
October 8, 2023
NCTzens, the wait is finally over. On October 6, NCT 127 returned with their fifth album, Fact Check, accompanied by a futuristic music video for the album’s title track...
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October 8, 2023
Riot Games has paired up with global K-pop sensation, NewJeans, a five-member group composed of Hanni, Danielle, Minji, Hyein, and Haerin. On October 4, 2023...
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October 6, 2023
The wait for the Toronto rapper’s long-awaited album is finally here. After a summer full of teasing, Drake’s fourth album in barely two years ”For All the Dogs” has arrived...
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October 5, 2023
Few hip-hop projects have managed to retain their timeless quality to the same extent that Drake and Future's "What a Time to Be Alive" has. This 2015 album's release...
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October 5, 2023
The Sonder group is a rare find in the world of modern R&B. Producer's Atu, Dpat, and lead vocalist Brent Faiyaz make up the band Sonder, which spins a captivating musical story...
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October 5, 2023
Resentment" stands out among emotional ballads and provides listeners with a musical haven in which to confront and work through their own inner issues...
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October 4, 2023
What makes Alan Walker's music so special is its ability to evoke a profound sense of nostalgia. His songs are often associated with the 2010s, a time when many people were just enjoying their youth..
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October 2, 2023
This year, we shine a spotlight on The Snotty Nose Rez Kids, a dynamic, ultra-talented, Indigenous hip-hop duo whose music and activism spreads the message of truth and reconciliation through rap.
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September 29, 2023
Madison Beer's journey began in the most modern of ways: on the internet. Born on March 5, 1999, in Jericho, New York, Madison was introduced to music at a young age...
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September 29, 2023
After a long two year wait since the release of her first breakout album “Sour”, Olivia Rodrigo is back with her sophomore album, “GUTS.” Olivia Rodrigo has been a revelation in the music...
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September 29, 2023
Throughout the show, the trainees trained rap, dance, and vocal skills through a variety of battles. On April 20, 2023, the nine members of ZEROBASEONE (ZB1) were announced....
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September 27, 2023
The highly awaited sophomore album from Lil Tecca, the 21-year-old hip-hop sensation, is called "TEC," and it's safe to say that it demonstrates the artist's development and professional maturity...
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Rap has always had tension in it. That’s kind of the point. Competition built the genre, who’s better, who’s realer, who actually has something to say. From early clashes to full blown diss tracks, conflict wasn’t just part of hip hop, it pushed it forward.
So when Jay-Z recently questioned whether rap feuds are going too far, specifically referencing the back and forth between Drake and Kendrick Lamar, it didn’t feel like a random comment. It felt like someone who’s seen every version of this culture asking if something has shifted.
Because it has.
There’s a difference between battling and bleeding into something else. Historically, diss tracks were about skill. Wordplay, delivery, strategy. Think about how much emphasis was placed on how you said something, not just what you said. The best diss records didn’t just attack, they showcased artistry. They made you run the track back just to catch the bars you missed.
Now, it feels like the focus is drifting. The stakes are higher, the audience is bigger, and the line between performance and real life is harder to see. When a feud plays out across songs, social media, interviews, and fan speculation all at once, it stops being just music. It becomes a spectacle.
And spectacle doesn’t always leave room for craft.
The Drake and Kendrick moment showed both sides of this shift. On one hand, it brought attention back to lyricism. People were actually listening closely again, analyzing bars, debating meaning. That’s the kind of energy hip hop thrives on. But at the same time, the conversation moved just as fast outside the music, into rumors, personal lines, and narratives that had nothing to do with the songs themselves.
That’s where Jay Z’s point lands.
If the focus moves too far away from the music, what are we actually rewarding? The sharpest pen, or the loudest moment?
Platforms like Sonical.ly highlight how listeners are engaging differently now. People aren’t just hearing full tracks, they’re catching snippets, standout lines, the most talkable parts of a song. In a feud, that means the most controversial bar travels the fastest. Not necessarily the best written one.
And that changes how music gets made.
Artists are more aware than ever of what will clip well, what will trend, what will get people talking instantly. In a battle, that pressure can shift the goal from making the strongest record to making the most viral moment. It’s subtle, but it matters. Because over time, it reshapes what we consider a good diss.
The question isn’t whether rap should stay competitive, it probably always will be. The question is what that competition is built on.
Jay Z isn’t saying stop battling. He’s asking whether the culture is still centered on the thing that made battles worth watching in the first place, the music.
And right now, that answer feels a little less clear than it used to be.