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Khalil Nova - Combo (Soundcloud, 2011)

I ranked this song as #19 on my year end list, and it would’ve been ever higher had I been given more time to listen to it. This is still Khalil’s most grandiose song to date, and Khalil has described this song as making him feel like he’s “riding around on an elephant with a random Hindu God.” Very accurate. I was thinking more along the lines of the Ancient Psychic Tandem War Elephant, but I may watch too many cartoons. 

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Khalil Nova - I Gotta Do It (Youtube, 2012)

The latest video from Khalil Nova finds him dancing in the woods, presumably on his way to the waterfall. Maybe looking for his spaceship home? It’s hard to say what the Space Don is up to in this video, aside from some tai-chi moves at about 1:50 into the video, but this is one of the most alien tracks that Khalil has unleashed on the world yet. Taken from his vastly replayable 808s of Death

The Black Layne Staley, 1/31/12.

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Khalil Nova - 808s of Death [REVIEW]


~by Maxwell Cavaseno

As 2012′s dawn peeks from over the hills of yesteryear, more new young rappers are poking their head out to bask in the sunlight. More than a few have managed to take their influences and spin them in ways that outsiders would find difficult to trace. One of them is Khalil Nova, a young man in his early 20′s from Atlanta. Like Tyler, The Creator and Spaceghostpurrp before him, he’s a producer with an eclectic style which looms over his vulnerable personality. A personality which is is embodied by the struggle within last year’s “808′s Of Death”.

It’s easy to see why Danny Brown declared “Khalil Nove got next!” While more and more bedroom rapper/producers are popping up out of the woodwork at an alarming rate, few of them have the immediacy in their production styles to stand out and arrest your attention. But on opener “Cloud Mover”, Khalil seduces the listener with a haze of soap-opera strings, low thudding bass, and melodies meant to pull at heartstrings. Throughout the tape, his sounds form a confusing array of realms to dwell in: whether on the murky sitar-tinged plod of “Combo”, the eski/R&B hybrid of “Freezer Bhudd” to the lo-fi could’ve-been-a-malnourished-Zomby-tune of “Internet Muzik” and the Juicy J gone cybernetic grind of “The Ultimate Track”. Khalil manages to merge the sounds of video-game bleeps from bits 8 to 32 with the bombast of modern trap production.

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Khalil Nova - 808s of Death (Internet, 2011)
Khalil Nova is an OG from the deepest depths of the Internet (also Stockbridge, Georgia) who loves anime, Gundams, and “Sega Genesis video games made by the likes of MF DOOM & Gucci Mane.” In other words, little is known about the presumably young artist, other than what little interests he presents to us. 808s of Death, which I found through a co-sign by none other than Danny Brown, is a dark, electronic ride with promises of ruling the world and an infatuation with Voltron. At times during the mixtape, Khalil lets out his pain in an elongated yelp reminiscent of grunge frontman, the late Layne Staley (of Alice in Chains). This is a weird ass album, but it’s absolutely captivating in all its eccentricities. Khalil has 36 likes on his Facebook, but after this D. Brown co-sign and the blog buzz that’s sure to follow, he’ll certainly be a name to watch in 2012. For now, he might’ve just dropped the sleeper of the year. 

Khalil Nova - 808s of Death (Internet, 2011)

Khalil Nova is an OG from the deepest depths of the Internet (also Stockbridge, Georgia) who loves anime, Gundams, and “Sega Genesis video games made by the likes of MF DOOM & Gucci Mane.” In other words, little is known about the presumably young artist, other than what little interests he presents to us. 808s of Death, which I found through a co-sign by none other than Danny Brown, is a dark, electronic ride with promises of ruling the world and an infatuation with Voltron. At times during the mixtape, Khalil lets out his pain in an elongated yelp reminiscent of grunge frontman, the late Layne Staley (of Alice in Chains). This is a weird ass album, but it’s absolutely captivating in all its eccentricities. Khalil has 36 likes on his Facebook, but after this D. Brown co-sign and the blog buzz that’s sure to follow, he’ll certainly be a name to watch in 2012. For now, he might’ve just dropped the sleeper of the year.