Happy music comes in many shades, but you have to go through some grief to really appreciate it. For their latest music video Phonte Coleman…

  In the almost ten years since their debut project, “Connected,” producer Nicolay and rapper/singer Phonte Coleman have defied expectations with each endeavor.  Three albums…

  Internet musical duo The Foreign Exchange is celebrating 10 years making music together. To help commemorate their anniversary, the pair is releasing their fifth…

Muhsinah is smarter than you. Well, at least your favorite singer.  The winner of our “One Minute to Shine” contest had the beautiful audacity to name one of her recent projects Oscillations: Sine and Triangle. “I was in recording school and I wanted to be an engineer,” she says with a smile. “I was learning […]

In the 8 years since Little Brother jumped on the scene, fans have been clamoring for a solo album from one of the group’s emcees, Phonte.  In this exclusive TheUrbanDaily interview, Phonte sheds a little light on where he’s at with the project.

The Foreign Exchange‘s Phonte & Nicolay take some time off in their new video for “Authenticity,” which doesn’t feature the pair at all, save for a brief cameo from Phonte.

Phonte and Nicolay of the Foreign Exchange dropped their third album, Authenticity, this week.  In celebration of the album’s release, they have also released a three-part documentary online.

On Drake’s “Fear” the rapper/singer/actor went out of his way to shout out “Little Bruh” and “Slum Vill” leaving some to wonder what the connection was.

Phonte and Nicolay of the Foreign Exchange will release their third album, Authenticity, in October of this year.

It’s never easy standing up for anything. Just look at the debacle Talib Kweli has tangled himself in just for recording a song with Gucci Mane. It seems that rappers get labeled as “conscious” depending on what they are against more so than what they are for. In our conversation with Phonte of Little Brother […]

For many fans of Little Brother, “Hiding Place” was one of the shining moments of their critically acclaimed sophomore LP, The Minstrel Show. You had Phonte and Big Pooh teaming up with a  lyrical juggernaut like Slum Village’s Elzhi making it one of the most anticipated team-ups since Marvel Vs. Capcom.

Prior to  the release of their latest studio album, Left Back, Phonte and Big Pooh of Little Brother announced that they were breaking up as group.