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March 9, 1997: The Culture Never Let Him Go
Twenty-nine years after Christopher Wallace was killed, Brooklyn still holds it down. The murals, the tapes, the books, and the DJ who built an 80-track tribute on the date he died.
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Chase B Just Dropped His Debut Mixtape and It's Worth Your Time
Chase B's debut mixtape is DJ-first, genre-less, and rooted in the same guerilla spirit that built Houston's legacy. Eight years in the making, Be Very Afraid Vol. 1 is what it sounds like when the background steps to the front.
OTR Just Put 10 MCs in a Room and the Culture Was Already Watching
On The Radar's New Class Cypher Vol. 1 dropped with ten MCs and zero filler. This is what comes next.
Freestyling the Streets: Styles P Reminds Us Why Mixtapes Built Hip-Hop
Styles P ran New York streets on raw bars alone. No big label push, just Ghost and the tape doing the work.
J. Cole & DJ Clue: The Mixtape Before The Fall-Off
Before dropping his highly anticipated final album, J. Cole reminded us why the mixtape remains sacred ground in hip-hop.
Now in the Vault
MixtapeKings Radio Vol. 1
Mixed by DJ Kast One
A 2005 time capsule straight from the streets of New York. DJ Kast One pulls together 33 tracks of pure mixtape-era heat, from D-Block to Diplomats, Papoose to Nas.
Listen Now →Eli's Rotation
Every week, my 15-year-old son Eli picks the track that's got his generation talking. This is what's on repeat in the halls, the group chats, and the car rides home from school.
Ninesomnia
Raging Love
Previous Rotations:
Visuals
Before the deal. Before Bad Boy. Christopher Wallace at 17 on the corner of Bedford Ave, already the best in the room.
Notorious B.I.G. — 1989 Bedford Ave Freestyle