Monday, September 17, 2012

ALBUM REVIEW: Ghani Gautama & Shadow – Live At The Radio Room: WPBR - We Are The Upstate.com


I’m always a little wary about live albums in general. Almost every artist worth their salt (and not worth it) has at least one grandiose live offering, which generally follows a breakout hit album, but that doesn’t mean they should. EPs are more understandable because they serve as fun treats in between recordings or give a snapshot of that period in time for the artist. Underground rappers Ghani Gautama and Shadow from Charlotte execute this perfectly as they just put out a collaborative EP recorded this past February at…The Radio Room?
Yeah, you read that right. A live recording from Greenville’s beloved music dive. Admittedly, I was skeptical coming into this release. I mean, how good could a live recording at the Radio Room be? Don’t get me wrong, We Are The Upstate practically lives at the place. I love it. The shows always look and sound great. And while I know very little about making live recordings, it didn’t seem like the most ideal environment to lay down a live record for release.
Boy, was I wrong. Live At The Radio Room: WBPR sounds fantastic. Sure, it’s not Bullet in a Bible or Live at Leeds level production quality, but everything’s pretty clear, and both artists and their interaction with the crowd can be distinctly heard.
Ghanni Gautama and Shadow both prove their abilities as live emcees, flowing effortlessly over the surprisingly audible beats. I say ‘surprisingly’ because I can’t get over how solid the recording sounds. You can tell the rappers felt completely in their element and were simply just having a great time performing, and because that comes through within these seven tracks, the EP succeeds.
If you enjoy some fun, well executed underground hip hop, use Live at The Radio Room: WBPR as a great sampler for these two rappers’ catalogue. Fans of either shouldn’t miss out on this record as it shows a real sense of community within the small, local hip hop scene that I hope continues to grow.

"Water From Turnips" Interview w/ Quanstar - June 5, 2012

By now, you all should be familiar with Quanstar. He's a friend of Straight Outta Hip Hop and in addition to an interview or two, we've also supported projects he's dropped over the past year and a half. He was also featured on the Commercial From Commercialmixtape that Hip Hop Hope Dealers and I collaborated on. After a few minutes talking about graduation (congrats to my brother who just graduated from Morehouse!) I got to ask Quanstar a few questions about his new book, Water From Turnips, and what purpose this served for him as well as his fans:


S.O. Hip Hop: The book is now out. I've had a chance to dig through it and read a bit of it, but before we get into the details of the book, what was it that made you decide to put the book out now? You mentioned almost procrastinating to put it out, so what made you finally pull the trigger?Quanstar: Just because it was done. It's honestly been written since January. We had to do a few more re-reads. We've done about eleven to twelve re-reads and once all that was done, it was time. It wasn't so much a constant procrastination as much as it was just getting it right. The original form of the book was probably only about half of what the book is now because I glossed over so many things. But then there was a blessing in disguise when my computer crashed and I lost all a form of the [original] book, it forced me to rethink how I was writing it. 

And that pretty much ties into the first chapter in the book when you describe a dream you had that eventually set you on the path you're on now in terms of musical endeavors and entrepreneurial pursuits. Essentially, just like you're computer crashing, this dream wasn't a coincidence. So, in regards to that dream, and I don't want to give too much away, but do you have any more like it that tell you what you're supposed to be aiming for next?Yeah. That particular vision was a culmination of a bunch of different dreams. I didn't want to write one chapter on twenty dreams, so I had a dream about a tunnel. I've had a dream about something else. I've had a dream about being in a tunnel. I've had a dream about certain women representing different things. I've had a dream about walking towards a light and just keep walking. So, I always have dreams and visions and certain thought processes because I'm always trying to think about the next step ahead. So, I think the dreams I have are basically a continuation of my thought process from when I'm awake. I don't want to say it's this grand vision or anything that deep, but it's just my thought process and the dreams are an extension of my daily "work, work, work" mindset.

