Capital City Podcast #137 “ The Old Welcomes The New: Young Artists “Old Heads” Actually Rock With" cover art

Capital City Podcast #137 “ The Old Welcomes The New: Young Artists “Old Heads” Actually Rock With"

Capital City Podcast #137 “ The Old Welcomes The New: Young Artists “Old Heads” Actually Rock With"

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Who really bridges the hip-hop generation gap in 2025—young heads the old heads rock with, and old heads the young crowd still plays? Capital J and DL Glass break down the “grown folks party” test: who makes it into the room, who gets skipped, and why the sound has drifted so far that some new artists don’t translate at all.

We talk Glorilla’s Memphis familiarity, why some “ratchet” joints still move aunties, how Kendrick became a universal party pick, and why the career-boost feature (young artist pulling an OG back into relevance) barely happens anymore—until we land on a few real examples.

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Episode notes (show notes)

Topic: Generational crossover in hip-hop (young ↔ old), club DJ reality check, and feature “cosigns” that revive careers.

Highlights:

  • Defining “old heads” (35–55) vs “young heads” (15–25) and what “resonates” actually means in real parties
  • Grown folks party approvals: Glorilla, Sexy Red (sometimes), Megan Thee Stallion, and why familiarity matters
  • Club DJ perspective: why the % of new music that works for 35–55 feels smaller now
  • Kendrick’s new “every age group” status (post-beef momentum)
  • The flip: old heads young folks still request (Drake, etc.)
  • Why “pulling an OG back up” through features is rare now
  • Examples that did work (re-introducing an older artist to a new audience)
  • Quick salute / moment for Rich Homie Quan (RIP) and crossover resonance

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