk performance, and then heated up again in June with a Funkmaster Flex freestyle.

Drake Shows He’s Still Got That Fire In The Booth

Drake is the biggest artist in Hip-Hop, and possibly all of music right now…He has nothing to gain from freestyling and everything to lose, but he still took the time to step in the booth in July. In a year where he also battled Pusha-T and Kanye West, Drake showed his critics that he is a true MC.

Mysonne Has A Message In His Music

Since he re-appeared on the music scene after serving a prison sentence, Mysonne has been a man on a mission. Not satisfied with just out-rapping other MCs, he has filled his rhymes with powerful content designed to enlighten and educate others. His freestyle with Fat Joe was no different, as he stole the show.

Mickey Factz Serves Up A Next Level Freestyle Over 1 Of DJ Premier’s Best Beats

Mickey Factz has been criminally slept-on. His verses require multiple rewinds, as literally every line counts. He stacks double entendre upon double entendre. He absolutely abuses a classic DJ Premier track in this incredible freestyle.

Young M.A. Puts Her Skills Where All Can See As She Busts Rhymes On A Hard Freestyle

Young M.A. rapped slowly and deliberately on her breakout hit, “Ooouuu.” It caused some to believe that she was not very lyrical. They were wrong. She put her skill on full display over one of Busta Rhyme’s biggest hits.

Logic Freestyles Over Method Man’s Beat & Brings Even More Pain

2017 was a breakout year for Logic, as he had a crossover hit with “1-800-273-8255.” But, the Maryland MC was born from Boom Bap and he went back to his roots in 2018. As has become tradition, he rocked Method Man’s “Bring The Pain” with another blistering freestyle.

Mistah F.A.B. May Be The Greatest Off The Top Freestyler In Hip-Hop

Mistah F.A.B. is a force. He is part of the elite club of MCs who are gifted with the ability to rap off the top of the head about anything, and he does so effortlessly. He goes off in this Sway In The Morning freestyle.

Jay Rock’s Freestyle Shows What A Migos Beat Sounds Like With Some G-Funk

2018 was a much deserved victory lap for Jay Rock. The TDE OG had his biggest album ever, commanded his first sold out show, and opened the BET Awards. While in the UK, he used a Migos beat to show he’s still got freestyle skills too.

Artist Anderson .Paak Is A Bad Boy On This Biggie Freestyle

Anderson .Paak is one of the most soulful singers of his generation, but he focused on his MC skills in 2018. His Oxnard album was Hip-Hop heavy, and he used a Biggie beat on this freestyle to show he’s a bad boy on the mic.

Tierra Whack Claims She’s Andre-Meets-The Beatles In An Incredible Freestyle

Tierra Whack won over critics and fans alike this year, with her high art video album, Whack World. Make no mistake, though, she’s also more than capable of rolling up her sleeves and becoming a microphone menace. She proclaims herself a combination of Andre 3000 and The Beatles on this short but potent freestyle.

Eminem Returns To His Battle Rap Roots

In a year when Eminem seemingly went after everybody on his Kamikaze album, it makes perfect sense that he would return to his Battle Rap roots. Earlier this month, he dropped a 10-minute a cappella freestyle filled with nothing but BARS.

Vic Mensa Says Biggie & Tupac Live On Through Him

Vic Mensa has become a perennial presence on these best freestyle of the year lists. The Chicago MC dazzles over and over again. It’s no surprise that he closed out 2018 with another one of the year’s best lyrical displays.

For all the chatter about Mumble Rap taking over, there have been a number of MCs who put on incredible lyrical displays in 2018. Artists like Royce 5’9, Styles P, Pusha-T, Evidence, Benny The Butcher, Jay Rock, Logic and J. Cole released projects packed with punchlines and substantive verses, and several others like Rapsody, Kendrick Lamar and JAY-Z unleashed features that had Hip-Hop abuzz. And, a number of artists flexed freestyles with chips on their shoulders.

Typically, blockbuster artists have fallen back from freestyling, leaving the forum for underground rappers and up and coming MCs, but 2018 saw some of the biggest names in Hip-Hop stepping into the booth too. Will Smith showed the world that he’s still fresh on the mic, Eminem returned to his Battle Rap roots, and even Drake dusted off his headphones. Up and comers like Tierra Whack and ANoyd also showed and proved. Here’s a look at some the year’s best, in chronological order.

LL Cool J, DMX, Redman & Method Man Explain The Real Definition Of A Freestyle

Tory Lanez Rips The 5 Fingers Of Death

Tory Lanez has been at the center of a lot of controversy over the last several weeks, taking shots at everyone from Joyner Lucas to Royce 5’9, but he also has been absolutely fearless in backing up his words with rhymes. He got the year started in February with a fiery 5 Fingers Of Death Freestyle.

Nick Grant Freestyles Over Classic Erykah Badu

2018 was a relatively quiet year for Nick Grant, but he used an LA Leakers freestyle as an opportunity to remind folks that he is one of the most gifted MCs of his generation.


ANoyd Rules The World Like Lauryn & Nas On A Regal Freestyle

ANoyd might not be a household name yet, but he proved he could hang with Rap royalty, as he tore down Nas’ “If I Ruled The World (Imagine That).”

“Let me remind everybody who Will Smith is.”

