#DXHitList: The Weeknd, Curren$y & Cardi B Top This Week’s Spotify Playlist

Spotify – The Weeknd opens up this week’s #DXHitList with “Try Me” off his My Dear Melancholy, EP. The project came as a surprise following a trail of cryptic messages the XO singer left for fans pining for new Weeknd music. On “Try Me,” The Weeknd makes an attempt to sing his way into a taken woman’s heart over a sultry and haunting Mike WiLL Made-It production.

New music from Curren$y’s latest mixtape Parking Lot Music is also featured on this week’s #DXHitList. “Right Here” featuring Casey Veggies is certainly a stand-out cut among the nine tracks featured on the project. Produced by Purps, “Right Here” addresses fair weather women, groupies, thots and the like.

Cardi B’s Invasion of Privacy is slated for an April 6 drop and the first single off the debut project “Be Careful,” also sits at the top of the #DXHitList. The single has been met with lukewarm reviews however, the song provides for radio-friendly production courtesy of Frank Dukes and Boi-1da and is coupled with Cardi spitting lyrics that clearly speak from the experience of being with a man who doesn’t appreciate you.

Rich the Kid’s slap “No Question” featuring Future as well as new music from DJ Esco, Trill Sammy, SAINt JHN, Jean Grae and U-God are also including on this week’s #DXHitList.

Listen to the #DXHitList below and make sure you’re following us to keep up with the latest music drops every Friday.

Article source: http://hiphopdx.com/news/id.46378/title.dxhitlist-the-weeknd-curreny-cardi-b-top-this-weeks-spotify-playlist

SZA’s "Broken Clocks" Video Highlights Archery, Roasted Marshmallows & Food Fights

SZA has released her latest music video, “Broken Clocks,” off her debut album Ctrldirected by herself along with Dave Meyers and The Little Homies.

In the video, the Grammy-nominated RB superstar wakes up at Camp CTRL, dancing around bunk beds and singing from a camper. She wakes up again at a strip club after apparently getting knocked out. Fellow label mates, Jay Rock, Ab-Soul, Isaiah Rashad and ScHoolboy Q all make cameos in support of their roster’s queen.

SZA continues to make huge strides in her career, despite announcing she’s done with music after her next album — a threat she’s echoed before. “Broken Clocks” is already certified gold and sits at #7 on the Billboard RB/Hip Hop Songs Chart.

Ctrl was certified platinum in October and was named HipHopDX’s Best RB Album of 2017. SZA and the rest of TDE will be hitting the road this year for their nationwide label trek, The Championship Tour. It is slated to begin on May 4 in Vancouver and will wrap up in Pittsburgh on June 16.

Check out the SZA’s visual for “Broken Clocks” above.

Article source: http://hiphopdx.com/news/id.46379/title.szas-broken-clocks-video-highlights-archery-roasted-marshmallows-food-fights

Lil Durk Begins Post-Def Jam Career With "Just ‘Cause Y’all Waited"

After releasing Bloodas last year with Tee Grizzley, Lil Durk has resurfaced with Just ‘Cause Y’all Waited, his first project since his split with Def Jam Recordings.

Featuring 12 tracks, the project boasts guest spots from Lil Baby, Ty Dolla $ign, PARTYNEXTDOOR, Gunna and TK Kravitz. Production comes courtesy of multiple beatmakers, including DY Krazy, Nard B and ATL Jacob.

Ahead of the release, the 25-year-old dropped a video for “How I Know” featuring the aforementioned Lil Baby.

Check out the Just ‘Cause Y’all Waited album stream, cover art and tracklist below.

290318 Lil Durk290318 Lil Durk
  1. Public Housing
  2. Just Flow
  3. When I Was Little
  4. How I Know f. Lil Baby
  5. Granny Crib
  6. 1773 Vulture
  7. Breather f. Ty Dolla $ign PARTYNEXTDOOR
  8. Home Body f. Gunna TK Kravitz
  9. Durkio Crazy
  10. Instigator
  11. Crossroads
  12. My Bruddas

Article source: http://hiphopdx.com/news/id.46368/title.lil-durk-begins-post-def-jam-career-with-just-cause-yall-waited

DJ Esco Enlists Help Of Future For "Kolorblind" Project

DJ Esco pulled off an impressive feat when it comes to assembling the artists for his Kolorblind project. The “coolest DJ in the world” was able to recruit a lineup comprised of a who’s who in Hip Hop today.

Future, Esco’s longtime collaborator, appears on all 11 tracks. Nas, Young Thug, DeJ Loaf, A Boogie wit da Hoodie, Rich The Kid, Ty Dolla $ign and O.T. Genesis are just some of the other guests helping out on the new release.

Check out the stream, cover art and tracklist for Esco’s Kolorblind below.

