MYKA 9 & PROFOUND, "WALKING WITH GOD"

Comment

MYKA 9 & PROFOUND, "WALKING WITH GOD"

"Walking With God" music video | on Spotify
Twitter @AOK_All_Day | @myka9
A-OK All Day on Youtube | Soundcloud | Facebook | Instagram | aokallday.com
Myka 9 on Spotify | Soundcloud | Instagram | Facebook
Profound on Spotify | Soundcloud | Youtube | Facebook

A-OK All Day Records presents the Elev8ted Lifestyle-directed music video for "Walking With God", the new single from Los Angeles emcee Myka 9. "Walking With God" is the new single from Nine Clouds, Myka's forthcoming collaboration album with UK producer Profound, who tragically passed away just after the album's completion. "Walking With God" comes on the heels of the release of the album's first single "Joy & Pain" lyric video. Aceyalone, Abstract Rude, Eligh & The Grouch of Living Legends, Blueprint, Lily Fangz, Joaquin Daniels and DJ Essential also appear on the album. Myka redefined the boundaries of rhyme and meter as a founding member of Los Angeles collective Freestyle Fellowship ("Innercity Boundaries" on Youtube) and has also released several solo albums. Blu made his mark via his Below The Heavens album alongside producer Exile. Founded by DJ A-OK, A-OK All Day is an independent hip-hop record label based on the Hawaiian island of Kauai which is "dedicated to a pure Hip Hop sound created with integrity and devotion."

Comment

TROYMAN- "YKTV"

Comment

TROYMAN- "YKTV"

"YKTV" lyric video on Youtube | on Spotify
Twitter @troymanofficial | @jackoemery | Instagram | Facebook
shoptroyman.com

Bay Area rapper, songwriter, record producer and actor Troyman presents "YKTV", his new single produced by Jacko. His performances as a top finalist on Netflix' first ever hip hop series competition Rhythm + Flow sent his Tay Keith-produced song "Streetlights" (watch his performance on Youtube) viral. He followed "Streetlights" up with "Blessings" featuring fellow Rhythm + Flow contestant Londynn B, which he followed up in turn with his 2020 EP Insomniac. Relocating to Atlanta as a teen, Troyman began rapping at age 16, releasing his debut album A.P.R.I.L. (A Period of Infinite Life) after the devastating loss of his mother. Troyman also won first place on BET's 106 & Park "Wild Out Wednesday", Best Independent Hip Hop Artist in 2009’s MTV’s Atlanta’s Best Independent Artist/Rock Your Fashion Campaign, being recognized by Lee Bailey of EUR as a 1st place winner at Uplifting Minds Talent Competition (LA) and the 2013 Best Male Hip Hop Artist recipient at The Atlanta Underground Music Awards. "I was inspired to make YKTV after being on a trip in Miami and wanting to manifest the lifestyle that I was experiencing for a brief moment," Troyman says. "I wanted to express the energy I felt while hitting the nightlife, yachting and dialoguing with some wealthy associates. It let me know that I can have whatever I want in life with hard work and dedication."

unnamed (1).jpg

Comment

interview: doc strange

1 Comment

interview: doc strange

doc strange

Twitter [@docstrange1] | [@Negro3P0] | [@JeffAdairFilms]
docstrange.net | Instagram | Facebook | Spotify | Soundcloud

Texas emcee Doc Strange presents the Jeff Adair-directed video for "Angle", his new single produced by Tahiti, which will appear on Strange's forthcoming album Business Is My Only Pleasure, the latest release in a prolific discography featuring 2016's Sindrome which included a collaboration with Kool Keith (stream "Telekinesis" on Spotify), and Gorilla Braudcast released earlier this year (stream on Apple). Residing in Arlington but repping Dallas, Strange has also collaborated with Sadat X (stream "A Piece Of Raw" on Soundcloud) and Guilty Simpson (stream "Futuristic Handgun" on Spotify). “I believe an artist re-introduces himself with each release," Doc says about the new single. "I wanted to make an anthem for myself that the listener can relate and vibe with. I present what I am a fan of, which is wit, flavor and verbal jewels."


What are the most common reactions your music tends to elicit? How are those advantageous or disadvantageous for you?

There is no middle ground as far as reactions to my music. You either highly appreciate it or you dismiss it. It’s for an advanced Hip Hop ear. The reactions are in extreme ranges. But I can tell you this for sure. There are far more listeners who feel it in a positive way over the inevitable troll who says, “Your music is trash.” Any reaction is advantageous. Being ignored is the problem. There is no artist alive or dead who has a 100% approval rate. The ability to make people react in an extreme fanatical state is my goal. When listeners say they understand the references, they dig the beats, they smile and bob that head, I try and double down on the things I do that create that energy.