In addition to all the hustles you have going on and this constant grind mind-state you have, you also talk about your relationship with your wife and the ups and downs you all have gone through. This chapter would probably be interesting for any career driven person, but especially men, who are chasing a dream, but trying to maintain a healthy relationship. What can people going through that get out of the book and what have you learned in dealing with that situation?I think the biggest thing is that if you're going to meet someone and pursue someone, you need to do it with someone that also has things going on. When we met, she had an E-Bay business, her own business, while still working a full-time job, just like I did. And she was making like two to three grand a week being an E-Bay seller. So, the fact that she had her own thing going on, and it was something she created herself, she understood the difference between working for yourself and just working for somebody else. When you work for yourself, the responsibility and worries and everything you have are exponentially more, when it's yours to build up or lose. I think the key to that is to find a woman that already has something else going on. So, those nights, when you're up all night, or you might have to be on the road for a week, or whatever, it's not so much of an issue. You still have to make time [for your family]. We make time at least once a week to do something. I have three kids, so you have to make time where it's just us. But the key is to a) find someone that already has something going on and can understand your focus, and b) - and this is important - the thing she's doing is separate from what you're doing. Two people in the music industry is a disaster waiting to happen. At some point, it's a conflict of interest. I would never date another artist. 

I think that's sound advice and I think it's good that people see you can have success and it doesn't have to be at the expense of your family because a lot of people get caught up in their ambitions and, unfortunately, their family almost gets lost in the shuffle.I mean, you have to prioritize. There's certain things I won't do. I don't go on the road for two, three months at a time because I have children. I'm not even going to be on the road for a month at a time because I have children. That's just my perspective and those are the things I've realized and understand there are sacrifices you have to make. But those sacrifices start with your system and that support comes from the people around you both understanding your hustle and accepting your hustle. And if they've never experienced that hustle themselves, they can't accept it.

Now I'm going to backtrack here a little bit and get back to some details of the book. I know a lot of people, especially artists, they have a co-author or they simply tell somebody their story that ends up writing it, but I have feeling you wrote this whole thing yourself.This is all me, homie. It's all me.

How long did it take you to write it?About four years. The original version took about a year, but when the computer crashed, I decided to re-write it. So, I spent another three years or so on [the published one], sent it to the publisher, and now we're here. The reason the final version took so long is because I wanted to take my time, be specific, and have points. I went through most of my life validating this, validating that, I was a sexual deviant. I talked about when I was in college what I was doing and how I couldn't see. My whole thought process, I had nothing going on, so the only way I could feel like a man was for me to womanize and womanize heavily. But I didn't really explain it in the first version, so in this final version, I traced that aspect of my life back to its origin, so people could see where it came from and how it grew. So, that's what I wanted to do. I wanted to take my time. I didn't want to inflate it. I didn't want to brag about it. I just wanted to record it, like it was. 

That sexual deviant chapter in the book is a crazy one. I think people might be caught off guard with that one. But, even in revealing all this, in the beginning of the book when you explain why you wrote the book, you say you didn't want this to be an autobiography. You do say, though, that it was important for you to unveil many parts of your life. Now that the book is finished, what do you hope people do get from this?I didn't want it to be an autobiography in any way. I had all of these ideas about how to write this book, but at the end of the day, it ended up being an autobiography because out of all those other ideas, this told the story the best. I want people to understand that it doesn't matter where you're born, or how many chances you get in life. To be frank, I f*cked off half of my life. I didn't even start thinking about get things together until I was 23. I want people to understand it's never too late. It's never too late to do the right thing, to want to be something better than what you are. It's also a matter of explaining...basically, I ain't sh*t. You know what I'm saying. I ain't sh*t. We're just all the same. I don't have money behind me, I don't have things like that. And my story, I wanted people to see, this is where I came from, this is what I did, and I'm still hustling. I basically floated through high school, flunked out of college. I did all of the things that are supposed to make you fail. If you grow up in the hood, you're supposed to fail. I'm from Compton, I'm supposed to fail. I didn't graduate with A's, I'm supposed to fail. I dropped out of college, I'm supposed to fail. I'm 23 and didn't have any money, I'm supposed to fail. I had a kid out of wedlock, I'm supposed to fail. But I didn't, and I'm not. After finishing the book, and looking at it right now, because I'm holding it in my hand, looking at the cover, that's what I want people to know. You're not supposed to fail. You're only supposed to fail, when you give up. 

