
About Hip Hop DX
Nobody in the online hip hop media represents hip hop culture and rap music like HipHopDX. Hip-Hop DX brings you the latest in hip hop news, rumors, album reviews, interviews, editorials, hip hop album reviews, unreleased audio, rap music videos and mixtapes. But that’s not all, Hip Hop DX doesn’t only cover hip hop music related content. There is a lifestyle section with the latest in hip hop fashion trends, movie and video game reviews, pictures from exclusive parties with your favorite hip hop and R&B artists, rap music video girls, a daily Boondocks comic strip and much more.

Hip Hop DX Daily News
Hip Hop DX is Updated daily, and HipHopDX stays extremely current on hip hop culture. Hip Hop DX even helps to influence and impact the hip hop culture. Their insightful “tell it like it is and how it should be” editorials, unbiased reviews and premier hip hop audio section has garnered the most dedicated and loyal following of any hip hop site.

HipHopDX has more than 10 years of hip hop news stashed away in their Hip Hop DX vault. And their search engine is really advanced. I have found some of the best album reviews on Hip Hop DX. Like the one below for examples for the Reflection Eternal album Revolutions Per Minute by Talib Kweli and Hi-Tek.
Reflection Eternal
‘Revolutions Per Minute’
Hip Hop lost one of its greats last month in Keith “Guru” Elam. Long before Guru passed away, Hip Hop lost one of its greatest groups, Gang Starr. Gang Starr was a duo that followed the traditional formula of one emcee and one deejay/producer, creating music side by side. Ten years ago, Reflection Eternal (Emcee Talib Kweli and DJ Hi-Tek) became a similar collaboration of emcee & deejay that followed that same Gang Starr formula that originated 30-plus years ago. Ultimately, both groups came to a screeching halt – Gang Starr due to politics and emotions, Reflection Eternal due to the desire for solo projects. Truth be told, Hi-Tek and Kweli weren’t even an official group, but with their highly acclaimed debut Train of Thought from 2000, fans wanted that group to form faster than Voltron. Now, a decade later, Kweli and Hi-Tek return with their second album Revolutions Per Minute, a now major label work that displays the evolution of both the emcee and the deejay and the desire to once again keep them together.
See what I mean? That is a great album review. All of Hip Hop DX reviews are like that. So if you get a chance check them out, read an article and post a comment. Show some love for some people who are keeping it real for hip hop.
Share on Facebook