The Runners: Track Stars
The Runners dont look like two men with their ear to the streets. The Orlando-based production duo is more GQ than they are AllHipHop. Their unapologetic fashion sense is a little flashier and more form-fitting than two men ingrained in Hip-Hop typically have. Thats a risky move in an industry that places as much emphasis […]

Bohagon: Bo Knows
A lot can be said of Lil Jons patience. Years before he was the Crunk kingpin that was parodied by Dave Chappelle, revitalizing careers for Ice Cube and E-40, he was a studio rats for So So Def. On So So Def All-Stars volumes, fans hear a pre-sunglasses Lil Jon as well as one of […]

Lil’ Scrappy: The Reinvention of…
While most 22-year-olds are too busy making petty mistakes, Darryl Kevin Richardson II seems to have the wisdom and experience of a man who has seen much of what life has to offer. Luckily, even though the album is called Bred to Die, Born to Live, Richardson, better known as Lil Scrappy, is nowhere near […]

U-God: Boxed In
It’sprobably safe to say that the Wu-Tang Clan, sans actual instruments (a la The Roots), is the only group in Hip-Hops history to really come across as an actual band. Yeah, a band. Remember those? I know, you thought those were just for Rock & Rollers. Each member plays his respective role and serves as […]

Rewind the Rhyme: GZA
“You know dead rappers get better promotion…” -Styles P, “We Gon’ Make It” Something many forget or refuse to recognize is that art is immortal. Long after an artist’s life is over, they continue to live through their work. Music is no exception. 2Pac and B.I.G. are perfect examples of artists who in their lives […]

RZA: Still Bringin’ the Ruckus
As Wu-Tang week winds down, a running theme with the Clan members has been one of disenchantment. Whether it was Meths dissatisfaction with Def Jam, Raekwons pressure to meet expectations, or Inspectah Decks need to be heard, the brothers from Shaolin all seem to have something to talk about. And as its been years since […]

Inspectah Deck: Wu-Tang Worldwide
Throughout Wu-Week, both GZA and Masta Killa cosigned that Inspectah Deck has long been a cypha show-stealer for the Wu-Tang Clan. Whether he was comparing himself to Spiderman on Protect Ya Neck or impersonating a masked Peter Parker in the Triumph video, Deck has always been a musical marvel. Unfortunately, the Staten Island MC has […]

Ol’ Dirty Bastard: Rather Unique
There was no figuring out Ol Dirty Bastard. Was he a wily Hip-Hop jester or a tragically misunderstood apostle of the Wu-Tang Clan? Both scenarios, and all points in between, are debatable, but what is certain is that his deeds were legendary. Whether it be saving a child pinned underneath a car in front of […]

Ghostface Killah: The Abstract
Just when a Wu-Tang verse seems battered and bruised from eight other swarming MCs, it is never been uncommon for Ghostface Killah to stomp the beat out with a surly sixteen. The Staten Island 36-year-old MC clearly represents the era when rap was not so formulaic. From his unique brand of ice-cream cone eating swagger […]

Method Man: Industry Shakedown Part 1
Method Man’s name, stage persona and music are defined by an intoxicating mixture of gruff flows, sharp lyricism and witty magnetism. Truth be told, he was the only member of Wu-Tang Clan recognizable to the general population for the longest. The tall, lanky, charismatic rapper has come quite a ways from his discovery in 1992, […]

Raekwon: Chef’s Special
When Only Built 4 Cuban Linx came out in 1995, he launched a genre within rap, using coded language to describe cocaine sales. Armed with a concept, dope beats and a charismatic partner-in-crime, Ghostface Killah, Raekwon the Chef carved out a spot in Hip-Hop history for himself. Not only was the music hot, but so […]

Masta Killa: A Brooklyn State of Mind
From the moment the world heard Masta Killas clean-up verse on the Wu-Tang Clan classic Da Mystery of Chessboxin, it was obvious that the quality of rap lyrics stepped up about three notches. Masta Killa was the silent horse, called upon for lethal injection as needed. While the rest of the Wu released groundbreaking LPs […]

Pee Wee Dance: Dance to the Drummer’s Beat
G oing into its thirty-third year, Hip-Hop has spun on pitch with the times. But as wise words echo from a true originator, the hands of time might want to cut the record back. Pee Wee Dance was expressing himself in the would-be culture when Richard Nixon was Americas president. The mans role in Hip-Hop […]

Mr. DJ: Hey Mr DJ!
S ome things seem like they were just made for each other. Like chicken and waffles, Will and Jada, and in the case if Outkast and Mr. DJ, its more than just chance or even luck that they met. Undoubtedly, each of them would have been successful as individuals, but together they will forever hold […]

Crunchy Black: Crunch Time
F or Darnell Carlton, March 5, 2006 was supposed to be the payoff for over 15 years of loyalty and dedication. But, as Three-6-Mafia took home the Academy Award for Best Original Song, their performance marked one of the final times the man more commonly known as Crunchy Black would perform with the group. When […]

Young Jeezy: The Understanding
As the summer offers weltering heat waves, Young Jeezy hopes to change the climate of Hip-Hop to a much frostier temperature in the fourth quarter of the year. After being the runaway new star of 2005, the question remains as to whether Jeezy will affirm a role in the game that matches his monstrous voice. […]

Kevin Powell: Let’s Get Free Part 2
AllHipHop.com: You brought up a point about the World Trade Center in your book about how the 3,000 people counted did not include immigrants or the homeless. Theres kind of a parallel happening in New Orleans with the prisoners not being offered any assistance. What would you suggest for the average person to do to […]

Kevin Powell: Let’s Get Free Part 1
K evin Powell has long stood as the voice of activism, politics, Hip-Hop, poetry, and revolution since the dawn of the 90s. One of the most assertive voices of our time, Kevin emotionally connects to every line he writes. As a soldier for Hip-Hop, his work with VIBE Magazine echoes to this day through his […]

Blood Raw: The Wrath of ‘Caine
N ot all lessons are learned on the first try. Around the time Trick Daddy was telling haters to Shut Up, Panama City, Floridas Blood Raw was supposed to follow-up the sunshine-state charge. While label drama was one thing, it was ultimately Federal agents that halted Blood Raws charge to the game. A drug-trafficking conviction […]

Slick Pulla: Talkin’ Slick
T hroughout the history of Hip-Hop, it would seem that artists who come into the game as the protégé of another artists never quite live up to the hype, or even to the success of the friend, mentor or whatever who put them on. You can argue that record sales dont always reflect the popularity […]