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Sam Krats, Artifacts & “Emcees Recognise”: New Jersey Hip-Hop Still Speaks Loud

  • Writer: Karev
    Karev
  • 24 minutes ago
  • 4 min read
The Artifacts are BACK!!!
The Artifacts are BACK!!!


There are records that come out, and then there are records that remind you why Hip-Hop still matters. Sam Krats’ “Emcees Recognise,” featuring Artifacts — El Da Sensei and the late, great Tame One — is one of those records. It does not beg for attention. It does not chase what is trending. It does not try to dress itself up as something it is not. This is Hip-Hop made for people who understand that the microphone is still a responsibility.


Taken from Sam Krats’ double album Culture, “Emcees Recognise” brings that classic boom-bap feeling back to the front. The drums hit. The texture feels dusty in the right way. The energy is raw, but controlled. The production gives the emcees room to breathe, and that is important because when you have Artifacts on a track, you do not need gimmicks. You need space for the bars to work.


For New Jersey Hip-Hop, Artifacts is not just a name. Artifacts is part of the foundation.

El Da Sensei and Tame One gave the culture a sound that represented Newark, graffiti, underground Hip-Hop, and true emcee skill. They came from an era when style mattered. Delivery mattered. Breath control mattered. Having your own voice mattered. You could not just rap over a beat and call yourself great. You had to prove it.

That is what “Emcees Recognise” feels like. It feels like proof.


El Da Sensei comes through with the sharpness people expect from him. His voice carries experience, but it does not sound tired. It sounds seasoned. There is a difference. He knows how to ride the beat without wasting words, and that is something a lot of newer artists should study. He does not have to overperform because his presence is already felt. Then there is Tame One.


Rest in peace to one of Brick City’s true originals.

Hearing Tame One on a record like this hits different now. It is not just nostalgia. It is legacy. Tame had a voice and cadence that could not be copied. He had that street art energy in his rhymes, like every bar had paint on it. He was rugged, clever, unpredictable, and honest in a way that made him stand out. When his voice comes through the track, it reminds you that real artists do not disappear. Their work keeps speaking. That is why this song matters.


“Emcees Recognise” is not just a song title. It is a statement. Real emcees recognize other real emcees. Real producers recognize what voices belong on their beats. Real Hip-Hop listeners recognize when something is made with respect for the culture.


Sam Krats deserves credit here because he understands the assignment. He is not just borrowing a ’90s sound to make something feel old. He is building a bridge. His production connects the feeling of classic Hip-Hop with the present moment. It gives listeners who grew up on records like this something to appreciate, while also giving younger listeners a chance to hear what emceeing is supposed to sound like when the craft is respected.


That is what Culture seems to be about. Not just beats. Not just features. Not just names on a tracklist. Culture is connection. Culture is memory. Culture is the reason a producer from the UK can connect with New Jersey legends and the music still makes sense. Hip-Hop has always traveled. The sound started in the Bronx, but the spirit moved through Newark, Jersey City, Queens, Brooklyn, Philly, London, Bristol, Tokyo, Paris, Toronto, and everywhere else people picked up the mic and told the truth.


This is why Hip-Hop cannot be reduced to algorithms, playlists, and quick numbers. A record like “Emcees Recognise” is not disposable content. It is a reminder that the culture has roots. It has elders. It has students. It has builders. It has people who still care about the difference between rapping and emceeing.


There is a big difference.


Rapping can be entertainment. Emceeing is command. Emceeing is how you move a crowd, sharpen a thought, tell a story, defend your name, and leave something behind. Artifacts came from that school. That is why their music still carries weight.


For New Jersey, this song should be celebrated. We talk a lot about New York when we talk about Hip-Hop history, and rightfully so, but New Jersey has always carried its own flame. Newark especially has produced voices with grit, intelligence, humor, pain, and originality. Artifacts helped make sure Brick City had a place in the underground Hip-Hop conversation, and their influence still reaches artists today.


“Emcees Recognise” is another chapter in that story. The music video gives the record another life because visuals matter. They help people enter the song. They help people feel the moment. For a track like this, the video is not just promotion. It is documentation. It gives fans a reason to stop, listen, remember, and share. That is what Heritage Hip-Hop is built for.


We do not just cover music because it is new. We cover music because it has meaning. We cover artists because their work deserves to be found, heard, studied, and respected. “Emcees Recognise” is the kind of record that reminds us why independent Hip-Hop coverage is still needed. Mainstream platforms may miss moments like this, but the culture cannot afford to.


Sam Krats’ Culture is available now on Bandcamp in vinyl, CD, cassette, and digital formats. For collectors, that matters. For listeners, that matters. For people who still believe music should be owned, supported, and respected, that matters.

So the call is simple: watch the video, listen to the record, support the album, and say rest in peace to Tame One by keeping his name alive the right way.

Not with empty posts.


With listening.


With sharing.


With teaching the next generation who he was.


With making sure New Jersey Hip-Hop history stays in the conversation.

Because when the beat is right, the rhymes are sharp, and the names on the record carry real weight, one thing becomes clear: Emcees recognise emcees.



"Emcees Recognise" Official Music Video:


Taken off the Sam Krats 22-track "Culture" double album available as Vinyl, CD, Cassette and Digital on Bandcamp.


Album Link:


Instagram Links:

Sam Krats: @sam_krats

El Da Sensei: @el_da_sensei

RIP: Tame One & DJ Kaos


Thank you:

Goon Promotion: @aprock_bloglove


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