[INTERVIEW] LOLA COCA
Lola Coca is a name that is gathering much ground in the music world. The London-based singer-songwriter was originally a model before deciding to pick up a pen and pad and to date she has
Lola Coca is a name that is gathering much ground in the music world. The London-based singer-songwriter was originally a model before deciding to pick up a pen and pad and to date she has
There must be something in the water down in South London, because it has been on a roll over the past year and a half producing some of the biggest names the UK music scene
In this new age of hip-hop where style is as important as substance, DP is going against the grain in more ways than one. The Virginia rapper is an up-and-comer, but with last year’s ‘Designer
Asher Roth is an individual who has fully reinvented himself since his breakout 2010 single ‘I Love College’; the squeaky clean, baby faced rapper that embodied that song is no more, and in his place
LNDN DRGS are not your average hip-hop group. Consisting of rapper Jay Worthy and producer Sean House, the California duo is as hard-hitting as they are slick and smooth. One listen to their last project,
Jazz Cartier is having a hell of a 2016. The Canadian artist put out his electrifying second album, ‘Hotel Paranoia’, in February and has been shutting down shows from SXSW to NYC ever since. His
We’re bringing our Meet The Producers feature online. First up, J. Money. Firstly, briefly introduce yourself. What’s your name? Where are you from? My name is John Mendez, known to the music industry as J.
Over the last decade, the legendary auto-mobile capital of the world has seen its fair share of hardships; be it political corruption and rampant gang violence or mass vandalism and property destruction, Detroit; the most
North Carolina’s finest is just getting started. “Money don’t make you real my nigga,” spits the unequivocal Deniro Farrar on the opening track of his latest EP, ‘Rebirth’. “That lifestyle promoted on billboards radio commercials,
Impossible dance moves seen on the streets of New York. Pitched halfway between excruciating Soviet contortionists and Golden Age break-dancers, with handfuls of influence from ballroom Voguing and Jamaican dancehall, flexing is big in New
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Lola Coca is a name that is gathering much ground in the music world. The London-based singer-songwriter was originally a model before deciding to pick up a pen and pad and to date she has
There must be something in the water down in South London, because it has been on a roll over the past year and a half producing some of the biggest names the UK music scene
In this new age of hip-hop where style is as important as substance, DP is going against the grain in more ways than one. The Virginia rapper is an up-and-comer, but with last year’s ‘Designer
Asher Roth is an individual who has fully reinvented himself since his breakout 2010 single ‘I Love College’; the squeaky clean, baby faced rapper that embodied that song is no more, and in his place
LNDN DRGS are not your average hip-hop group. Consisting of rapper Jay Worthy and producer Sean House, the California duo is as hard-hitting as they are slick and smooth. One listen to their last project,
Jazz Cartier is having a hell of a 2016. The Canadian artist put out his electrifying second album, ‘Hotel Paranoia’, in February and has been shutting down shows from SXSW to NYC ever since. His
We’re bringing our Meet The Producers feature online. First up, J. Money. Firstly, briefly introduce yourself. What’s your name? Where are you from? My name is John Mendez, known to the music industry as J.
Over the last decade, the legendary auto-mobile capital of the world has seen its fair share of hardships; be it political corruption and rampant gang violence or mass vandalism and property destruction, Detroit; the most
North Carolina’s finest is just getting started. “Money don’t make you real my nigga,” spits the unequivocal Deniro Farrar on the opening track of his latest EP, ‘Rebirth’. “That lifestyle promoted on billboards radio commercials,
Impossible dance moves seen on the streets of New York. Pitched halfway between excruciating Soviet contortionists and Golden Age break-dancers, with handfuls of influence from ballroom Voguing and Jamaican dancehall, flexing is big in New