Gangstagrass Release Infectious Single "Obligatory Braggadocio" with Music Video Today
GANGSTAGRASS
— BLUEGRASS AND HIP-HOP GROUP —
RELEASE infectious SINGLE
“obliGATORY BRAGGADOCIO”
WITH OFFICIAL MUSIC VIDEO
FORTHCOMING 10-TRACK ALBUM THE BLACKEST THING ON THE MENU DUE OUT FRIDAY, JUNE 14 VIA RENCH AUDIO
“This Is the Music America Needs” – Farah Stockman, The New York Times, August 5, 2023
NASHVILLE, TN (May 10, 2024) — Today, Gangstagrass — trailblazers in a distinct musical genre of their own design — deliver “Obligatory Braggadocio,” the infectious fourth single off their forthcoming 10-track album, The Blackest Thing on the Menu.
Stream “Obligatory Braggadocio” HERE. Pre-order The Blackest Thing on the Menu HERE.
Glide Magazine exclusively revealed the new track, praising, “Gangstagrass have solidified their status… through sharp musical chops and even more impressive hip-hop flows… their skills are strong enough to appeal to fans of all the genres they cover, making them a true melting pot of a group.”
Accompanied by a music video filmed in rural Virginia, the track can be described as a “country-bro banger,” and encapsulates the band’s signature blend of genres with precision and flair. Driven by powerful guitar rhythms that lay the groundwork for the MCs’ verses, the track features intense beats that complement the assertive lyrics, which are all about flexing their bragging rights — with imagery of big wheels on oversized trucks to playfully display their swagger.
Watch the “Obligatory Braggadocio” music video below:
Gangstagrass has been praised in a wide variety of leading publications including The New York Times, Forbes, Rolling Stone, NPR, Vice, HipHopDX, and The Wall Street Journal. With more than a decade of shattering barriers and global touring, this rebellious collective has achieved unparalleled success in crafting an innovative sound rooted in historically significant heritage.
Set for release on June 14, The Blackest Thing on the Menu released via Rench Audio marks the band’s seventh full-length album. It embodies the dynamic fusion of bluegrass and hip-hop that Gangstagrass is known to inject into their music, exploring the foundational elements of both genres with zest and flavor.
The third single off the album — “Up High Do or Die” — showcases melodies infused with groove, crisp MC flow, and captivating bluegrass instrumentals. The anthem cleverly interpolates elements from “Jerusalem Ridge,” carrying a co-write with Bill Monroe, the “Father of Bluegrass.” Rench, the band’s founder and producer, describes it as an “uprising jam that gets your blood pumping, barreling at you like a comet.” This infectious energy permeates the entire song, making it impossible not to move along with Gangstagrass.
Watch the “Up High Do or Die” music video below:
The album’s sophomore single — “Good at Being Bad” — was released alongside the album announcement on March 1. Co-produced by the GRAMMY-Award winning Lawrence “Boo” Mitchell and recorded at the legendary Royal Studios in Memphis, TN, the track, with that sexy mandolin, dynamic production, and energetic vocals, seamlessly blends funk with Gangstagrass’s distinctive fusion of bluegrass and hip-hop.
Watch the “Good at Being Bad” music video below:
On February 2, the lead single from the album made its debut on Bluegrass Today. Titled “The Only Way Out Is Through,” the track features Jerry Douglas, a 15-time GRAMMY winner and three-time CMA “Musician of the Year” recipient. The accompanying music video, directed by TOUGH DUMPLIN & MZ.ICAR and polished with post-production by Someplace Called Brooklyn, had its exclusive premiere via The Bluegrass Situation. Watch the official music video HERE.
The conception of the album’s title came about last year while the band was eating dinner at a “blues-themed restaurant in my hometown,” MC and vocalist Dolio the Sleuth explains. “There was a Juneteenth-themed menu that had a bunch of ‘blackened’ spicy items. One of us asked the server for ‘the blackest thing on the menu,’ and it turned out to be blackened shrimp and cheese grits… which, of course, we all ordered.”
