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Artist Spotlight

OBSERVE THE RISE OF UNQUESTIONABLY, ONE OF THE FINEST ARTISTS OF THIS GENERATION –AUDENTIA

Tell us a little more about when you first got into music?
What got me into music was actually some friends back in middle school, they were always rapping during lunch and sometimes in between class periods. I decided to give it a shot and start rapping myself and from there the rest was history. I grew love for hip-hop culture https://open.spotify.com/artist/3VGZiDaW8raCdtrNnf9ja1which branched me out to discovering different genres of music. Also coming from a musical background within my family like my grandfather from Puerto rico who used to play guitar back in the day.
If you could describe your sound/style in one word, what would it be and why?
I would describe my style as different, as much as that is a cliche answer and I know a lot of artists out there probably think they are different themselves. However I honestly feel like my style is different because I can bounce back from hip-hop music to indie rock to urban latin music. Especially I try to always remain true to myself in my music and always include my latino background as well as being the voice of those who don’t have the chance to speak out.
What would you say to any aspiring recording artists who look up to your work?
I would say just know what message you are trying to get across to your audience and know everything comes within time, that it is a marathon not a race and to just keep pushing through.
Do you have anything new or upcoming we can expect to see from you?
I actually do! I just recently dropped my latest new single “Send This To Your Crush” featuring one of my good friends Criselda, now streaming on all music platforms.

Artist Spotlight

Boorook creates a hip-hop anthem for change on “Fight For Your Rights”

Boorook

Boorook’s latest release, “Fight For Your Rights,” is both a song and a movement. The Indigenous people have a strong voice, and from the first beat, the song has a strong, urgent, and very human energy. “Fight For Your Rights” is an example of how conscious hip-hop can serve as art activism. The track is about unfair systems, and it’s clear that it supports the Black Lives Matter movement. Clarke’s performance is more than just a show, it’s a call to action that tells people to face hard truths and connect with the pulse of community and defiance.

Thomas Lorenzo’s live guitar adds an unexpected yet beautiful layer, giving the rhythm an emotional depth that makes it feel soulful. The track sounds real because it has real instruments and hip-hop beats. This shows how good Boorook is at mixing styles and still getting the message across.

People feel like they are part of a group when they listen to the song “Fight For Your Rights.” The lyrics are deep, and the music is good. It’s a song that makes people want to get together, think, and do something. Boorook doesn’t just play music; he makes people feel strong by turning every beat into a heartbeat for change.

Boorook’s new release reminds us that music can still be a powerful force for truth and change in a world where trends come and go. “Fight For Your Rights” is a call to action, an anthem, and proof that music can still bring us together, make us think, and motivate us.

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Artist Spotlight

Malammore unveils a new voice rising from portugal’s margins on new album “Aurora”

Capa_Malammore -

Malammore, whose real name is Sandro Feliciano, is a singer, songwriter, and producer from Lisbon, Portugal. “Aurora” is his first album. The album comes out on January 23 and tells the story of his life as a young Black man, his search for belonging, and his country’s cultural resistance. The lyrics talk about love, adoption, thoughts on humanity, and how the artist sees his role in the world. The concept for the album originated from a notebook containing poems, narratives, and my self-perception within this world. It’s a record of the Black experience in Portugal, of belonging and feeling alone, of love and loss.

Sandro, also known as Malammore, was born in 2005 and lived with the Portuguese State for two years until he was adopted in 2008, which was a big change in his life. One of the main ideas in Aurora is to turn the idea of a “black hole” into “the world’s white hole,” which shows a universe that erases identities. He challenges dominant narratives and changes how people see black bodies in society by filling it with the idea of blackness.

The album mixes hip-hop, rap, trap, and spoken word, which is not something that is usually done. Malammore gets the political tone of the project from people like Malcolm X, Muhammad Ali, Angela Davis, and Fela Kuti. No Icon (Rodrigo Fernandes) did the production, mixing, and mastering for the album at Lisbon Sound Society.

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