/
DE

Ernest Jenning Hip Hop 1 Items

Hip Hop 1 US Hip Hop 1 Organic Grooves 1 Rock & Indie 18 Pop 2
Hide Filter & Categories Show Filter & Categories
Filter Results
Format
Format
Vinyl
LP
Close
Label
Label
!K7
(In)Sect
10
10k
1332
360 Grad
365xx
4th & Broadway
5th & Union
90's Tapes
ABB
ADA
AE Productions
Afterlife Recordz
Aftermath
Age 101
Air Vinyl
Ajlavmjuzik
Akai47
Akromégalie / HHV Records
Aldebaran
All City Dublin
Alles Oder Nix
Alpheus / HHV Records
Am Apparat
Amerigo Gazaway
Anette
Anti-Corp
Antilopen Geldwäsche
Appledizzle
Arista
Arjuna
Armabillion
Asher Roth
Asian Fake
Astrollage
Atlantic
Audio Recon
Audiolith
Augenringe unter dem dritten Auge Records
Aura
AV8
Babygrande
Babygroove
Back 2 Da Source
Backstein Ru'let / HHV Records
Backwoodz Studioz
Bad Boy
Bad Taste
Bane Capital Productions
Bang Ya Head
Bars Over Beautiful Sounds
Bastard Jazz
Battle Axe
Battle Weapons
BBE Music
BCM
Be With
Beat Art Department
Beat Catz
Beat Jazz International
Beatbude
Beatillz Produktion
Beatsqueeze
Because Music
Below System
Beyond The Groove
Big Crown
Big Dada
Big Dirte3
Black Buffalo
Black Rain Entertainment
Blackground
Bloc Hustle Inc.
Block Opera
Blue Note
Blunted Astronaut
BMG
BMG Rights Management
Boombap Relickz
Boot
Bozz Music
Brainfeeder
Bretterbude
Brick
Britcore Rawmance
Buback
Burning Sole
Capitol
Caroline
Casual Low Grind
Chamber Musik
Chambermusik
Chillhop
Chillhop Music
Chinese Man
Chocolate Ind.
Chong Wizard
Chopped Herring
Chrysalis
Cleopatra
Closed Sessions
Coalmine
Cocareef
Cold Busted
Cold Diggin'
Columbia
Concord
Copenhagen Crates
Core
Craft
Crane City Music
Cutting Deep
Da Cloth
Daily Concept
Das Label Mit Dem Hund
De Rap Winkel
Death Note
Death Row
Deathbomb Arc
Deck 2 Deck
Deck8
Decon
Dedicate
Def Jam
Def Presse
Delicious Vinyl
Dezi Belle
Dezi-Belle
Diggers Factory
Dinked
Dirty Science
Dirty Version
DMC
Don't Sleep
Dooinit Music
Doomtree
Dope Folks
Downbeat
Drink Sum Wtr
Duck Down
Dust & Dope
Dymond Mine
Ear-Sight
Eartouch
Edits
Eightyhd
Eklat
Eklat Tonträger
Elektra
EM
Embassy Of Music
EMI
Empire
ENTBS
eOne
Epic
Epic International
Epitaph Europe
Equinox
Ernest Jenning
Expanded Art
Fake Four Inc.
Fat Beats
Fat Possum
Fettes Brot Schallplatten
Filthe Analects
Financed Buy Dope
First Word
Flipnjay
For The Love Of It
Forever Living Originals
Former City
Four Music
Four Music Local
Frank's Vinyl
Fraternity
Fruit Company
Full Plate
Funk Night
Funky Dividends
Funkypseli Cave
Fused Arrow
FXCK RXP
G-Lette Music
G.A.M.M
G59
Gee Street
Geffen
Gentleman's Relief
Get On Down
GGBR
Glassnote
Good Felons
GoodFelons
Green Berlin
Green Music Group
Green Streets
Greenfield
Greenfield Music
Grilchy Party
Groggy Pack / HHV Records
Grönland
Groove Attack Record Store
Group Bracil
Heat Rock
Heavenly Sweetness
Heavy Jewelz
HHC
HHV Boombap 45s
HHV Records
High Focus
High Times
High Water Music
Hip Dozer
Hip Hop Enterprise
Hip-Hop Enterprise
Hit+Run
Hole In One
Holy Toledo
Homegrown
Honigdachs
Hopeless
Hot Plate
Hustle Don't Stop Music
Hydeout Productions
I Had An Accident
Idol
Ill Adrenaline
Ill Catz
Illect
Imported Goodz
Inner Ocean
Inner Tribe
Innovative Leisure
Interscope
Irma
Iron Lung
Ish
Island
Item
Jagjaguwar
Jakarta
Jet Set
Jive
JKP
JuNouMi
Just Listen
JWS
Kabul Fire
Kankana
Kay-Dee
KEATS
Keep Cool
Keller Flavour
Kickin' Kutz
King Mag Music
KingUnderground
Kitchen Label
Krash Slaughta
Kreismusik
Krekpek
Lab'Oratoire
LabOhr
LaFace
Leaving
Legacy
Legal Hustle
Legendary Music / HHV Records
Lewis
Lex
Linear Labs
