music

Liana Bank$ Dates Commas Not People by Alex Young

Liana Banks, a 25 year-old singer and songwriter from Queens, New York, garners attention for her effort on her debut single "LVLUP."  The song is aptly featured on ITR's "Run and Tell" playlist and also reached number 10 on Spotify's United Kingdom Viral Chart.

Since riding her wave of success, Liana keeps her momentum following up her debut with a track taken from her forthcoming Insubordinate mixtape. The new single, titled "M.O.N." (Money Over N*ggas), is sage advice made more appreciable by its R&B and soul tones.

"People will hurt you. Commas won't. Date commas," Liana says.

The interesting fact is this statement would very rarely come from a male. Sometimes males have no regard for females' emotions and have doggish behavior towards the women they interact with. Sometimes males' pursuit to money is just as much of a vice as is the p*ssy. True or untrue, these statements come from the mind of a male, so I hear the songstress on focusing her attention on stacking paper and finding love later. "Find someone who can add to your money so instead of your own personal stack, y'all can have stacks on stacks together," my girlfriend hopes for Liana. Companionship over everything.

Either way, listen to "M.O.N." below and stay tuned for Liana's mixtape release date. 

InTheRough - Run and Tell (Playlist) by Alex Young

+ Binge watching 'Game of Thrones' is suggested. The only takeaway is: do not walk through the forests alone.

+ You are sure you want to vote for Trump?

+ No respect from spraying bullets.

+ Do good business unless you want to fuck up a check or relationships.

+ Eating fruit can cause happiness.

+ "Trust your struggle," said Jace, part of Two-9 quintet, in his latest mixtape.

+ Who are you without a woman?

Listen to Kendrick Lamar's New Album, 'untitled unmastered.' by Alex Young

Kendrick Lamar is a Compton, Calif. native, hip-hop artist, seven-time Grammy Award winner, and Afro-American male who bettered himself, his family, and his community in an environment disadvantaged from much of the U.S.A.

The neighborhood that raised Kendrick juxtaposes the disenfranchised African American experience some face daily. 

A music news channel on YouTube, Noisey, documented Kendrick speaking on the city, its lifestyles, and the rapper's longtime friends involved with street gangs, like Piru (Blood) and Crip. A segment in Part 5 of Noisey's "Bompton" series talks about how mass incarceration is used to hide problems such as poverty and institutionalized racism. The observation eliminates the classic, "get a job," or, "go to school," retorts from society because it acknowledges the situation many black people in Compton and America face. 

Through Kendrick's music and the light he sheds upon his home, it is necessary to understand that people sell drugs because they have to feed their families and kids, all the while supporting themselves. They never received proper guidance because one parent is in jail for life and the other was killed before the kid became a teenager. They never received a good education because low-income neighborhoods have school systems that do not receive a fair share of state and local funds. Lives like these are real, but not by choice. K.Dot shares the following:

It’s both physically and mentally. It’s not only caging us in the prisons, but up here [points to head] as well. Making us feel like there’s no hope so you will always be institutionalized to know that up here [points to head] your son is going to be thinking the same way, forever locked up. You get cats that say, ‘I’m in the hood. All I know is the hood, I wanna go back to the hood and do this and do that and be on the block.’ They do that because they got to do that. They don’t want to be doing what they doing. It’s not for the luxury, it’s the circumstances that be.

However, for some, Kendrick's songs about his unique experience, the on-going struggles, and self-improvement are entertainment, and for others his songs are inspiration and messages for fairness and equality.

Foremost, Kendrick's mission continues in the form of his newest album, which is called untitled unmastered. The project is eight tracks spanning from 2013 to 2016 and carries a tone of empowerment, insight, and celebration. He raps, "No more discriminatin' the poor," in "untitled 01 08.19.2014" and "The politicians always mislead the youth," in "untitled 07 2014 - 2016" (also produced by Egypt, Swizz Beatz and Alicia Keys five-year-old son). iTunes editors call the latest album, "political and expressive currency."

In listening to Kendrick Lamar, one can understand that we all come from different circumstances, but different should should not mean disadvantaged. Hopefully, some may see aspects of life that are unequal for certain people when listening to Kendrick Lamar's untitled unmastered.



Sh'mi - My Wrist by Alex Young

@realshmi

@realshmi

The Company Only, an artistic collective, occupies a substantial part of Pittsburgh's rap scene. With six members, Joel Kellem, PK Delay, Seas, Deem Trill, Fat Corey, and Sh'mi push projects, perform, promote, and support each other individually and as a group. Viewers can peek at their lives through Kellem's "Just Chilling" episodes.

Sh'mi makes waves out of the bunch currently because of his new single, "My Wrist," which follows his effort on "See Me Ballin" with Seas. The new song chronicles a young man's come-up in an urban jungle. "My Wrist" is featured on Sh'mi's forthcoming extended play called "The Slicky Williams EP."

Aminé - Yeye (Lean Quatifah & Cautious Clay) by Alex Young

image.jpg

District of Columbia is home to a collection of eclectic sounds and producers. Hard hitting trap, rhythmic house, 808s, pleasant electronics and chimes, and live instrumentations are fused into the musicianship of two specific D.C. producers.

Lean Quatifah and Cautious Clay, co-founders of Proper Vibes record label, display their talents today in the form of a remix. Both Lean and Cautious flip a Kaytrananda produced song by Portland, Ore. artist Aminé, "Yeye."

Listen to the D.C. duo's re-work below and explore Aminé's Calling Brio project here.