You have a close working relationship with producer Tahiti. How did that come about? What’s your creation process like with him?

My friend and DJ for many years put me on to him. DJ B-Down has produced and worked with me for years. So, I trust his opinion on a few things. He was living in the Dallas-Ft. Worth area for quite a bit before I moved out there. He told me before I came out there from San Antonio, “You need to hook up with P.P.T. “P.P.T is a group Tahiti used to perform in. This was in the Myspace days. I checked out the P.P.T page and they were highly followed and the sound was polished, straight jamming Black Music. I was a fan before becoming a colleague. We developed and executed the “Trap House” YouTube series before we even did any music. We are brothers of the same sensibility. Oddly enough, I approached him first as a producer. He checked out a beat tape I have on Bandcamp. That’s when we did the songs “Another Dimension” and “BMB”. Shortly after that he started sending me basically the sickest beats I ever heard. They were blowing my beats away! The first wave of beats made “Sindrome”. We are committed to doing a string of projects until we run out of fly ideas. But frankly, that will surely not happen in any future I see. The beats and concepts just keep coming. He presents the wildest beats and I approach them from the idea of fusing our artistic approaches. Funky, next level, forward thinking Black Music that is accessible is the angle we come in with.


How did you come up with the name for your forthcoming album Business Is My Only Pleasure?

It truly was a vision. I was up late playing one of my favorite fighting games. They aren’t paying me for promo so the game remains nameless. There is one particular fighter I get absolutely crazy with. He’s cold. Before a fight, he told the opponent “Business is My Only Pleasure.” I had never heard him say this before. It summed up everything I was feeling at the time. Juggling a career, marriage and artistic ventures is fully consuming. The business of life becomes a multi-armed creature you have to manage for optimum results. The album speaks from that point of view.


As an emcee with an eye to the future, what do you think hiphop will sound like in 20 years?

Genres and styles are being made daily. I think Hip Hop will continue to expand due to that simple fact. But, as it was 20 years ago, there will be mainstream fluff. There will be boy bands. There will be girl bands. There will be a bubbling independent presence that influences and invigorates the creative and consumer community. There will be a top 3% that are rich and famous and a remaining majority vying for attention. I love it; I’ll be around for sure to see it.

How would you sum up 2020 for yourself personally and professionally?

I would say it was eye opening. In many good ways it supported my sentiments of independence and realistic financial stability. I cannot live from doing shows and making cute t-shirts. The pandemic shut down live venues at a point where I was just gaining ground doing them! Fortunately I have an “essential” position in my square life that supports my family and my musical pursuits. I haven’t stopped working in that respect. Personally it was revelatory on a cultural level. Black Americans live in a different America altogether. I feel like that is the permanent place of our existence. So, 2020 put my mental against the wall. Rather than blame the system, I have to devise a means for my success, man. By that I mean successful as a father, brother, son, husband, leader, artist. I won’t let a timeline tell me my reality. This year has been great. My music looks and sounds better than ever. I started putting more into my website, more regular content. I look at what “sucks” about this year as opportunities to get better and more live.

_DSC1515.JPG

1 Comment

video: SACH & K.D.T. PRODUCED IT, "HEY LOVE"

Comment

video: SACH & K.D.T. PRODUCED IT, "HEY LOVE"

"Hey Love" music video on Youtube | on Spotify
Instagram | Facebook | Bandcamp | Soundcloud | kdtmusic.com

Los Angeles producer K.D.T. Produced It presents "Hey Love", the lead single from Breakfast At Earl's, his collaboration EP with LA emcee Sach Illpages. K.D.T. a.k.a. Kevin Andre de Toledo began making beats in the late 90s, and what started as a passion turned into a full-time career in 2016 with the creation and launch of his recording studio, Mobile Rooster Studios. He has two solo albums under his belt as well as collaborations with Life Rexall, 2Mex, Matre, Giovanni Marks (Subtitle), Anacron and most recently, tracks featured on Cafe Om volumes 1 - 3 with Unfamous Fest. Sach was one half of The Nonce, the LA duo that delivered the West Coast underground classic "Mix Tapes" (Youtube) before member Yusef Afloat tragically passed away. K.D.T. describes "Hey Love" as "something that Sach was inspired by and asked if I could make a beat from it. As a producer, I try to help the artists I work with to follow their creative flow, and then the ping pong of collaboration takes over. I think the best work usually comes out of that freedom to explore our ideas and this single ended up being a favorite on the EP." Breakfast At Earl's will be released this winter on Veronique Records.

unnamed (1).jpg

Comment