LLT
Lofi
Loma Vista
Long Lost Relative
Loretta
Loud
Lowtech
M3
Madlib Invazion
Mädness
Majik Ninja
Man Bites Dog
Manteca
Mass Appeal
MCA
Mecca
Mello Music Group
Melting Pot Music
Menace
Mercury
Metal Face
Mind The Wax
Mind Write Music
Mnrk
Mnrk Music Group
Mnrk Urban
Mo Wax
Mobile Home
Mofo Airlines
Mongoloid Banks
Most Wanted
Most wanted
Motown
Mountain 45s
Mr Bongo
Multitrack Reworks
Mush
Music Development
Music On CD
Music On Vinyl
Mutombo
Mutterkomplex Urban Media
Mutual Intentions
MZEE
Nature Sounds
Ne'Astra Music Group
Near Mint
Needlejuice
New Platform
New Rapform
Next
Ninja Tune
No Cure
Nobody Buys
Noel & Poland
Nordachse Cashgroup
Nordachse Cashgroup / HHV Records
Normale Musik
Northcyde Vinyl
Not On Label
Not On Label (DJ D-Tale Self-released)
Nothing But Net
Now-Again
Oonops Drops
Original
OTHAR
P-Vine
Parlophone
Paxico
Peggy
Perpetual Stew
Piecelock 70
Pink Siifu
Play With
Polydor
POSTPARTUM.
Priority
Profile
Project: Mooncircle
Quality Control
Radio Juicy
Radio Juicy / Urban Waves / HHV Records
Rap And Revenge
Rap-A-Lot
Rawkus
RCA
Real Life Drama
Rec. 118
Red Apples 45
Red Bull
Redefinition
Rekord Music Publishing
Reprise
Republic
Return To Analog
Revorg
Rhino
Rhymesayers
Rhymesayers Entertainment
RJ's Electrical Connections
RMC
Roc Nation
Roc-A-Fella
Rockabye Baby!
Rostrum
Rough Trade
Royal Alchemist
Rrc Music
Rucksack
Ruffnation
Rummelplatzmusik
S!X
Sacred Bones
Sbme
SCMD Music
Secretly Canadian
Seeker Music Group
Select
Selfmade
Sic
Sichtexot
Silver Age
Slamboyant
Smoke On
Solar
Someothaship
SomeOthaShip Connect
Sony
Sony Legacy
Sony Music
Sony Music Catalog
Soopastole
Soul Dynamite
Soul Jazz
SoulForce
Soundweight
Southwest Enterprise
Spoken View
SRFSCHL
Srrschl
Static King
Stereofox
Stereophonk
Stokyo
Stones Throw
Street Corner Music
Styler Berg
Sub Pop
Suburban Noize
Subway
Sugar Hill
Sultan Günther Music
Supa Sounds
Super Bad Disco / HHV Records
Superjock
Svart
Tabu
Take Fingz
Tanta Roba
Tape Kingz
TCF Music Group
Ten Thousand Project
Tenement
Tenement Music
The Content Label
The Get Down
The Spitslam
The Vinyl Spot
Thizz
Thizz Ent.
Threshold
Thud Rumble
Tommy Boy
Tontraeger
TR
Trad Vibe
Trailerpark
Tres
Tru Soul
Tuff City
Tuff Kong
Turntable Training Wax
Twentyfour:Seven
Ubiquity
Ultimix
Uluru
Umse
Uncle Howie
Uncommon
Universal
Universal Music Japan
Up Above
Upstruct
Urban
Urban Discos
Urban Waves
URBAN [PIAS]
Urbnet
Vendetta
Vertigo
Vertigo Berlin
Victor
Village Live
Vinyl
Vinyl Digital
Vinyl Me, Please
Vinymatic
Virgin
Wagram
Walk This Way
Warlock
Warner
Warner Music International
Warp
Wave Planet
Wax Flip
White Room
Woodwurk
WSP
X-Ray
X-Ray Production
X-Ray Productions
XL
Year0001
Yellow Flower
Young Art
YZY
ZYX
[PIAS]
Close
Sale
Sale
All Sale Items
Up to 30%
Close
Ernest Jenning
Linqua Franqa - Bellringer
Linqua Franqa
Bellringer
LP | 2022 | EU | Original (Ernest Jenning)
18,69 €* 21,99 € -15%
Release: 2022 / EU – Original
Genre: Hip Hop
Add to Cart Coming Soon Sold out Currently not available Not Enough Coins
n linguistics, “lingua franca” is a term for a language used to communicate across cultures. For instance, the lingua franca of the Internet is typically English; in post-colonial Africa, French is often the lingua franca. For Athens, Georgia-based rapper, linguist, activist, parent, and politician Mariah Parker (they/them), aka Linqua Franqa, music is the tool they use to communicate – and educate – across cultural boundaries. Parker is a linqua franqa for the people.