DJ Esco Drops KolorblindDJ Esco Drops Kolorblind

1. No Slow Money f. Future Young Thug
2. Xotic f. Future, Rich the Kid Young Thug
3. Chek f. Future
4. Light Show f. Future Guap Tarantino
5. Warzone f. Future
6. Walk Thru f. Nas Future
7. Showed You f. Young Thug, Future, A Boogie wit da Hoodie DeJ Loaf
8. Bring It Out f. O.T. Genasis Future
9. Code of Honor f. Future ScHoolboy Q
10. Psychedelik Smoke f. Future Ty Dolla $ign
11. Fuk Faces f. Future

(The original version of this article was published on March 27, 2018 and can be found below.)

DJ Esco recently took to social media to announce Kolorblind, a full-length project dropping on March 30. Instead of revealing a tracklist as the release date approaches, Esco has decided to tease fans by sharing puzzle that includes all of the stars appearing on his upcoming project.

Future, ScHoolboy Q and Rich The Kid were previously revealed before Esco shared the puzzle on Instagram on Tuesday (March 27). But now, fans can discover the rest of the lineup, which boasts artists such as Young Thug and Dej Loaf.

SEARCH ??the names for all my Guest features and Guest producers for #KOLORBLIND Leave your answers in my comments!! Hint: 10 Artists 6 Producers You can also solve at http://KOLORBLIND.us

A post shared by DJ ESCO (@escomoecity) on Mar 27, 2018 at 2:55pm PDT

On Monday (March 26), Esco dropped the video for the first single off the tape, “Code of Honor” featuring Future and ScHoolboy Q. Future is expected to have a heavy presence on the album.

Esco and Future’s last joint effort was the Project E.T. mixtape, which dropped in 2016. The Atlanta DJ is also credited as executive producer on Future’s 2017 Future and Hndrxx albums.

Article source: http://hiphopdx.com/news/id.46341/title.dj-esco-reveals-guests-for-kolorblind-project-in-puzzle

SAINt JHN’s Debut Album Took A Lifetime To Create

Since dropping the single “1999” back in 2016, rapper SAINt JHN has managed to amass around 50 million streams and a dedicated fan base. More impressively, he’s done so with only a small handful of singles. With his debut LP Collection One dropping on March 30 — which includes five of the previously released singles — JHN is hesitant about telling fans what to expect.

“It’s not exactly what you think it is and it’s better than what you imagined it would be,” he told HipHopDX via phone interview — fresh off a trip to Israel to film a visual for “Hermès Freestyle.”

“I make the music that I wanna hear,” he continues. “I think for those people that are returning and continuously listening, I’m making the music that they wanna hear. So [they] can expect that … full form.”

Hailing from Brooklyn, he initially broke into the music industry as a songwriter, with his first major credit being the chorus of Hoodie Allen’s “No Interruptions” in 2012. The single was the first off Allen’s All American EP, which debuted at the top of the iTunes chart and hit #10 on the Billboard 200. Since then, JHN has racked up credits writing for the likes of Usher, helping pen two of the singles from 2016’s Hard II Love LP (“Crash” and “Rivals”), as well as Jidenna (“Helicopters” from last year’s The Chief LP).

“I started out making music for myself, and I fell into song writing … I took the opportunity because I wanted to see what it’s like to be like to be selfless,” he explains. “[I learned that] in writing songs for someone else, you never get to a place where you’re completly selfless, because you’re still injecting yourself into someone’s story or you’re introducing your story to someone, and then you’re giving up the voice to sing it.”

As he further explains, it was “giving up the voice” that drove his desire to put everything he had into his brand. “Someone else’s voice singing it doesn’t carry the same intention and the same intensity … so it was straightforward to make a transition, and realizing I needed to do this myself. No one can tell my story.”

He does credit the in-studio experiences with driving his confidence. “They taught me that I was good enough,” he says. “Imagine you’re standing next to a hero of yours — someone you’ve been admiring for two decades, or a decade, or 10 days, or five minutes — and you’re there because of something that you crafted for yourself. It tells you that you deserve to be in the room.”

JHN also worked as a professional model but decided to leave that alone — much for the same reason he began feeling a bit of disdain for writing for others. “Nothing is exciting about modeling; there’s nothing exciting about being the subject of somebody else’s vision,” he says. “You’re a beautiful mannequin in motion, and I didn’t wanna do that. So I stopped doing that.”

To hear him describe his creative drive — and even more esoterically, his music — paints him as an artist’s artist. It’s something that is resonating with both fans and writers who have been fiending for a full body of work to digest after snacking on and reheating his appetizers.

The length of time fans have been patiently waiting, though, is eclipsed by the period this complete vision has been in conceptual production. “A lifetime,” he says bluntly. “That’s how long, I’m sure of it. To put the sounds together: year and a half. But, you’re making the first thing you introduce to people. It takes so many different experiences and exchanges. Things that I’m talking about in this project, one way or another, they might’ve come from different times [in my life].”

When it comes to describing the sound, he merely states, “I don’t. As anti-climatic and disappointing as that sounds, I don’t. I don’t describe my music. I make my music. I listen to it. But, what you hear and what I hear are two entirely different things.”

Collection One is available now.

Article source: http://hiphopdx.com/news/id.46369/title.saint-jhns-debut-album-took-a-lifetime-to-create