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Artist
With AfroPhysics there's no box. No tracks. No train. They've taken hip hop and music as a whole back to its roots. Something the mainstream industry are so keen to dissolve. Music when it was more than something to float aimlessly around the room and occasionally brush against our minds and hearts but completely ignoring our souls. AfroPhysics equal freedom. The Truthsayers EP provides a collection of tapestries, oil paintings, graffiti and sculptures; presenting art in its most versatile, free flowing hiphopalicious form. Altogether creating a magnum opus. The mintest thing about AfroPhysics is that they create no separation between music and life. Between stage and floor. Performers and audience. Beats and bus stops. As heard in 'School Days Part 2', which has an addictively personal flow to it. Aiwan's meticulous deliverance will make many of today’s gangster rappers bow their heads in shame. For two reasons, one, because she is fully aware that what she says into the mike comes out of the speakers, and two, because she makes us feel the need to ask these other spengs - why the hell do you feel the need to shout for? Ain't you got a mike mate?! The beats and lyrics diffuse perfectly and purposefully into each other with no pre-mediation. As a decade strong drummer I'ma boldly raise my sticks, and do you know what? Yeh. My bass drum too. Above my head... I’ma raise ‘em and say that this is the some of the most effortlessly enticing drumming of this century. These beats