Event II — Hieroglyphics’ Most Ambitious Album Explained

If 3rd Eye Vision was Hieroglyphics announcing their independence with confidence, The Vin Skully EP and later The Hieroglyphics Event series represented the crew going further — deeper into concept, deeper into the underground, further from any concessions to accessibility. The Event II project occupies a specific place in the Hiero catalog: the record…

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Best Hiero Day Sets of All Time — The Moments That Defined the Festival

Hiero Day has been running since 2012 — a free outdoor festival in Oakland that Hieroglyphics Imperium started as a gift to the Bay Area hip-hop community. Over more than a decade, it has grown from a neighborhood gathering to a 8,500-person event that draws fans from across the country, a live music institution…

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Hieroglyphics vs Boot Camp Clik — Two Visions of Underground Hip-Hop

In the mid-1990s, two crews defined what it meant to be an underground collective in hip-hop: Hieroglyphics from Oakland, California, and Boot Camp Clik from Brooklyn, New York. Both operated outside the mainstream. Both built loyal followings on the strength of craft rather than commercial positioning. Both proved that a crew could sustain a…

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Phesto of Souls of Mischief — The Most Underrated MC in Hiero

Ask a room full of hip-hop heads to rank the Souls of Mischief MCs and Phesto will finish last almost every time. Not because he's the weakest — he's not — but because he's the most patient. The most understated. The one who seems least interested in grabbing your attention and most interested in…

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Opio of Souls of Mischief — The Soul of Hieroglyphics

Every group has that one member who functions as its emotional center — the voice that feels most human, most grounded, most connected to something real underneath the technical display. In Souls of Mischief, in Hieroglyphics, that voice belongs to Opio. It's easy to look past Opio if you're drawn to the flashier elements…

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Souls of Mischief — No Man’s Land: The Overlooked Masterpiece

Souls of Mischief's 1995 album No Man's Land arrived under an almost impossibly heavy cloud. Their debut, 93 'til Infinity, had been the kind of record that redefined California hip-hop — lush jazz loops, elastic flows, four MCs rapping like they were trading solos in a late-night session. How do you follow that? The…

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20 Best Hieroglyphics Songs for New Fans: The Essential Playlist

New to Hieroglyphics? Here are twenty tracks that will give you the full picture — the groundbreaking debut material, the collective anthems, the Del solo classics, and the deep cuts that devoted fans have been quoting for decades. Start With These Five 1. '93 'til Infinity — Souls of Mischief (1993) The beginning. The…

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Tajai of Souls of Mischief: The Intellectual Anchor of Oakland’s Greatest Group

Tajai Massey is the most publicly vocal member of Souls of Mischief — the one who does interviews, engages with fans on social media, and articulates the philosophical framework behind the collective's three-decade commitment to independent hip-hop. His MCing reflects the same qualities: dense, analytical, built on an intellectual foundation that rewards close listening.…

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A-Plus of Souls of Mischief: The Architect of ’93 ’til Infinity

A-Plus (Adam Carter) occupies a unique position in Hieroglyphics history: he is simultaneously one of four MCs in Souls of Mischief and the primary producer behind the group's foundational sound. On '93 'til Infinity, he built the beats and rapped over them — a dual role that required him to think about production and…

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Hieroglyphics at the Turn of the Millennium: The 2000–2003 Era That Proved the Model

The years 2000 to 2003 were arguably the most creatively fertile and institutionally significant period in Hieroglyphics history. Del released Deltron 3030 and Both Sides of the Brain. The collective dropped Full Circle. Individual members were releasing solo albums and collaborative projects at a pace that demonstrated the full scope of what they'd built.…

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