Friday, March 6, 2026

Atlanta Hip-Hop Icons Back $5 Billion Overhaul of Downtown’s Historic Gulch

A rendering shows the proposed layout for Centennial Yards, an upcoming $5 billion entertainment and residential district in downtown Atlanta. The massive 50-acre redevelopment project, backed by celebrity investors including Usher, Killer Mike and 2 Chainz, aims to transform the historic rail yard known as the Gulch into a thriving cultural hub featuring a Cosm immersive theater, a Live Nation music venue and luxury housing. (Courtesy of Centennial Yards)
If you want to see the future of Atlanta, look down into the Gulch.

For decades, the 50-acre sunken rail yard in the heart of downtown has been little more than a vast concrete void shadowed by towering stadiums. But now, the royalty of Southern hip-hop and R&B are putting their money exactly where their roots are to transform that crater into the city's next crown jewel.

Usher, the diamond-certified voice behind the monumental 2004 album "Confessions," has officially joined rap veterans Killer Mike and 2 Chainz — alongside other notable celebrity investors like Shaquille O'Neal, Vince Carter, and Migos frontman Quavo— as major investors in Centennial Yards, a sprawling $5 billion redevelopment project set to completely remake downtown Atlanta.


Led by Los Angeles-based developer CIM Group and a group headed by Atlanta Hawks principal owner Tony Ressler, the massive venture aims to replace empty parking lots with a thriving, world-class entertainment and residential district.

The heavy-hitting roster of homegrown celebrity investors was recently celebrated during a ribbon-cutting event for the district's new Hotel Phoenix. Financial literacy advocate John Hope Bryant has also joined the effort, bridging the gap between urban luxury development and community financial empowerment.

In a statement posted to its official Instagram page, the Centennial Yards team praised the artists for stepping up to physically shape the city's skyline. The developers shouted out the hometown heroes as "true leaders who love Atlanta, believe in its people, and understand both the vision and the real need for #CentennialYards."

"These are individuals who showed up with trust, purpose, and pride in Atlanta's future," the statement continued. "This is what happens when Atlanta builds for Atlanta."

For artists who spent the 1990s and 2000s building the city's cultural infrastructure, the investment represents a transition into literal city building. The Centennial Yards footprint sits perfectly between two of the city's biggest hubs: Mercedes-Benz Stadium and State Farm Arena.

Once completed, the district will boast a towering skyline of residential buildings, luxury hotels, retail spaces, and restaurants. However, the crown jewel for music fans will be the brand-new entertainment hub. The space will feature an immersive 70,000-square-foot Cosm viewing theater boasting an 87-foot LED dome, alongside a dedicated 5,300-capacity live music venue operated by Live Nation.

The development is currently operating on a massive deadline. Developers are pushing to open Cosm, the Hotel Phoenix, and a central gathering plaza by June 10, 2026 — just five days before Atlanta is set to host international fans for the first of eight matches of the 2026 FIFA World Cup. The Live Nation music venue is slated to open its doors the following year, in 2027.

Wednesday, March 4, 2026

Bob Power, the Studio Genius Behind the Native Tongues and Soulquarians Movements, Dies at 73

Legendary audio engineer and producer Bob Power sits at a mixing console in a recording studio. Power, whose technical mastery shaped the sound of golden-era hip-hop and neo-soul for iconic artists like A Tribe Called Quest, Erykah Badu, and D'Angelo, died on March 1 at the age of 73.
The music industry has lost the meticulous ear behind its most flawless-sounding masterpieces. Bob Power, the legendary audio engineer and producer whose technical wizardry defined the sound of the Native Tongues movement and the birth of neo-soul, died on March 1 at the age of 73.

A funeral listing in Maryland confirmed the passing of the sonic pioneer, noting that his family requested donations be made to NPR in lieu of floral tributes. No official cause of death was immediately provided.


For purists of 90s hip-hop and R&B, Power's name in the liner notes was a guarantee of sonic excellence. Born in Chicago in 1952, he was a classically trained musician who studied at Webster College before earning a master's degree in jazz from Lone Mountain College in San Francisco. Before completely altering the sound of rap, he spent the 1970s and early 1980s composing music for PBS television shows and major commercial campaigns for brands like Coca-Cola and Intel.

Power relocated to New York City in 1982, famously taking gigs playing mafia weddings in Bensonhurst to pay the bills before landing a pivotal role as a fill-in engineer at Calliope Studios. It was there that he engineered his first major hip-hop project: Stetsasonic's 1986 debut album, "On Fire".

That session made Power the indispensable sonic translator for the emerging Native Tongues collective. He engineered and mixed foundational texts for A Tribe Called Quest, De La Soul, and the Jungle Brothers. Prior to Power's touch, hip-hop struggled to balance heavy bass lines with crisp, sample-heavy melodies without muddying the track.


