Frisco Taps Skepta, JME, Shorty & Jammer On "Red Card"

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Frisco makes it a BBK affair alongside Skepta, JME, Jammer, and Shorty on his new single, "Red Card."

Frisco is coming through with a massive new single. One of the founding members of BBK, the London-based MC returned with his new single this morning titled, "Red Card." Bringing members of the original BBK crew together, he, alongside Skepta, JME, Jammer, and Shorty bring it back to the essence of grime with pure bars, punchlines, and a frenetic beat that matches the intensity of their delivery. Skepta kicks things off with braggadocio and swagger before Jammer catches the rebound. Frisco slides through on the third verse and JME on the fourth as Shorty closes out the record.

The single was delivered alongside a new visual that finds all five rappers posted in front of what appears to be Trafalgar Square at night where they deliver their respective verses. Check it out below.

Quotable Lyrics
No, I am not your father
If I got to put 'em in care, better know that's something intensive
Man, I got zero to hundred, man so passive aggressive
Pull up outside in something offensive
I do not care what the ends is


About The Author
Aron A. is a features editor for HotNewHipHop. Beginning his tenure at HotNewHipHop in July 2017, he has comprehensively documented the biggest stories in the culture over the past few years. Throughout his time, Aron’s helped introduce a number of buzzing up-and-coming artists to our audience, identifying regional trends and highlighting hip-hop from across the globe. As a Canadian-based music journalist, he has also made a concerted effort to put spotlights on artists hailing from North of the border as part of Rise & Grind, the weekly interview series that he created and launched in 2021. Aron also broke a number of stories through his extensive interviews with beloved figures in the culture. These include industry vets (Quality Control co-founder Kevin "Coach K" Lee, Wayno Clark), definitive producers (DJ Paul, Hit-Boy, Zaytoven), cultural disruptors (Soulja Boy), lyrical heavyweights (Pusha T, Styles P, Danny Brown), cultural pioneers (Dapper Dan, Big Daddy Kane), and the next generation of stars (Lil Durk, Latto, Fivio Foreign, Denzel Curry). Aron also penned cover stories with the likes of Rick Ross, Central Cee, Moneybagg Yo, Vince Staples, and Bobby Shmurda.