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5 Tools I Use Daily to Keep the Legacy Alive in 2025

5 Tools I Use Daily to Keep the Legacy Alive in 2025

Being an MC today ain’t just about storming the stage and shutting down the rave — it’s about running a full creative operation. Between studio sessions, spitting bars live in clubs, social media madness, and staying fit, I’ve got a process i use.

Here are the five essentials I use to stay sharp, stay consistent, and keep the VIBE ALIVE!! :


1. 🎤 Voice Recorder App – The New Rhyming Notepad

Back in the day, I would write bars on the back of take-away menu’s, notepads and scrap paper. Now? The voice recorder app on my phone is my notebook. Whether I’m in the back of an Uber after a gig or sitting on the toilet, if a bar hits me, boom — I capture it instantly.


2. 🤖 AI Transcription – From Freestyle to First Draft

Freestyles i spit into the phone are instantly converted into text—-a massive time saver!


3. 🎚️ Logic Pro – The Lab Where the Magic Happens

Logic is where i lay down the verses and the Beats. Whether I’m dropping a full UK garage anthem or a gritty freestyle, Logic keeps it tight. It’s the bridge between raw idea and finished record.


4. 📱 Phone Camera – Lights, Camera, Legacy

Forget fancy gear. The camera on my phone is the workhorse of this whole campaign. IG Reels, TikTok, YouTube Shorts — the streets don’t wait for slow moving editors, they want content now. I keep it moving and you’ll see me recording straight after a gig to get that immediate fan reaction.
So whether I’m spitting acapella in a club car park at 4 AM or dropping gems in the studio, my phone catches it all. Real, raw, unfiltered — just how it should be.


5. 🎬 Final Cut Pro – Where It All Comes Together

After all the chaos of recording, filming, and capturing vibes, Final Cut Pro is where I stitch the madness into magic. It’s the glue that makes my YouTube Shorts sharp, my Reels punchy, and my long-form videos smooth.
It’s like DJing your visuals — cut, blend, transition, drop.


“The tools might be different in 2025, but the energy’s the same: raw bars, heavy beats, and a mission to keep the legacy alive.”


Wrapping It Up

So yeah, my daily toolkit is Ruff Rugged and RAW! — it’s a phone, an app, some AI backup, Logic in the lab, and Final Cut for the finish. Simple, powerful, effective.
The hustle hasn’t changed — only the tools. From pirate radio to platinum records, the mission remains: keep the energy raw, keep the crowd moving, and keep writing history.

Peace…

K

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Kamanchi Sly: Legacy Meets the Algorithm “How i use AI in music”

In the late ‘80s and early ‘90s, Kamanchi Sly  — carved his place in Hip Hop with a militant precision, sharp lyricism, and that unmistakable firepower. Back then, the tools were turntables, microphones, and a relentless work ethic. Fast forward to 2025, and while the energy is still raw, the toolkit has a new member: Artificial Intelligence.

Now, before you imagine robots in hoodies spitting sixteen bars, let’s clear something up. AI isn’t replacing Kamanchi Sly — it’s helping him get sharper. Recently, he’s been using AI to take his songs — those fierce verses that once ripped through radio static — and translate them from raw audio into text. Think of it as turning sonic lightning into something you can read and recite yourself.

This isn’t about nostalgia — it’s about evolution. Hip hop has always been about using the tools at hand. In the Bronx it was turntables. In London, it was pirate stations  bussing a a track on friday and by saturday the sampler was loaded up with crazy loops building  mad firing tracks to flow to. Today, it’s algorithms and apps. By turning verses into text, Kamanchi can archive, remix, and even build bridges between the golden era flow and new tech-driven creativity. It’s preservation and reinvention rolled into one.

At the heart of it, the message is simple: the legacy continues. The fire from the Kamanchi Sly hasn’t dimmed — it’s just been digitized, optimized, and occasionally spell-checked by a confused robot. And in a world where culture risks being flattened by automation, Kamanchi proves once again that the human voice — raw, rhythmic, rebellious — still leads.

Stay with the Rhyme writer….The Legacy Continues…

PEACE K

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MC DUKE UK RAP LEGEND !

