DEAR READER

izzy's playlists!
Today's Document
Show & Tell

Andulka
Stranger Things
styofa doing anything

JVL
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
Monterey Bay Aquarium
Keni

pixel skylines
$LAYYYTER
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
Not today Justin
trying on a metaphor
Sade Olutola
KIROKAZE

Love Begins
noise dept.
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Singapore
seen from Ecuador
seen from United States
seen from Japan
seen from Netherlands

seen from Spain
seen from Portugal
seen from Argentina
seen from France
seen from Lithuania
seen from Angola

seen from Türkiye

seen from Tajikistan

seen from Türkiye
seen from United States
seen from Netherlands

seen from South Korea
@boolzroolz
(Rude World)
my latest music video(via https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bmu4kJRxIjo)
(GDS.FM)
CRIM3S track ‘MILITIA’ is now available on spotify
we’re using our official CRIM3S instagram now, follow for new - -instagram.com/crim3s
FLYEST VAMP ON E4RTH ... haha
mirrormirror in the sky
(via https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jvcFVk60tjU)
down down cities fall down ... on me ,down down cities fall down(via https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I-v3sVWT8pA)
Omahyra Mota for Alexander Wang S/S 2011.
MY LATEST MUSIC VIDEO E K A $ I (via https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_3qd3iuKdqQ)
Download Aphe Kapa Part 2 MASTER.mp3 free. File hosted free by DataFileHost.
LATER FOR THE DATE THAN HADRON COLLIDER: CJ's SHORT ASSESSMENT OF CPT'S RAP SCENE
It starts with a few synthesizer keys and a producer drop, soon giving way to a deliriously catchy and relentlessly repetitive hook. About four young men trade verses, both adhering more or less to the same sing-song cadence as if compelled by force or deep induced trance. It’s the sound of something you’d like to fuck with, something so goddamn new that it’s hard not to become stupefied by it.
BooLz “Aphe Ekapa” [Prod. By Touch Narcotics] & the remix of that very same song, should have spread with pandemic intent and achieved a certain cultural ubiquity because that shot was tight and inherently different. Unfortunately, it came with regular baggage, my criticism of the actual video & whatever marketing team he had behind to push it to its full potential. Labels not giving him creative freedom to visually depict what the lyrics of the joint actually entailed. These arguments however do grasp that the song’s lack of popularity was a function of its DNA (by that, I’m referring to what labels let you do & don’t, also referring to what fans of today want to consume) nature, not nurture.
There’s a host of millenial go-getters here in CPT alone who could prove to be the genetically engineered solution. A sunny sibling to Amilca & Slim’s “Hayi Sho Bhowzey” was supremely safer, Youngsta’s problematic verse on “The Way It Goes”, the West Wing Academy “Season Yama Yakuza” packed danger, Maestro Zen’s “Indiewaves” had venom whilst exuding that superb and superior newness. Sharing many of the same characteristics described above, like any other rapper, just as rigidly formulaic as any breakout hit you’ve ever heard, the template equally as proprietary - credit due to our rappers though, respectively.
The shit our artists are providing should thrive on without credibility challenges, or any need for trigger warnings. Neither Chinga Time nor Phresh Clique (female rap duo) pretend to be drug kingpins or streetwise arms dealers. Like their spiritual forebears LMFAO, the nigga’s just want to make dope shit, get paid off it & have a good time. After all, to them swag is something you unlock as if in a video game (Word to Rae Sremmurd). Their youthful spark still very much alight, their exuberance is played up throughout their work, often to the point of exploitation, which is okay, because that’s their lane.
Any artist associated with the American subculture tends to get facepainted with a broad brush. Serious critical assessment of those making music in our local rappers orbit is conveniently scarce. After nearly 3-years of consistent existence, BoolZ latest album makes the strongest argument for proper assessment. Does Uno July still adhere to a formula of themes over hip hop boom bap reinforced by b-movie level skits ? I can’t make a critical assessment of man’s music or contribution to the culture because I know nothing of it, & I’m honestly not looking to either, but if he has, and anyone who would like to school me, hit me up via management, bruhbruh. All jokes aside, credit to our rich scene of producers whose work is very well executed, with their beats more or less on par with what rap has been receptive to over in recent years.
One could also argue that both our rappers and producers have demonstrably better than anything JHB/DBN have peddled lately. It strikes me as odd that pop culture’s embrace of dude’s shark biting tendencies has extended to rap music when one of rap’s main premises has always been about originality (for example, how WTF are doing a really bad impression of Rae Sremmurd), I mean, listen, I get that local rap is *mostly* derivative, but dudes repackage an entire concept & that’s just mad lazy, but then again, that in itself is a conversation for another day. Though overall CPT’s rap scene can be unconvincing as a phenomenon, I do believe it has the potential to, and what they’re up to now is hardly as poor as some of their predecessors.
(photo credit: Chris Kets for 10and5 Urban Jungle: Portraits of Cape Town’s young characters and creatives)