A bonus conversation with British rapper and spoken word artist Kojey Radical recorded live at the 6Music Festival, discussing themes of love, his connection to his Ghanaian heritage and his dad.
Romesh Ranganathan discovers the world's best-selling album of 2016... but, more importantly, the album that turned James onto pop.Produced by Hannah HuffordPhotography by Edward MooreDesign by Danny Arter
Eleanor Tiernan is drawn in by hip-hop duo Run The Jewel's critically acclaimed epic third album.This is the final episode of series 1 but we'll be back this summer so subscribe to the podcast to be the first to hear new episodes!
James invites friend of the podcast and grime fan Jamali Maddix to sit down with him and Trim to discuss working with James Blake on 1-800 DINOSAUR Presents and Trim's role in the grime scene.
Mae Martin is thrilled by the album from which the podcast takes its name. The final track on the punk musician's second solo album is called Perfect Sound Whatever.
A Christmas treat for you featuring James, Matthew and Ed on seeing Jeff Rosenstock live and then an interview with the man himself about his album Worry.
Hip-hop fan Dane discovers Kojey Radical's masterful 23Winters for the first time. At 42 minutes the EP spans rap, spoken word, and a conversation with Kojey's dad that covers themes of love, life in London, and their Ghanaian heritage. Which m
Phil Wang gets to grips with the 2016 Eurosceptic experimental hip-hop album United Diktatürs of Europe, by Anarchist Republic of BZZZ. Plus why instruments are like tacos.Produced by Hannah HuffordPhotography by Edward MooreDesign by Danny A
Classically trained Rachel Parris dissects the one-off album Balter/Saunier, a collaboration between the Chicago orchestra Ensemble Dal Niente, influential art-rock band Deerhoof, and Brazilian composer Marcos Balter.
Nish is blown away by this concept album from Brockhampton's Kevin Abstract. The album tells the story of him growing up in Texas with homophobic parents and a racist boyfriend.