Brought up again while on the road a few months later, “That ‘eureka’ look struck over all of our faces, the rain stopped, and I kid you not, TWO rainbows appeared in the sky,” Dolio continues. “We then had no choice but to acknowledge that the heavens were blessing the moment that the title appeared.”
As time passed, the title acquired an entirely new significance, “especially at this moment of conversation about race and country music, after we have played so many bluegrass and folk festivals where the Black influence on country music was not represented except by us,” Rench details. “We were trying to find an album title for a while, to the point where we were really throwing in all kinds of funny ideas, and this one seemed funny for being so brash at first, we were in the tour van laughing. But then we stopped laughing and it sunk in how appropriate it is.”
Dolio concludes, “We recognized that when we’re at festivals we are indeed the spiciest thing on the menu, the one with the most intense flavor. This album is bringing the heat, the spice, the flavor and the down-home cookin’ all in one.”
THE BLACKEST THING ON THE MENU TRACK LISTING:
“The Only Way Out Is Through”
“Good at Being Bad”
“Up High Do or Die”
“Gone Gone”
“Mother”
“Obligatory Braggadocio”
“Avenue Boy”
“Palette”
“It’s Alive”
“Sankofa”
Gangstagrass is set to hit the road this month with shows on May 16 in Roanoke, VA at The Grandin Theatre, May 19 in Bloomington, IL at the Bloomington Center for the Performing Arts, and May 20 in Lexington, KY at Manchester Music Hall. The ALBUM RELEASE PARTY will be in Washington DC on June 11. For a complete list of upcoming Gangstagrass shows, visit their website HERE.
Furthermore, as part of a busy festival season, Gangstagrass will take center stage as the Friday headliners for three major international festivals: the Montelago Celtic Festival in Italy on August 2, returning to the USA for the Philadelphia Folk Festival on August 16, where they will be leading a workshop spotlighting the Jim Crow-era origins of American music genres, then back across the pond for UK’s Shrewsbury Folk Festival on August 23.
Above all, Gangstagrass emphasizes the value of education, frequently conducting workshops for K-12, college students, and adults of diverse backgrounds. Whether through engaging Q&A sessions, historical lessons, or spontaneous music tutorials, the group staunchly advocates for imparting well-rounded knowledge to everyone.
Fans can now text the band at (+1) 504-224-7700 – send them your weirdest text message or a fun fact or just say hi, and they’ll read it!
ABOUT GANGSTAGRASS:
Conceived as a studio endeavor 15 years ago by Rench, a Brooklyn-based producer handling vocals, guitar, and beats, Gangstagrass has evolved into a vibrant and improvisational band, forging camaraderie from the most unexpected of origins. The group harmonizes the unwavering array of skills from Rench, R-SON the Voice of Reason (MC), and Dolio the Sleuth (MC, Vocals), in addition to featuring other brilliant instrumentalists, most recently Dan “Danjo” Whitener (Banjo, Vocals), and B.E. Farrow (Fiddle, Vocals). With roots across the country, the ensemble has skillfully blended the traditional sounds of fiddles and banjos with contemporary hip-hop beats. This unique synergy and creative innovation have propelled the band to worldwide success. As the pioneers who made history as the first-ever band to bring real hip-hop MCs to the #1 spot on the Billboard Bluegrass Chart, Gangstagrass is well-acquainted with challenging norms. Their groundbreaking work led to them receiving UNESCO’s “International Innovator” award. Particularly noteworthy is their creation of the iconic “Long Hard Times to Come” — which served as the opening theme song for every episode of the hit FX show Justified — earning Gangstagrass a 2010 Primetime Emmy nomination in the “Outstanding Original Main Title Theme Music” category. The group also saw recognition on America’s Got Talent in 2021, as judge Howie Mandel praised Gangstagrass as “the recipe that America has been looking for until now,” ultimately reaching the quarter-finals. Their educational outreach and the vast diversity of people in their live audiences all dancing together garnered Gangstagrass The New York Times headline “This Is the Music America Needs.”
GANGSTAGRASS ONLINE:
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