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Hip Hop Nation

Hip Hop Nation is a commercial-free digital hip-hop radio station owned by Sirius XM Radio. The station broadcasts on Sirius Satellite Radio channel 40, XM Satellite Radio channel 67 (where it replaced XM's The City) and on DISH Network channel 6040.

The station plays uncensored hip-hop hits 24/7 with no R&B or commercials.

They also feature some of the hottest DJ mix shows each week, playing exclusive remixes and artist interviews.

Hip Hop Nation artists played include Lil Wayne, Drake, Jay-Z, Gucci Mane, The Game, Ludacris, Eminem, Young Jeezy, T.I., Kanye West, Lloyd Banks, Nicki Minaj, Waka Flocka Flame, Reflection Eternal, B.O.B, Ghostface, OJ da JuiceMan, Keak Da Sneak and many more.

by Mongo The Dog May 11, 2010


618 Hip-Hop

A Southern Illinois hip-hop platform that promotes local artists music, videos, events and content creation.

Y’all seen that new rapper 618 Hip-Hop posted? He’s fire!

by UrbanSoIL October 2, 2022

25πŸ‘ 1πŸ‘Ž


Hip Hop Tuga

Portuguese Hip Hop. Portuguese artists and portuguese Hip Hop audience very rarely use the expression "Portuguese Hip Hop", instead they say "Hip Hop Tuga".

"Eu só ouço Hip Hop Tuga" - I only listen to Portuguese Hip Hop.

"Represento o Hip Hop tuga" - I represent Portuguese Hip Hop.

by Nicolau November 26, 2005

35πŸ‘ 4πŸ‘Ž


Rap/Hip-Hop

Ask any two artists, fans, or other assorted members of the rap/hip-hop community to explain the precise difference between the two terms, and odds are you'll get different answers. Even so, most would probably agree that rap describes a type of music while hip-hop refers to a cultural phenomenon that includes graffiti, breakdancing, and fashion in addition to music -- or as rapper social theorist KRS-One says, "Rap is something you do, hip-hop is something you live." Musically, the only difference between the two is that rap always contains the vocal element of rhythmically spoken rhymes while hip-hop can be purely instrumental in nature. Rap in its earliest stages consisted of DJs mixing records and juggling beats and breaks for block parties while emcees rhymed over the rhythms. This practice of adapting, dissecting, and transforming pre-recorded music to create new songs could be hip-hop's most significant contribution to modern music.

Rap/Hip-Hop: The Game, Nas, Tupac Shakur, The Notorious B.I.G., Big L, Big Pun, Eazy-E, N.W.A., MC Ren, Dr. Dre, Ice Cube, Ice T, Immortal Technique, KRS-One, C-Murder, Public Enemy, EPMD, Mobb Deep, 50 Cent, Kanye West, The D.O.C., The Diplomats Aka Dipset, Jim Jones, Cam'Ron, Juelz Santana, Wu-Tang Clan, MC Eiht, Compton's Most Wanted, Eric B. & Rakim, Common, DMX, Asheru & Blue Black Of The Unspoken Heard, People Under The Stairs, Onyx, Jay-Z, Grand Daddy I.U., Big Daddy Kane, Lil Scrappy, Lil Jon, Lil Wayne, Westside Connection, Mack 10, W.C., Too $hort, Audio Two, One Be Lo, R.A. The Rugged Man, Naughty By Nature, Cypress Hill, B-Real, Delinquent Habits, A Lighter Shade Of Brown, Omar Cruz, JV, Ludacris, Run-D.M.C., Channel Live, Warren G, Kurupt, Kam, King Tee, Talib Kweli, Mos Def, Black Star, Jay Rock, Ya Boy, Snoop Dogg, Canibus, Zion I

by β™« Highway to Hell β™« October 6, 2009

1335πŸ‘ 304πŸ‘Ž


Hip Hop Dickriders

Hip Hop Dickriders listen to whatever is on the radio and music channel, and think it is a tune or think there artists are the best. They listen to songs with no meaning, normally talking about money sex and cars. Overplay the tunes on bus like it's cool, pump in the car. Hip Hop Dickriders also listen to whatever there friends listen to and agree with them. Also people who listen to anything, just want like the beat or the actual chorus, no lyrical skill is intented for a good song anymore. They also think that whoever is in the label at the time is the greatest artist. They don't really listen to the lyrics, just whatever is new and once there song is old, it's not good.

Antonym of Hip Hop Dickrider: Someone who doesn't follow what everyone listens to and actually listen to the music they like, normally the music they could listen to are either old tracks or underground. They like their music because it's important, and the artists express there pain, happiness or anger through there. They could listen to their tracks for ages and cannot get old.

e.g.

Hip Hop Dickrider: You heard Soulja Boy new track blowing em kisses, that's a sick track

Me: Soulja's Boy crap, I listen to Papoose, he's real rap, and has better skills that soulja boy could ever have

Hip Hop Dickrider: Nah Papoose is crap

Me: Have you even heard or listened to Papoose?

Hip Hop Dickrider: No....

Me : So how can he be crap?!

Hip Hop Dickrider: Cause I haven't heard of him, never heard his tracks or he hasn't had a video on a music channel and I know, best music is on the music channel

Me: Then your one of them Hip Hop Dickriders

by RealHipHop94Lake December 28, 2011

27πŸ‘ 3πŸ‘Ž


Japanese Hip-Hop

Where hip-hop enthusiasts who don't mind some more extravagance will go for the good shit. Not necessarily limited to Japanese lyrics(in fact, quite a bit of J-Rap artists out there will feature English-speaking lyricists in their songs if not a remix), Japanese hip-hop is more focused on pleasant, jazzy, and exotic beats, usually involving the piano or other instruments.

It is very different from US hip-hop(even from a lot of underground artists), but there's a certain beauty to it that may make it almost as(if not, even more) appealing than the typical underground artist. It's obviously an acquired taste, so it may not appeal to everyone.

If you want to get into Japanese hip-hop, start with the likes of Nujabes. From there, you can branch into artists like Nomak, Shing02, Shin-Ski, Martiangang, DJ Mitsu the Beats, etc.

Person A: Hey, what are you listening to?
Person B: Nujabes - High 2 Lows ft. Cise Starr. Dope track.
Person A: Whoa...this sounds way different than what I normally listen to. I don't see much hip-hop out there with a piano flow like this! I'm feeling this!
Person B: You just got a taste of Japanese hip-hop.

by Starcount October 26, 2009

45πŸ‘ 7πŸ‘Ž


hip hop is dead

Hip Hop died when rappers stopped saying meaningful things and just started making songs about dances. Most of the "rappers" these days dont talk about real issues in the world, they talk about bitches,money and how they're the best..this shit is RIDICULOUS!

Mark - Yo, You hear that song that kid's listening to?
Chris - Yea, A Bay Bay..
Mark - what happened to Hip Hop?
Chris - Hip Hop is dead Dude!
Mark - Yea..I hear that

by Chris Puckett October 25, 2007

443πŸ‘ 112πŸ‘Ž