#mcduke #ukhiphop #ukrap #ukvusarap
Originally a model and dancer, Duke began his music career at a DMC World Championships after show party, where the winner of the MC battle competition got on stage and boasted that he would beat any rapper who challenged him. Duke climbed on stage to take the challenge, and emerged victorious. The battle was witnessed by Derek Boland, who was acting as an A&R man for Music of Life records. He quickly arranged a meeting between Duke and Simon Harris, the head of the record label, where instead of bringing a demo tape, Duke rapped live in Harris’ office. Harris agreed to sign him.
Duke debuted with the track “Jus-Dis” on the compilation album Hard as Hell (Music of Life, 1987)- an album which also included Overlord X’s first track before he was later signed by Mango Records: in later years, Duke and X would develop a grudge that led to both producing music belittling each other. In 1988, Duke was support to Salt-N-Pepa on their UK tour.
A series of singles followed, with Duke finally pairing with longtime partner DJ Leader One on the single “Throw Your Hands in the Air” (Music of Life, 1989) and adding his name to the sleeve with Duke right up to their reincarnation as IC3 for the EPs Excalibur (Shut Up and Dance, 1992).
Duke and Leader One’s first album, Organised Rhyme (Music of Life, 1989),[6] was heavily featured on Music of Life’s 1989 Hustlers Convention album. It contained their most famous single, “I’m Riffin’ (English Rasta)” (Music of Life, 1989).[6] The single was popular amongst hip hop fans, and received airplay and often crops up on compilation albums.
More singles followed, as well as the follow-up album Return of the Dread-I (Music of Life, 1991),[6] but Duke parted company with Music of Life. Following this, he guested on other artists’ tracks, such as Phat Skillz’ “Dress Like Your Enemy”/”Phat Skillz” (Effect, 1992), before moving to the Shut Up and Dance record label for the IC3 project.
In the 1990s, he linked up with the Suburban Base record label to put out breakbeat and jungle tracks on his own record label Hard Disk.
An album for Shut Up and Dance never materialised, but Duke continued to guest on other artist’s tunes, such as Lisa Pin-Up, DJ Elvira & DJ Modelle’s “Another Jam” (Rock Hard Recordings, 2000). Following this, Duke disappeared from the limelight, although his track “I’m Riffin’ (English Rasta)” was sampled for C90’s dance hit “Miracle Maker (I’m Riffin)” (Twenty-Three Seven Recordings, 2001).
In 2007, he also appeared in UK hip hop artist Charlie Sloth’s song, “Can’t Forget About UK”. The song was a tribute to pioneering rappers from the UK.
Duke usually appeared at live events and in videos with his backing dancers Billy Boy and Seeker. Both featured on the front cover of the Organised Rhyme album.

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Dj Derek B UK Raps first superstar 1987! #derekb #ukrap ukhiphop

#derekb #ukrap ukhiphop #ukvusarap

Dj Derek B UK Raps first superstar 1987! Born in Hammersmith, London, to Trinidadian nurse Jenny Boland, he was raised in Woodford. He attended Churchfields Junior School. When he was fifteen years old, he began DJing in a mobile unit around London, before joining local pirate radio stations such as Kiss FM and LWR and finally starting his own station, WBLS (not to be confused with the radio station of the same name in New York City).

He joined Simon Harris’ Music of Life record label, as the closest thing they had to an A&R man. When a planned compilation of US hip hop called Def Beats 1 (Music of Life, 1986) ran short of tracks, Boland stepped in to record a track called “Rock the Beat”. He co-produced the track with Harris, rapped on it under the pseudonym EZQ, and also did his own deejaying under the name “Derek B”. “Rock the Beat” (Music of Life, 1987) was released as a single, and was followed by three more – the most successful of which were “Goodgroove” (Music of Life, 1988), and “Bad Young Brother”, both of which reached No. 16 in the UK Singles Chart.[3] Derek B’s third and final UK chart entry was “We’ve Got the Juice”, which peaked at No. 56.

Derek B was the first UK rapper to achieve pop success, appearing on BBC Television’s Top of the Pops at a time when the only other rappers who had appeared were Break Machine and Doug E. Fresh. He received criticism for rapping under an assumed American accent, something which was popular in the early days of British hip-hop, but later abandoned by some artists. Following his chart success, Derek B was signed up to Rush Artist Management and released singles and the album, Bullet from a Gun (Tuff Audio, 1988). Derek B was also successful as a record producer and remixer, working with the Cookie Crew, Thrashpack, and Eric B and Rakim In 1988, he also helped to write the Liverpool F.C. anthem, “Anfield Rap”.

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Liam Howlett from Prodigy is a Bboy from HiPHop culture! #liamhowlett #prodigygroup

Liam Howlett from Prodigy is a Bboy from HiPHop culture! Liam Paul Paris Howlett was born on 21 August 1971 in Braintree, Essex, England. Howlett was trained in classical piano (from childhood). At the age of 14, he mixed songs recorded from the radio using the pause button on his cassette player. He was first influenced by hip hop music and culture when he began to attend school at Alec Hunter High School in Braintree. He learned breakdancing alongside his crew called the Pure City Breakers, and DJed in his first band Cut 2 Kill. After a fight at a gig in support of the band, Liam left Cut 2 Kill and started to write his own music.

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Goldie is a legend in Hiphop and Jungle

#goldieartist #graffitiart #hiphop #drumandbass #junglemusic

Goldie is a legend in Hiphop and Jungle who started out as a bboy and graffiti writer before creating his drum and bass label Metalheadz. Born in Walsall, England, but raised in Wolverhampton, Goldie is of Jamaican and Scottish heritage. Goldie was a member of the breakdance crew Westside, based in the Whitmore Reans and Heath Town areas of Wolverhampton, in the 1980s. He later joined a breakdance crew called the Birmingham Bboys, and made his name as a graffiti artist in the West Midlands. His artwork around Birmingham and Wolverhampton was featured heavily in Dick Fontaine’s documentary Bombin’. He is mentioned for his graffiti in the book Spraycan Art by Henry Chalfant and James Prigoff, which contains several examples of his art. He moved to the United States owing to graffiti projects, and also started selling grills (gold teeth jewellery) in New York and Miami; he continued this business after his return to the UK in 1988. His nickname stems from “Goldielocks”, an earlier nickname given to him during his Bboys days and subsequently shortened when he no longer wore dreadlocks.