Get ready to elevate your hip-hop experience with NehruvianDOOM's highly anticipated LP! This legendary collaboration between MF DOOM and Bishop Nehru promises to deliver witty rhymes, smooth beats, and a heaping dose of humor.
Culture III is the groundbreaking third installment finale of the blockbuster Culture trilogy. As a knockout climax, it spotlights their nimble ad-libs, bulletproof bars, head-spinning hooks, and irreplaceable chemistry.
Double vinyl LP pressing. 2015 release from the Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania rapper. He was also a noted record producer under the pseudonym Larry Fisherman.
Limited edition lavender vinyl / When most fans think of Mac Miller, the first thing that comes to mind is his platinum-certified mixtape, Best Day Ever, released in 2011 by Rostrum Records. It's a certified white boy classic!!
Blue Slide Park is the debut studio album from Mac Miller, named for a section of his hometown Pittsburgh's Frick Park. Released in 2011 by Rostrum Records, the album features the gold-certified singles, "Frick Park Market," and "Party on Fifth Ave."
Circles is the sixth and final studio album by Mac Miller. Conceived as a sister album to 2018's full length Swimming, the album was completed with the assistance of Jon Brion, with whom Miller worked on Swimming.
Each 3LP package includes a special triple gatefold jacket printed on silver mirror board with die cut, two inner sleeves with photos printed on silver mirror board and a yellow bonus vinyl with a custom etching on the back.
First-ever vinyl pressing of Mac Miller's fan-favorite 2011 mixtape I Love Life, Thank You, featuring the viral track "Love Lost," and appearances by Talib Kweli and Bun B.
Mac Miller's seminal mixtape K.I.D.S. was originally released in 2010 by Rostrum Records. The title, an acronym for "Kickin' Incredibly Dope Shit," is a reference to the 1995 film, Kids, which is quoted throughout. Hell yeah!
Mac Miller is managing to buck some of the criticisms that have been leveled in his direction. He's becoming more three-dimensional, revealing depth while not abandoning what got him here.
Tiny Desk Concert where Miller and band performed album cuts "Small Worlds," "What's The Use?" featuring regular collaborator Thundercat and "2009" with a full band.
Swimming was immediately understood by both his fans and critics alike as the high water mark of Miller's career: an album that perfectly showcased the musical chops he had developed vocally and instrumentally over the course of a decade.