For the release of their new collab album Dharma, Son Raw linked up with Lex Boogie and Senz Beats to break down each song, its beatmaking process, life lessons, and more.
In the latest No Country For Old Men column, Son Raw argues why it's worth it to keep bucking the trends and searching for new music amidst an ever-changing industry pushing out unoriginal content.
This album is the rap equivalent of a film shot entirely in close ups – one more concerned with its subject’s interior life than dramatic twists and turns, Son Raw writes.
In the latest edition of No Country For Old Men, Son Raw questions the lack of enthusiasm for new rap music outside of the growing brain rot suburban-core lane.
For the third edition of No Country For Old Men, Son Raw details the long and winding road that Tyler, The Creator's career has taken, pushing his vision forward every step of the way.
Welcome to the second edition of No Country For Old Men, where Son Raw tackles the state dance music and music writing and underwater basket weaving about dancing about architecture.
Welcome to No Country For Old Men – a (hopefully) regular column in which a 40 year old DJ turned music writer turned musician grapples with the state of music journalism and how to age as a music fan.
Son Raw deconstructs the new album from The Alchemist & Oh No, which focuses on Hip Hop’s aesthetic of the broken, invoking the genre's long tradition of B-Boy outcasts.
'Another Triumph Of Ghetto Engineering' is a reminder that participating in underground culture is an act of resistance in itself.
Son Raw dives into the two-year long process of the creation of his new album Re:Defined, in collaboration with Jamaican rapper Five Steez.