Ambrosia For Heads
Ambrosia For Heads (AFH TV) started in 2011 with the aim of showcasing and sharing the finest aspects of Hip-Hop culture. Through its website and various social media platforms, AFH provides top-notch video, audio, and written content to a wide-ranging and dedicated audience. The lifestyle content from AFH offers a unique perspective on Hip-Hop as well as important topics such as politics, race, technology, gender, climate change, and more, making it relevant to the interests of its community.
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Articles
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Jan 11, 2025 |
ambrosiaforheads.com | Jake Paine
In the last week of 2024, Redman released Muddy Waters Too. The 32-track collection arrives after nearly 15 years of development. That behind-the-scenes process is something Redman spoke candidly about with Ambrosia For Heads’ What’s The Headline podcast in his first interview since releasing the album.
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Apr 28, 2024 |
ambrosiaforheads.com | Jake Paine
In 2001, J-Live released his debut album, The Best Part. The LP, originally intended for release at Payday/London Records, was among a group of projects halted after the label experienced a merger and distribution. “We ended up having to redo a lot of stuff. They used to call it ‘The greatest record never heard,'” J-Live recently told Ambrosia For Heads over the phone.
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Apr 19, 2024 |
ambrosiaforheads.com
Nas' New Song With DJ Premier Shows Time Is Illmatic
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Feb 24, 2024 |
ambrosiaforheads.com | Jake Paine
During the 2010s, Hip-Hop fans speculated what the future held for Slum Village. At the top of the decade, the Detroit, Michigan crew released a special album in Villa Manifesto—a collection of songs that featured kaleidoscopic contributions from the six artists who had claimed the group since its early 1990s inception. The album was a pivot point—looking to the past and honoring the future.
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Feb 15, 2024 |
ambrosiaforheads.com | Jake Paine
A quarter-century ago, Slum Village was in the process of following up their Fan-Tas-Tic(Vol. 1) debut. That underground album became a calling card for a new sound coming out of Detroit, Michigan — and three artists bringing the change. T3, J Dilla, and Baatin were in the process of following up and making good on another album worthy of its name, Fan-Tas-Tic,Volume 2. A year before Volume2, Slum supplied The Office Space soundtrack with a banger.
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