#Mach-Hommy & Tha God Fahim
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187outsider · 9 months ago
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6i · 2 years ago
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just received my triz saga complete vinyl set today and i was lucky to get dump gawd: triz 9 signed by mach-hommy and tha god fahim
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oldestsoul · 2 years ago
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chillgawds · 2 years ago
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chrishinxmcgee2 · 1 year ago
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chroniclesofnadia111 · 1 year ago
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manysmallhands · 2 years ago
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My Albums Of 2022 - Second Tier (pt. 2)
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As previously explained, I've had to split these albums up into two posts because tumblr won't let me put more than ten links into one. This carries on where the previous one left off, recounting the second tier of my favourite albums of 2022 from July onwards. On we go!
July 
While Conway The Machine’s major label debut, God Don't Make Mistakes, got the better reception when it was released back in February, his collaboration with Big Ghost Ltd, What Has Been Blessed Cannot Be Cursed, was much more consistently enjoyable for me, if a little dense at times. There’s a gruesome feel that runs throughout the record and makes it heavy going to begin with, but Conway’s smart, edgy lyrics tend to lighten the mood and memorable tracks like "YBCM" and the Method Man guest spot "Scared To Death" meant that there were few albums more addictive released this year.
August
Trading in a kind of trippy soft-soul rumble, Mach-Hommy and The God Fahim's Dollar Menu 4 had a wonderfully dreamy sound, where the MCs who floated in and out of earshot were never quite as dominant vibes-wise as Fahim’s strange and hypnotic loops. But that's not to downgrade their contributions, as Mach and his guests' musings on food and hip-hop were always high quality, with beef of various kinds coming to the fore.
Your Old Droog (who also pops up memorably on Dollar Menu 4) released no less than six (count em!) EP/mini-albums this year and the quality rarely fell below excellent, increasingly placing him as one of my favourite underground MCs. Brooding funk beats, tenuous concepts and strikingly unusual reference points (what?!) were in full effect across every release, but the edgy bounce of Yodney Dangerfield was perhaps the best in a strong field.
September
If my first idea of Marina Allen was a kind of Shakin’ Judee Sill, the impression didn’t last long after hearing her excellent Centrifics album. While her voice has as much warmth and careworn experience as the 70s legends that she found herself compared to, there’s something unusual about the arrangements, especially the way they hang back and evolve rather than take the obvious route, which makes this album a slow burner and something worth returning to.
Rina Sawayama’s Hold The Girl spans genres effortlessly, shifting from pop-rock to club beats to wailing musical numbers and back again and then tying everything together in a bow of extreme melodrama. While there's a bit of deadwood in the middle, enough of it works (especially terrific single “This Hell") for it be worth sticking with for the long haul, as repeated plays bring ever more to the surface.
October
Armani Caesar is another fine talent from the Griselda stable and her fifth album The Liz 2 arrived late in the year with a wealth of diamond shimmer. Combining hard rhyming and opulent beats with a torrent of absolute filth in the lyrics, it was both hugely entertaining and offered a rare female angle on the bricks and hustle Griselda house style that made for an enlightening perspective shift.
Following on from 2019's slightly woolly Close It Quietly, Inner World Peace saw Frankie Cosmos return to the sweet but snappy guitar pop which made their name. While some of the more twisting elements of its predecessor remained, the immediacy of their best work was back to the fore, while Greta Klein’s bittersweet musings were as heartbreaking as ever
And that's it! More or less no one will read any of these posts, but it kept me occupied for a couple of weeks and that's what counts. I'd also be surprised if anyone actually listens to any of these records either (i only ever click on these things to see how many of the same albums I've got myself), but it would be nice to think otherwise I guess. They're all pretty good though: you really should do it, rare and unusual reader!
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reckonslepoisson · 2 years ago
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Notorious Dump Legends Vol. 2, Mach-Hommy & Tha God Fahim (2023)
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Mach-Hommy will likely never release a work that is not skilful, pleasant and competent; instead his releases pendulate between those which are significant within his catalogue and those which are not. Notorious Dump Legends Vol. 2 is, for me, very clearly in the latter category.
Pick: ‘Cold Milk’
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purpleheartrainman · 2 years ago
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Mach-Hommy | Everybody (Source Codes) // Notorious Dump Legends, Vol. 2
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187outsider · 9 months ago
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votava-records · 1 year ago
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Tha God Fahim - Let's Make A Deal (feat. Mach-Hommy and Your Old Droog)
Uninterested in the flashy trappings of the modern rap game, Atlanta's own Tha God Fahim has channelled his energy into building a phenomenal catalog, blending soulful aesthetics with hard-edged rhymes. Now, the talented emcee is taking a break from his dizzying mixtape schedule to unveil the new studio album "Iron Bull". Produced by Tha God Fahim himself, the standout track "Let's Make A Deal" finds microphone titans Mach-Hommy and Your Old Droog joining Fahim for another classic collaboration from underground hip-hop's most formidable trio. Now available worldwide, "Iron Bull" features production by SadhuGold, Nicholas Craven, and Camoflauge Monk.
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oldestsoul · 2 years ago
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chillgawds · 2 years ago
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asteroidemaravich · 1 year ago
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Cook County
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