I think that's always been your message. Even with The Underdog and all your music, that's always been what you've portrayed. Regardless of what the circumstances are, you've come out of it and found another way. But, now that you've put your story out there, and people will have a chance to read it and understand you better, how does it feel? I'd assume it's hard to get everything out in the form of music, but it seems like you did a lot more with this book.It feels pretty good. I wouldn't say that I got it all out there. There's a ton of things I condensed or left out because I didn't want to give twenty stories conveying the same message. But, it feels great because a lot of those stories, I never shared with anybody. I'm not the most open of people. There may be things I don't tell my wife. It might not be anything big, but I just don't talk about my childhood. There's probably four or five things in there I've never really discussed with folks. So, in a way, that was pretty therapeutic for me. It surprised a lot of people. There were things in the book that my mom never knew. My wife and her mom and other people read and were shocked. And let me say that all of the things that have happened is a testament to me, but also to my family and how I was raised. I have a really close knit, crazy, but big family that always stuck together and looked out for each other. So, I just want to take this time to say that my success or my drive as a person comes from my family. It comes from a lot of the sacrifices my family made in order for me to achieve. To get out of the hood and step my game up. A lot of this is because of my family structure, albeit sort of unorthodox. I was living in a house with four women, but they kept me on the up-and-up as an adult. Sometimes, the only thing that motivates me is the sacrifices my family has made. When I want to give up and can't figure stuff out, I think about my momma and my granny and my auntie and my wife and my kids. It makes me step my game up. 

Since you were able to write all of this down and actually see it on paper in the form of a book, have you seen any difference in your approach to how you write music? Are you more open in your music since you know these stories are out there now?It hasn't a great deal, but it has allowed me to venture off into other areas of my music and do other things with music. Now I have all these things to discuss and deal with and talk about. I wasn't ever really compelled to write about certain things before. I'm still not compelled to, but since I know that these stories are out there, I'm not as hesitant to talk about them in my music. Also, since it's out there, those stories aren't quite as close to my heart. It allows me to be a little bit more celebratory. That kinda started with The Underdog because I was starting to get that stuff out. I had the freedom to write with a free heart and that felt good. 

Well, I know people will definitely enjoy reading the book. I looking forward to getting even further into it than I already have. For most of your fans, it should lend to even more understanding of your music, but if nothing else, it's just a compelling story. Tell everybody where they can get it.It's pretty much everywhere. Barnes & Noble and barnesandnoble.com, Amazon.com, Google Books, Scribd.com, Quanstarmusic.com. It's in a bunch of places. Feel free to leave a comment. On Amazon there's been a bunch of reader reviews and it's been getting a bunch of four and five stars, tell me what you think.

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Quanstar: Momentum: as reviewed by Pedro 'DJ Complejo' Hernandez

Quanstar is the true definition of a hustler. By that I don't mean that his music brags about how much he hustles, how he always hustles, or even mentions the word "hustle." Instead, Quanstar's work ethic says everything that needs to be said about his work ethic. His name may be unfamiliar to the masses, but that has not kept the man from releasing multiple albums and EPs, music videos, and touring consistently to promote his music. His music doesn't reflect the desperate delusions of a man trying to rap for a big hit or ringtone sales, but instead conveys his love for hip-hop and his determination to make quality music. "Momentum" is the latest EP from Quanstar and delivers another small, but potent, dose of dope hip-hop. The EP's name doesn't convey much about the music contained, but reflects the fact that Quanstar wanted to release this music ASAP rather than wait to compile an album's worth of material. While the EP lacks a cohesive purpose, the individual songs overcome any thematic shortcomings. "I'm Through" is a short barrage of punch lines and positive advice that serves as an appropriate intro. "Higher Standards" is a clever proclamation of Quanstar's abilities as an emcee as he declares "higher standards, giving these niggas nosebleeds" on the hook. "On My Brain" is a reflective track where Quanstar details some of the struggles he has faced as an artist. "She Did Me Wrong" features one of the EP's dopest beats with a warm, soulful sample looped over soft piano keys. The instrumental serves as the perfect backdrop for Quanstar to reflect on young love and the problems that can come with it. "Christmas List" is the EP's strongest track as Quanstar finds a strong way to convey his sorrow: "A couple months ago Dale died in Iraq Two weeks before he was supposed to come back Married about a year, newlywed to the widow Still can't believe it so she staring out the window Never got a chance to see his daughter The only thing she'll know is a picture of her father Never learned a lesson he'd have taught her Shaking and trembling, barely even hold a glass of water Eyes swollen up, blood red, bone dry First couple of weeks only thing she did was cry Mother came down to help with the baby Only time she cool is when you rocking little Katie Thought it was right so he took another tour Pissed because she shouldn't have let him out the door Does it even ever get better than this? Wrote "bring him back" on your Christmas list And please cruel world don't look at me I'm a shell of the person that I used to be Because God don't love me, that much clear And wonder why Santa won't come around here It's "happiness" on my Christmas list And I still didn't get that wish" Presenting sorrow, sadness, and disappointment in adulthood through the concept of unfulfilled Christmas wishes is very unique and clever. The EP ends on a strong note with "I Need You," an up tempo track about perceptions with an eerie, robotic beat. Overall, "Momentum" is a dope EP from a passionate artist. That said, the last three tracks are definitely stronger than the first three. One minor gripe with the project is just the vocal quality of Quanstar's vocals on most tracks. They don't sound unprofessional at all, but do lack something in terms of mastering that make them sound at odds with the beats on some songs. Oddly enough, the distortion effect used on "I Need You" is just right to mesh his vocals with that particular song. Despite that small issue, Quanstar's passion and lyrics shine through on this EP and he gives us plenty of dopeness to hold you over for his next project. Knowing his work ethic and passion, that next project should be right around the corner. Music Vibes: 6.5 of 10 Lyric Vibes: 6.5 of 10 TOTAL Vibes: 6.5 of 10 Originally posted: October 4th, 2011 source: www.RapReviews.com

