Sonnyjim – Dude Wheres My Car? [Audio]
Visualizer for "Dude Wheres My Car?" taken from the forthcoming Sonnyjim and Lee Scott project "Ortolan And Armagnac". Super slow and thoughtfully delivers. Lots of nice imagery conjured by SonnyJim.
Visualizer for "Dude Wheres My Car?" taken from the forthcoming Sonnyjim and Lee Scott project "Ortolan And Armagnac". Super slow and thoughtfully delivers. Lots of nice imagery conjured by SonnyJim.
Black Josh and Wino Willy drop 'E R M8' featuring verses from Lee Scott and Sonnyjim. A beast of a track and link up, punchlines in Lee’s verse are unreal. Wino Willy cooks up a sinister beat which slaps.
Lee Scott brings in Cool Calm Pete and Heems for this typically slow Blah Records offering. Feed The Well sees this unexpected, but silky smooth ill collaboration. Vinyl limited to 300 copies, hand numbered.
Blah Records artist and poker player Sly Moon drops a quick short entitled 'Holographic World' in which he asks, "whats real?". The track is the lifted from Sly Moon's self produced EP 'Banned From The Vic'.
Railing against fast food, sugar and other dietary evils and major corporations which have made us slow, Lee Scott and NYC's Homeboy Sandman combine on Staple Junk.
Jack Danz from Leeds, West Yorkshire, drops his whole eleven track tape entitled Lucidia here. This is a generally slow paced soporific offering which features some talents like Lee Scott and Jam Baxter.
Live performance of Lee Scott's brand new project 'There is a Reason For Everything' direct from his living room. Available digitally 26.05.23 via Bandcamp, general release 29.05.23.
Bisk is back with 'Lost' featuring YungMorpheus. The Lee Scott produced track is lifted from Bisk's new album 'Samosh!t Deluxe'. The Blah Records release is out now on all digital platforms.
West Yorkshire master spitter Lunar C drops his next release, a production from equally famed beat-maker Lee Scott. Sound. delivers proper wordplay on this ill banger that really slaps. Run it.
'Mork Calling Orson' is Jehst's sixth album reaching a typically supreme standard of syllables and similes bearing a red-eyed hue. Featuring the tracks 'Daily Planet', 'Lonely World', the BBC 6 Music-playlisted 'One Horse Town', 'Wild Herb' and 'Autumn Nights'.