Will Smith has absolutely nothing left to prove. He is a Grammy-winning artist, was the lead character on one of TV’s most iconic shows, and is one of the biggest movie stars to ever walk the planet. But, every once in a while, he likes to remind people of how he got his start, as a rapper. In May, he stepped in the booth, and flexed, just because.

Big Daddy Kane Freestyles Raw, Uncut & With A Chip On His Legendary Shoulders

Big Daddy Kane has never gone away, but he was more visible in 2018 than he has been in recent years, likely in celebration of the 30th anniversary of his debut album, Long Live The Kane. He kicked things off in February with a Tiny Desk performance, and then heated up again in June with a Funkmaster Flex freestyle.

Drake Shows He’s Still Got That Fire In The Booth

Drake is the biggest artist in Hip-Hop, and possibly all of music right now…He has nothing to gain from freestyling and everything to lose, but he still took the time to step in the booth in July. In a year where he also battled Pusha-T and Kanye West, Drake showed his critics that he is a true MC.

Mysonne Has A Message In His Music

Since he re-appeared on the music scene after serving a prison sentence, Mysonne has been a man on a mission. Not satisfied with just out-rapping other MCs, he has filled his rhymes with powerful content designed to enlighten and educate others. His freestyle with Fat Joe was no different, as he stole the show.

Mickey Factz Serves Up A Next Level Freestyle Over 1 Of DJ Premier’s Best Beats

Mickey Factz has been criminally slept-on. His verses require multiple rewinds, as literally every line counts. He stacks double entendre upon double entendre. He absolutely abuses a classic DJ Premier track in this incredible freestyle.

Young M.A. Puts Her Skills Where All Can See As She Busts Rhymes On A Hard Freestyle

Young M.A. rapped slowly and deliberately on her breakout hit, “Ooouuu.” It caused some to believe that she was not very lyrical. They were wrong. She put her skill on full display over one of Busta Rhyme’s biggest hits.

Logic Freestyles Over Method Man’s Beat & Brings Even More Pain

2017 was a breakout year for Logic, as he had a crossover hit with “1-800-273-8255.” But, the Maryland MC was born from Boom Bap and he went back to his roots in 2018. As has become tradition, he rocked Method Man’s “Bring The Pain” with another blistering freestyle.

Mistah F.A.B. May Be The Greatest Off The Top Freestyler In Hip-Hop

Mistah F.A.B. is a force. He is part of the elite club of MCs who are gifted with the ability to rap off the top of the head about anything, and he does so effortlessly. He goes off in this Sway In The Morning freestyle.

Jay Rock’s Freestyle Shows What A Migos Beat Sounds Like With Some G-Funk

2018 was a much deserved victory lap for Jay Rock. The TDE OG had his biggest album ever, commanded his first sold out show, and opened the BET Awards. While in the UK, he used a Migos beat to show he’s still got freestyle skills too.

Artist Anderson .Paak Is A Bad Boy On This Biggie Freestyle

Anderson .Paak is one of the most soulful singers of his generation, but he focused on his MC skills in 2018. His Oxnard album was Hip-Hop heavy, and he used a Biggie beat on this freestyle to show he’s a bad boy on the mic.

Tierra Whack Claims She’s Andre-Meets-The Beatles In An Incredible Freestyle

Tierra Whack won over critics and fans alike this year, with her high art video album, Whack World. Make no mistake, though, she’s also more than capable of rolling up her sleeves and becoming a microphone menace. She proclaims herself a combination of Andre 3000 and The Beatles on this short but potent freestyle.

Eminem Returns To His Battle Rap Roots

In a year when Eminem seemingly went after everybody on his Kamikaze album, it makes perfect sense that he would return to his Battle Rap roots. Earlier this month, he dropped a 10-minute a cappella freestyle filled with nothing but BARS.

Vic Mensa Says Biggie & Tupac Live On Through Him

Vic Mensa has become a perennial presence on these best freestyle of the year lists. The Chicago MC dazzles over and over again. It’s no surprise that he closed out 2018 with another one of the year’s best lyrical displays.

Source: AmbrosiaForHeads.com

Click Here to Discuss in the Forums

Spread the love
             
 
   

Casanova, Sharaya J, Tobe Nwigwe,& More Rock BET Hip-Hop Awards Cyphers [Video]

2018 BET Hip-Hop Awards Cyphers

Source: John Parra / Getty

BET’s annual Hip-Hop Awards aired last night celebrating all of the big names in the musical genre that had a great year. One of the awards shows biggest draws is the cypher segment which highlights young gunners giving them an opportunity to flex their lyrical skills and in case you missed it we got you.

With Dj Premier and Dj Erykah Badu who also dropped some bars during the ladies cypher supplying the soundtrack Hip-Hop’s youngest and brightest took the stage. This years edition of the popular segment featured Casanova, Blocboy JB, G Herbo, Taylor Bennet, Nick Grant, Flawless Real Talk, Shawn Smith, Reason, YBN Cordae, Tobe Nwigwe, Bri Steves, Neelam Hakeem, Sharaya J, Chika and Vic Mensa who’s bars were believed aimed at the late XXXTentacion and is now catching heat for it.

The segment gives these artists an insanely bright spotlight giving them the opportunity to let Hip-Hop fans know that they definitely should be listening and adding them to their playlists. So you be the judge, check out the full cypher segments below and let us know who you felt brought the heat and who should reconsider this rapping thing and get a regular day job.

Photo: John Parra / Getty

Spread the love