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Rapper gives poetry program a twist - Bennington Banner

RAPPER GIVES POETRY PROGRAM A TWIST

BENNINGTON - Atlanta rapper Quanstar brought a different culture to Bennington last week through written and spoken words as a guest teacher in a summer poetry class.

After two weeks of focusing on slam poetry and more traditional poetic styles in the summer program, Quanstar introduced the class to rap and asked members to write songs that flowed with musical beats. "I want them to enjoy it and do something fun, but I want them to experience the art of song writing and what goes into doing this," he said.

As a recorded emcee, as well as a publicist, songwriter and movie producer, Quanstar also gave participants in the free program an inside look at the music business, which he said is focused on money and has little concern about messages it promotes.

"Any company, but record companies specifically, since the '40s have been out for money and absolutely nothing else," Quanstar told the class. "You got the record labels telling you you've got to do music like this, because, to be perfectly honest with you, it's what sells and record labels are in it to make money. They're not in it to make social change, and they shouldn't be; they're a business."

A number of students disagreed, saying businesses have a responsibility to inspire social change as well as consumers. While the rapper from Compton, Calif., agreed with the premise, he said it's up to the artist to determine what they want to promote.

"Those are the questions as artists that we deal with - should we do this or should we do that - on a daily basis," Quanstar said.

Slam poetry and rap was chosen as the main focus of the program to draw students into a class that teaches poetry - a topic that by itself didn't draw much interest, said Robert Marine, director of summer and after-school programs for the Southwest Vermont Supervisory Union, which sponsored the four-week program through a grant.

"Get them involved"

"I want to get them involved in poetry, and I want to do more than that. I want to get them involved in expressing themselves, a way for kids to talk about things that interest them or bother them, and through slam, that's what it's all about," Marine said. "This is a great way for youth to talk about the things that bother them in their life or things they want to improve ... I think that slam poetry, hip-hop and rap give them an avenue where they feel comfortable expressing their ideas and who they are and finding their individuality and personality."

Individuality is part of the focus of slam poetry and hip-hop, said the program's first instructor Kiah Morris, who was involved with a group that promotes urban arts and culture to youth in Chicago called Kuumba Lynx before moving to Bennington.

Through the program, Morris said he tried getting students to expand their writing comfort zone and their confidence.

"I hope they get not only a confidence of how they can use their voice, but also that they see themselves as poetic artists and learn that their voice is valued," she said.

The second week was led by Jessica Marine, Robert Marine's daughter, who focused on poetic literature and structure.

This week, published poet Clara Rose, of Brattleboro, is teaching the class, which is held at Southern Vermont College.

Unlike many Mosaic programs, the poetry session has also been available to the community as a whole in addition to students.

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Quanstar 4/11 reviewed by Patrick Taylor

When Radiohead released "In Rainbows" as a pay-what-you-want download in 2007, people lauded it as the future of the record industry. Who needs labels when artists can reach the fans directly, and Radiohead's success seemed like proof that this was a viable business model. What people forgot was that Radiohead are one of the world's most popular bands, and the reason for their popularity has at least something to do with the close to two decades of major label support for the band. Ask the struggling indie artist with an album on iTunes how many copies they've sold, and they'll tell you that it isn't so easy when you don't have years of a major label's advertising budget behind you. The other thing the indie artist will tell you is that doing it yourself is a hell of a lot of work. Quanstar, who has been releasing his own material and booking his own shows for a few years now, loves the freedom of being an indie artist, but acknowledges that it takes a lot of hustle to get yourself heard.

