“Do That (Cashe Money)” features Chase and Kent Money over an impressively dope beat from Boi-1da, the who is pretty much responsible for Drake’s (unfortunate) success and the only humane rap-related entity in Canada right now. Kent kills. SC remains victorious.
Chase N. Cashe brags about his current success (landing beats on the Young Money album and producing the Wayne and Eminem song) over Primo’s masterwork. The second verse is new guy Kent Money, who flows quite nicely.
New Surf Club jamming. Chase N. Cashe on the beat. Once Chili realizes that a direct correlation exists between the eeriness of his voice and his music’s success, we will have an extremely interesting rapper on our hands.
The Surf Club continue to take steps toward becoming household names. Hit Boy, B. Carr, Chili Chil and Chase N. Cashe do work here over a Hit Boy beat.
If you’re not already familair with the Surf Club collective, take this opportunity to get up. With multiple tracks on the forthcoming Young Money album and work logged for Game’s next glorified production showcase, you will be hearing a lot of them soon. They have already done stuff for Diddy and Polow and are just starting to get some fringe internet attention. Chase N Cashe, Hit Boy, Chili Chil and Co. are all extremely talented both on the mic and on the boards. Cashe and Hit Boy have produced some extremely engaging beats in the past few months, with Chase’s solo instrumental album garnering some great co-signs, and Chili Chil has progressed from a Wayne derivative alien money rapper into a hard-edged, almost haunting lyricist. These guys are merging new sounds with pop sensibilities and have the potential to push the genre into new places as hit-makers… if everything works out they way it should.
I threw together a bunch of random tracks produced by different combinations of crew members with Chili Chil as the main vocal focus. There are a couple early tracks that feature Dick Dale-ish namesake borderline corn, a few radio/club hits that could have easily blown up with some exposure and a bunch of newer, more lush and complex productions. Everything is relatively progressive, no matter how limiting the canvas. I probably should have put the tracks in chronological order for development’s sake, but that would have been taxing.
The Surf Club kids continue to impress. You may recognize Chili Chil from the hook on Rich Boy’s “Top Of The World”. He sounds like a scheming basehead from an early 90s hood movie. Chase N. Cashe on the beat: Masterful. These guys are going to be major.
Here is another fine piece of production from soon-to-be super producer Chase N. Cashe. I don’t have any info on Big Bilz, but he is kinda nice with it. Such a dope beat though. Grab Chase’s spectacular instrumental album here. I can’t stop listening to “Stoopid”.
I am by no means a fan of instrumental hip hop. Perhaps I don’t lay around and nod out with some heroin often enough, but its just not for me. I do, however, enjoy the work of the Surf Kids. Chase N Cashe, Chili Chill, Hit-Boy and Co. are all great both on the mic and behind the boards. As a crew they posses tremendous potential as hit makers in the current climate. Check out a ton of their work here
Chase N. Cashe combines hard drums, laid back grooves and just enough glitch to keeps things interesting here. Considering this is the first I have heard in 09, I am going to declare LOVEnd the INSTRUMENTAL HIP HOP ALBUM OF THE YEAR. Preview a few cuts, download the album and let me know which Ethiopian xylophone album produced by Madlib’s childhood babysitter’s cousin is better…