Weaving a rich tapestry of hip-hop lyricism and neo-soul hooks, Parker imbues every song with a sense of urgency and keen social consciousness. This is particularly evident on the forthcoming sophomore album Bellringer, produced by Parker, Reindeer Games, and Joel Hatstat and featuring guest spots from Jeff Rosenstock, Of Montreal, Kishi Bashi, Dope KNife, Wesdaruler, and Angela Davis. On Bellringer, Parker does not hold back, touching on issues like police brutality, social media addiction, mental health, anti-capitalism, labor organizing, among other topics ripped from the headlines.

As a county commissioner serving the poorest district in Athens, Georgia, Parker is well-versed in the forces that threaten vulnerable communities. But as the pandemic took hold and threw the world into a constant state of tragedy and unease, Parker began writing the songs that would shape Bellringer as a way to “process the crisis we were living through, and then use that as a form of mass political education.” As Parker puts it, Bellringer is about taking the “aesthetic pleasure of hip-hop to educate people about why things are so bad and what can we do about it.”

The name Bellringer, which follows Parker’s 2018 debut album Model Minority, reflects Parker’s love of language play and double-entendres. “I thought of the word bellringer in two ways,” they explain. “A bellringer is a jab to the face that knocks someone out completely, but it also invokes someone ringing the bell to sound the alarm about something.”

Parker started out their artistic journey scribbling notes in their journal during high school anatomy class and traveling with their mother, a touring gospel singer. By the time they got to college in Asheville, North Carolina, Parker started exploring slam poetry and freestyling. “There was these white boys in my dorm that would have Freestyle Fridays and freestyle together,” Parker says. “And I was like, ‘what the?’ Like, I'm not gonna sit back here with my notebook full of sick bars and not show these cats what's up.”

Parker has arguably spent their entire career to date doing just that. Channeling issues-minded lyricists like Noname, Jay Electronica, Meek Mill, and Immortal Technique on the clattering, modern day labor anthem “Wurk,” Parker directly addresses frontline employees and calls for organization in the face of exploitation. “The pandemic saw the greatest transfer of wealth from the working class to billionaires, perhaps in the history of humanity,” Parker elaborates. “I'm shouting out the people driving FedEx trucks and getting spit on in the hospital and whipping the grocery carts around the parking lot of Kroger. I’m saying, ‘Y'all don't have to take this. Come together and fight and you can get what you actually deserve.’”

Meanwhile, the album's cacophonous title track loops in Jeff Rosenstock to revisit the 1991 murder of 15-year-old Latasha Harlins, who was shot in a South Central convenience store. Both reflective and braggadocious, Parker nods to the ways that trauma like Latasha’s manifests: hot temperedness, antagonism, substance abuse, and belligerent boasting.

In the same vein, album closer “Abolition” considers the work left to do to free the people. Over a looped harmony of civil rights hero Angela Davis’ famous quote – “to be radical simply means grasping things at the root” – Parker calls out performative (and ultimately empty) gestures made by prominent politicians when members of the Black community are killed by police. The song’s outro then features Davis herself describing her excitement about the new vigor of the abolition movement after 50 years of lonely anti-prison activism. “What shocked me the most was her humility and willingness to learn from the younger generation,” Parker says of working with Davis. “She expressed a lot of excitement about the current moment that we're in.”

Bellringer is also not without its intensely personal moments: On the soulful, funk-flecked “Necessity,” Parker dissects the chaos of pursuing ill-fitting relationships in lieu of self-actualization while dropping in references to Parker’s since-passed cat Eggs and the since-shuttered Athens dive bar The Max Canada.

Later, Parker offers a sequel to Model Minority track “Eight Weeks,” where they described the difficult decision to have an abortion. Here, on the piano-accompanied “13 Weeks,” Parker, who recorded Bellringer while pregnant with their first child, ponders the joy and anxiety of parenthood.

Ultimately, Bellringer is a natural continuation of the work Parker has committed themselves to both as an artist and politician. Boiled down to a word, Bellringer at its heart is about liberation – and the obstacles that prevent us from achieving it.
Back To Top