His new pay-what-you-want EP "4/11" might make less of an impact on the market than "In Rainbows" did, but it's not for lack of trying. The Compton MC has put out several albums, mixtapes, live recordings, and a documentary, all by himself. This site was impressed by last year's "The Underdog" and Quanstar doesn't disappoint with this follow up.

He starts off by personifying cocaine on "Yayo," showing the destruction the drug has caused:

"Most of my soldiers were dead or in jail
Fighting for my attention to get them out of this hell
Prisoners in their own homes
Cities turned into war zones
Women sell their babies so with me they'll be alone, man
Fuck the community let me get what's due
And you'll be good for a little while 'til I'm through with you too"

"Groove With You" starts with Quanstar rapping "Let me dispel a few myths/Most rappers you meet ain't really got shit." He goes on to describe the grind of being an indie rapper, but keeps it on the positive rather than complaining. After all, if he didn't like what he was doing, he wouldn't spend so much time doing it.

"Come Back To Us" is a cautionary tale about success. Quanstar describes a rapper being ruined by a shitty label deal and the party lifestyle, a football player being ruined by steriods, and a whiz kid stockbroker being ruined by the allure of wealth. "Don't fly too fast/you might run out of gas hit the earth with a crash" raps Quanstar, sounding like the wise older brother. It's a role he takes on for much of the album. His flow is steady and unhurried, and his rhymes offer lessons about making it in the industry and admissions of his own shortcomings as a husband.

Quanstar has grown man beats to go with his grown man rhymes. Most of the songs sample 80s quiet storm R&B. Anita Baker even gets a feature on "What's Wrong." That may sound cheesy, but the tracks are flipped just enough to make them work, and the result is the perfect sound for cruising. Quanstar mixes it up on a few tracks, getting screwed and chopped on "Sure You Want It," and coming harder on "Underground Rap Star" featuring Tea Bag Da Herbalist (good rapper, terrible name).

"4/11" is a solid collection of grownup rap. While its low-key vibe and quiet storm samples don't make for the most dynamic music, it's worth a trip to Quanstar Music to give it a listen. If you like what you hear, give the man a few dollars for the download: he works hard enough for it.

Music Vibes: 7 of 10 Lyric Vibes: 7 of 10 TOTAL Vibes: 7 of 10

Originally posted: April 19th, 2011
source: www.RapReviews.com

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Quanstar: The Underdog: as reviewd by Steve "Flash" Juon

"The only way to get it is to go out and earn it
There's no turnin back cause the bridges are burnin
I used to want a manager but figured they useless
I fucked with a label but don't like how they do shit
The videos on cable fuckin cost too much
And mainstream radio is whack as fuck
Now cats back trackin that path, we up
See the folks that ignored me now ask whassup
Now they couldn't try to sign a nigga fast enough
At the start, same cats that laughed at us"

Vowing that he's "the greatest fucking emcee to never be signed," Quanstar is back with his fourth volume of unsigned music. Regrettably I missed the first three and only recently got introduced to his music, but the self-titled single off his new "Underdog" album drifted into my inbox and impressed me enough to get a spin on my weekly podcast. It's amazing how many talented rappers are putting their albums straight out to the public, for free or for a small donation fee, and just bypassing the conventional "get a deal, record an album and get it into stores nationwide" model altogether - but I digress. Suffice it to say Quan's rap on the above intro and on that single suggest a polished rapper that 10-15 years ago would have been hungrily snapped up by an indie imprint until bid on by a major label. Q found an ideal analogy for his career in the NFL:

"I'm the underdog y'all, Kurt Warner of rap
Payroll ain't even close to the salary cap!
Maybe I'm wantin too much, you shouldn't bother me
Do it my way, still make a million dollars
While most cats that are noted for playin this label game
After everybody's cut, our bank accounts look the same
So niggaz get fame, and people call they name in the mall
That's just more folks to know how you fall
See if I'MA go down I'ma GO givin my all
Rockin a couple hundred people yellin YES YES Y'ALL"

