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Dios Negasi + Tone Fultz drop “What It Is” single ft. Skrillz Dior

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When the “Iron City” links up with Los Angeles no weak emcees are safe!  Dropping today is Iron Angeles, the eleven track LP that combines Reagan Era Records lynchpin Dios Negasi on rhymes with production from Pittsburgh’s Tone Fultz.  First single “What It Is” (also featuring a verse from Reagan Era’s Skrillz Dior) is hard-as-nails, head-nodding boom-bap greatness.  As the producer states “though the Steel City is a cloudy and dark place and Los Angeles is known for its sunny weather, the two have a long history of creating legendary music together including Mel-Man and Sam Sneed’s work with Dr. Dre and Bud’Da’s producing ‘Bow Down’ for Westside Connection.”  This extends to the album voice-over which makes the project feel like a long-lost blaxploitation action flick of the grimiest proportions.

Listen to “What It Is” ft. Skrillz Dior: https://youtu.be/VYSWIfN-h9E?si=2AywABT93tQ2qRrX

While Dios Negasi is known for producing his own tracks (including the recent single “Domingre Gang” featuring Young Zee) and Tone Fultz also rocks the mic in his alter-ego Messiah Of Madness, both artists stick to one role here.  As Tone relates, “Dios and I have been like brothers over the past few years.  I come to Los Angeles regularly to dig records, and he mentioned he was slowing down on production to focus more on rhyming.  Meanwhile I was in a producer zone so I started cooking up beats specifically for this project.  I came to visit when a bunch of tracks and as we cooked up in the studio, members of Reagan Era came through and it was a totally organic process.”

More Info: https://www.instagram.com/diosnegasi/

https://www.instagram.com/messiah_of_madness

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Suki Summer’s ‘LOVESICK AND SICK OF LOVE’ is a Cinematic Coming-of-Age Masterpiece

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Indie-pop newcomer Suki Summer may be a fresh face, but her new EP, LOVESICK AND SICK OF LOVE, proves she’s got a veteran’s soul. Across six emotionally layered tracks, Suki unveils her most intimate and refined work yet—a sonic diary chronicling the highs and heartbreaks of modern love. With dreamy production and searing lyrics, this EP doesn’t just whisper its pain; it commands attention.

From the sugar-rush romance of “Summer Crush” to the tear-stained farewell in “outro (it’s nvr bye it’s jus c ya l8r),” Suki crafts a narrative that feels both personal and cinematic. Every track is a chapter in the emotional evolution of a young woman learning to love, lose, and find herself again. Her vocals shimmer with a quiet confidence, often drenched in nostalgia yet pulsing with clarity.

The title track, “LOVESICK AND SICK OF LOVE,” marks a pivotal moment in the EP—a bold declaration of emotional exhaustion with dating culture. “It’s about the burnout of constantly opening yourself up just to be misunderstood or ghosted,” Suki explains. The raw honesty hits hard, resonating with anyone who’s swiped, waited, and walked away empty.

What elevates Suki’s debut is her ability to balance soft melancholy with sharp insight. Fans of Clairo, Gracie Abrams, and Mazzy Star will feel right at home, yet Suki’s poetic edge and immersive production carve a new lane entirely. Each song feels like a vignette from a beautifully tragic indie film.

With LOVESICK AND SICK OF LOVE, Suki Summer doesn’t just join the indie-pop conversation—she shifts it. Vulnerable, nuanced, and breathtakingly real, this EP signals the arrival of a bold new voice ready to reshape the genre from the inside out.

INSTAGRAM | TIKTOK | SPOTIFY

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