Hip-hop’s news cycle today sits in that familiar tension between glory and grief, nostalgia and new blood. On one side, Baltimore is literally renaming streets in Tupac’s honor while his sister plants a peace pole in the same neighborhood that shaped his formative years.[hiphopwired] On another, the courts are still sorting out the fallout of rap’s real-life wars — from the conviction of the men who killed Jacksonville’s Foolio, to Pooh Shiesty pleading not guilty in a wild federal case tied directly to his former label boss, Gucci Mane.[hiphophero]
Meanwhile, the underground keeps moving: Action Bronson drops a new album, grimy boom‑bap producers are still building worlds, and a new wave of abrasive, Gen Z‑coded rap experiments is stretching the edges of “listenable.”[blackouthiphop] The culture is doing what it always does — grieving, honoring, innovating — all at once.
Today in Hip-Hop: Bite-Sized Blurbs
Baltimore Rededicates Street for Tupac — And Aims at the Next Generation
Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott rededicated a portion of Greenmount Avenue in the Pen Lucy neighborhood in honor of Tupac Shakur, where Pac lived as a teenager with Afeni Shakur.[hiphopwired] Sekyiwa “Set” Shakur, his sister, was on hand to unveil a peace pole — part of the Tupac Amaru Shakur Foundation’s work to “unify with the on-the-ground organizations” and support kids “from kindergarten to college” in that same community.[hiphopwired]
Learn more about Baltimore Rededicating Street for Tupac
Four Men Found Guilty in Foolio’s Murder — The Courtroom Catches Up to the Timeline
A jury found four men guilty of killing Jacksonville rapper Foolio, with sentencing — death penalty or life in prison — set for May 11.[hiphophero] Prosecutors framed the case as part of a “real gang war” in Jacksonville, where rivals “shoot each other and then… post about it on social media.”[hiphophero] Foolio, allegedly aligned with 6 Block, was killed after publicly posting about his 26th birthday; his rivals allegedly crossed the state, ambushed him around 4:30am on June 23, 2024, and opened fire with a pistol and assault rifles.[hiphophero]
He’d dropped his final album Resurrection in April 2024 and still has over a million monthly Spotify listeners; his song “Voo Doo” alone has more than 92 million streams.[hiphophero]
Learn more about the Four Men Found Guilty in Foolio’s Murder
Pooh Shiesty Pleads Not Guilty in Gucci Mane Recording Studio Case
Pooh Shiesty has pled not guilty to federal charges alleging he helped orchestrate an “armed takeover” at a recording studio, where US Attorney Ryan Raybould says Shiesty produced an “AK-style pistol” and forced a victim to sign a contract release at gunpoint.[hiphophero] Other alleged conspirators displayed firearms, robbed victims of Rolexes, jewelry, cash, and more, with one victim reportedly choked “to near-unconsciousness” while another suspect allegedly barricaded the door.[hiphophero]
Shiesty, who remains behind bars, is charged alongside his father, Big30, and others. His lawyers call it “a highly defensible case” and say they hope to have him “back in the recording studio very soon.”[hiphophero] This comes after his rapid rise with Gucci Mane’s 1017 label, powered by Shiesty Season — a 2021 mixtape that debuted at No. 3 on the Billboard 200, anchored by “Back in Blood” with Lil Durk, “SUVs (Black on Black)” with Jack Harlow, and “Neighbors” with Big30.[hiphophero]
Learn more about Pooh Shiesty and Gucci Mane Recording Studio Case
Action Bronson Drops Planet Frog — The Cult Hero Stays in His Own Universe
Action Bronson released a new album, Planet Frog, packing 13 tracks in his trademark style.[blackouthiphop] The guest list runs from Paul Wall to Meyhem Lauren to Lil Yachty, with “Peppers” — a Daringer-produced joint featuring Roc Marciano — flagged as one of the lead singles and a “straight banger.”[blackouthiphop]
Learn more about Action Bronson Dropping Planet Frog
The Underground Gets Louder, Weirder, and More Claustrophobic
The experimental underground had a noisy showing today, with a couple of records that say a lot about where Gen Z and Gen Alpha are taking “rap” sonically.
- 2Slimey – “Kno You”
An “abrasive” underground cut that “immediately gives you a headache” with blown-out beats and an autotuned vocal that “pierces your brain.”[hotnewhiphop] The song’s aggressive, distorted sonics are framed as borderline unlistenable to the reviewer, but “for some Gen Z and Gen Alpha, this sounds like Beethoven.”[hotnewhiphop] Lyrically, it stays on standard street-flex terrain — packs, touchdowns, shutdowns, gun downs.[hotnewhiphop] - Rocket Rese – “Murder Rate”
Another underground entry driven by shock tactics in beat selection. The track’s “thumping and head-stirring instrumental” “whack[s] you over the head,” while Rocket Rese matches it with shouted, aggressive lyrics that “will make you feel claustrophobic.”[hotnewhiphop]
Learn more about The Underground
Boom-Bap Never Left: Mickey Blue’s “Villains For Hire”
New Jersey producer Mickey Blue dropped “Villains For Hire,” recruiting underground stalwarts M-Dot, Celph Titled (A.O.T.P.), and Starvin B, with cuts from DJ/producer Tone Spliff.[blackouthiphop] The record leans into “raw lyricism and hard-hitting production,” built on “dusty samples, razor-sharp drums and ominous textures” — a “grimy, hard-knocking soundscape” designed for fans of “authentic boom-bap.”[blackouthiphop]
Learn more about how Boom-Bap Never Left
Bottom Line
Today’s hip-hop headlines read like a compressed version of the last 30 years: a city rewriting its streets in Pac’s name, a courtroom untangling the consequences of a gang war broadcast online, a star rapper fighting federal charges, and an underground split between grimy tradition and chaotic futurism. The culture is still negotiating that balance — memory vs. momentum, violence vs. uplift, chaos vs. craft — and days like this show all those forces moving at once.

