The rapper who represents A-T-L is very humble and prone to crack self-effacing jokes about his music at all times, noting on "Mr. Blue Collar" that he'll be standing in the bread line if you're not buying his rhymes. The funny thing is that he doesn't really need to be humble when you look at his bio: he's been putting out music since 2003, has toured with Black Sheep, been featured on the Vans Warped Tour and even written for TV. Perhaps he could be accused of exaggeration when he describes himself as "the hardest working man in hip-hop to never be signed," but if the resume is everything it seems to be he's definitely not a lazy cat. In fact Quan is hustling so hard that he linked up with Akil the MC (formerly of Jurassic 5) to do music, and one of those songs wound up on this album: "Heart it All Before."

Akil: "Somebody told me hell with this rap shit, nigga let the mac spit
Chop it up and package it, flip it like a mattress
You'll never make a platinum hit, won't make a classic
You ain't Jeezy, you need to quit and sell cannabis
Bang the hood, really you ain't that good
If you was, then why ain't you signed with Suge?
You seem them other niggaz quit, they wasn't feelin yo' shit
Broke and went solo now who you fuckin with?
Those you thought was true or really close to you
I seen interviews and they ain't even mention you dude
The homies wouldn't do you like that
Even though we might scrap and pull straps, niggaz still got'cha back"

Quan: "Get my kids put my hands on they ears
Trained them they're not to listen to the shit that they hear
Because if you really want it, you can get it if you wish
Just step to the plate and swing at the pitch
And even if you miss man swing again
One day you gonna hit it and begin to win
Somebody told me yo Quan, how dare you
Give kids hopes of something that's there too
I told 'em that it's simple man, I gotta give 'em good
Let 'em know that they more than the Boyz N the Hood
Not that bein a boy in the hood is bad
But when a boy's still trapped in the hood it's sad
And rather than be in the projects cookin coke like a chemist
Get a job with Coke, work in the project as a chemist"

I know you're skeptical about yet another new rapper claiming to be great but unsigned because there's anywhere from tens of thousands to millions who all think they're the shit, don't have a deal and giving away their free album or mixtape online. If that's a given, then consider how much BETTER Quanstar has to be than most of them to have actually broken through the pack. Even his guest stars stand out amongst most albums you'll download this year - Ghani Gautama makes a funny cameo on "Caffeine Hustlaz" as both men rap about pushing latte to make their pay. "Bank" featuring Juicy the Emissary has a loping clip clop beat backdrop that sets up JTE perfectly, as he sounds like a country rap version of Eminem. "It's funny right? But I'm hardly laughing." No offense Juicy, you're nice. Nato Caliph also rocks on "Revolution."

As noted earlier though, Quan believes in the swing, miss and swing again philosophy. While "Summertime" in Atlanta is undoubtedly as nice as described in rhymes, it's not impressive musically and suffers by comparison to the first hip-hop classic to rock that title. "American Dreams" is another song that needed more bump in the lab. "Relax" plays off a classic track by Tribe but it's over too early at only 1:52. I mean no disrespect to his seeds either but I don't need two skits mixed into the album of him goofing around or play-rapping along to old Vanilla Ice hits with daddy. It's worthwhile to cut Quan some slack for the tracks that don't work though, because the ones that do work more than make up for it. He's working hard to impress you, and giving you the chance to preview his album for free and then name your own price to download it. Based on what I'm hearing anything between $7-$15 would be fair, especially given it's arguably twice as good as some rappers who ARE signed and totally suck. Quan's got bill paying skills. His time in the bread line will be short.

Music Vibes: 6.5 of 10 Lyric Vibes: 7.5 of 10 TOTAL Vibes: 7 of 10

See the review here

Tuesday, August 3, 2010

Review of "The Underdog" by Angie "The Hip Hop Angel" Griffin

As I listen to the abstract beats and refined rhyme of Quanstar in his latest debut, "The Underdog," the first thing that comes to mind is "Grown Folks" Hip Hop music. This new age, independent sound is soulful. The passion that this artist delivers is clear and evident; most noticeable when you hear each song like Caffeine Hustlaz, Blame, Cleansing, and Revolution. Inclusions of QuanStar's 9-5 J.O.B, spiritual enlightened experiences, family life, societies perception in regards to rap music, and so much more flow through this album. The array of subject matter makes this one well balanced and full of soul. Dope lyrics and sound from the heart...
Kudos to Quanstar and "The Underdog."