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Dizzee Rascal Goes Hard On “Fire In The Booth Freestyle”

Dizzee Rascal has bars on bars, but he put his skill on full display on another level for Fire In The Booth. Charlie Sloth’s popular freestyle segment was thrust into the upmost levels of the limelight when Drake graced the series, however, Dizzee drops bars to make you forget the Canadian’s appearance. The lyrical slaughter begins as soon as the rapper starts, and he embarks on a monstrous double-time flow. 

The hype-drill instrumental is the perfect backdrop for Dizzee to squeeze as many words into bars as he can, using the energy of the beat to his favor. Although this may go under the commercial radar, Dizzee’s “Fire In The Booth Freestyle” is one of the best appearances on the series to date. 

Quotable Lyrics
Fuck your raps, fuck your tracks
Fuck your plaque, fuck your numbers and your stacks
Uncle’s back, they can’t hold me back
Hold my hat, quick throwback, hold a slap
Holy crap what’s that?
Big chat got your Rolie clapped
You were fronting on the Gram like you own the app

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Kyle Ashen’s sun-drenched recollection with new release “That Local Girl”

KYLE

Kyle Ashen’s latest release, “That Local Girl,” is a gorgeous trip down memory lane, a country single that explores that golden glow of memory, like flipping through old photographs touched by salt air and summer sunlight. It’s warm, cinematic, and deeply relatable, a song about the kind of love story that never quite goes away, even as time moves on.

“That Local Girl” is filled with imagery that quickly takes the listener into a world they can walk right into. You got a blonde-haired, blue-eyed girl on a boardwalk street by the ocean, a souped-up truck driving through town, neon lights reflecting off the ocean breeze, and the electric innocence of young love burning in the background.

But under all that cutesy trapping is something more than that, longing. Some people, some places that leave permanent marks on Kyle Ashen and us know that. What’s so brilliant about this song is that it marries those two ideas, making love and hometown memory feel beautifully inseparable. Sometimes you miss a person. And with that person, you miss an entire version of life. “That Local Girl” is more than a country love song from Kyle Ashen. He is a living postcard from the past, sun-faded, bittersweet, and glowing with feeling. A reminder that summers pass by, but some memories stay with us forever.

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ECHOFLIP inspires faith and fire with triumphant anthem on “Kingdom Rise”

ECHOFLIP

ECHOFLIP marches forward with commanding purpose on “Kingdom Rise,” a single that not only demands attention but also commands it. Driven by pounding drums, soaring melodic textures, and full-conviction lyricism, the song arrives like a battle cry with the heart of worship. Bold and energized and spiritually charged from beginning to end.

“Kingdom Rise” is street realism meets kingdom vision at its heart. It’s got grit in its pulse but grace in its message as well. Each bar rings with resilience with ECHOFLIP, a record that embodies struggle, perseverance, and steadfast faith in the face of adversity. The result is music that is rooted in reality while reaching for something much larger.

What makes the single particularly compelling is how seamlessly it combines high-energy Christian trap with uplifting spiritual themes. The hard-hitting production has edge and urgency, and its faith-centered focus gives it soul. It’s motivational without being pushy. Worshipful without momentum loss, without losing authenticity. Ideal for trap gospel, inspirational rap, and urban playlists that aim to uplift as much as energize, “Kingdom Rise” delivers on all fronts. It moves the body, it sharpens the mind, it stirs the soul.

Connect with ECHOFLIP on Spotify

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