"Bob was the KING of the Low End," The Roots' frontman Questlove wrote in a social media tribute. "Drums Crispy & Loud... but the BASS is FULL... before him? Hip Hop was chaotic & muddy... Bob was our training wheels for how to present music".

Beyond his alternative hip-hop foundation, Power was equally responsible for engineering the R&B revolution of the mid-1990s as a trusted engineer for the Soulquarians collective. He mixed the blueprints of the neo-soul movement, including D'Angelo's "Brown Sugar," Erykah Badu's "Baduizm," and Common's "Like Water for Chocolate".

Following the news of his death, Badu openly mourned her mentor online. "What a great loss for the music community today," Badu shared, noting his immense influence on her sound. "'Baduizm' is thee most bass heavy singing album in history. You mixed like a TRIBE album!".


Legendary producer DJ Premier also paid his respects, writing, "R.I.P. to one of the iLLest Engineers of all time... Thank you for your various pointers in recording from D'Angelo to ATCQ'S 'Low End Theory,' Erykah Badu's 'Baduizm' and so on!".

Later in life, Power became an Arts Professor at New York University's Clive Davis Institute of Recorded Music, ensuring his technical mastery and philosophy would be passed down to the next generation of audio engineers.

In an era where producers and MCs rightfully received the lion's share of the glory, Bob Power remained the quiet genius behind the boards. He did not invent the culture, but he built the acoustic architecture that allowed it to stand the test of time.

‘All Eyez on Me’ To ‘Atliens’: Inside the 30th Anniversary of Hip-Hop’s Golden Year

If you want to measure the passage of time for a golden-era hip-hop purist, just point to the calendar: The Class of 1996 is officially 30 years old.

As 2026 unfolds, the culture is bracing for a relentless wave of retrospectives honoring a 12-month span widely considered the genre's zenith. The sheer volume of watershed albums released in 1996 remains a staggering anomaly, their sonic architecture still firmly woven into the fabric of contemporary music.


The anniversary marathon commenced with a massive milestone in February. On Feb. 13, 1996, record store shelves absorbed two culture-shifting releases simultaneously: The Fugees' inescapable global juggernaut "The Score" and 2Pac's sprawling, diamond-certified double album "All Eyez on Me." Both projects pulverized the commercial ceiling for rap, proving the art form could dominate pop radio and command global attention without compromising its street-level authenticity.


As the summer approaches, the historical gravity only intensifies. June marks three decades of Jay-Z's mafioso-rap blueprint "Reasonable Doubt," followed swiftly by Nas' cinematic sophomore effort, "It Was Written," in July. That summer proved existential for New York hip-hop, reaffirming the East Coast's lyrical supremacy and commercial viability amid heavily publicized regional rivalries.

Down South, the celebratory wave will crash over Atlanta in August when OutKast's atmospheric masterwork "ATLiens" turns 30. Fulfilling Andre 3000's prophetic 1995 Source Awards declaration that the South had something to say, the album offered undeniable proof. It anchored the region's place in the hip-hop pantheon, submerging listeners in the futuristic, funk-laden soundscapes of Organized Noize.


Concurrently, R&B experienced a permanent metamorphosis. The genre's topography shifted unequivocally with the August release of Aaliyah's "One in a Million." Galvanized by the erratic, syncopated production of Timbaland and the sharp penmanship of Missy Elliott, the album decisively closed the curtain on the new jack swing era, laying a futuristic foundation for the new millennium. Months prior, Maxwell’s April debut, "Maxwell's Urban Hang Suite," executed a similar pivot, helping to birth the neo-soul movement.


Three decades removed, the Class of 1996 defies categorization as mere nostalgic trivia. Contemporary vocalists continue to borrow these cadences, producers still scavenge for the analog warmth of these drum breaks, and ascending MCs perpetually dissect these flows. Nineteen ninety-six wasn't just a prolific calendar year; it was the seismic event that permanently realigned the tectonic plates of Black music, pouring the concrete foundation upon which the entire modern industry is built.

Upcoming 1996 30th Anniversaries to Watch

Busta Rhymes"The Coming"
March
Maxwell"Maxwell's Urban Hang Suite"
April
Jay-Z"Reasonable Doubt"
June
Nas"It Was Written"
July
Aaliyah"One in a Million"
August
OutKast"ATLiens"
August
Ghostface Killah"Ironman"
October
Lil' Kim"Hard Core"
November

Honorable Mentions: The Underground & Cult Classics of '96

De La Soul"Stakes Is High"
July

A crucial, boom-bap rejection of the era's growing commercialism.

The Roots"Illadelph Halflife"
September

The live-band pioneers establishing their heavier, uncompromised sound.

Makaveli"The Don Killuminati: The 7 Day Theory"
November

2Pac's posthumous, darkly prophetic masterpiece.

Mobb Deep"Hell on Earth"
November

The grimy, cinematic follow-up that cemented Queensbridge royalty.

Redman"Muddy Waters"
December

A masterclass in funk-sampled, blunt-fueled lyricism.

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