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Saturday, April 4, 2026

MIKE - 2025 - Showbiz!

10K – none  314.32MB FLAC

 The cover presents two women in magnificent headwraps, their faces built from red, blue, green, gold and brown pencil strokes that refuse the smooth perfection of commercial portraiture. Their expressions are composed but not vacant. The woman on the left looks beyond the frame, as though watching somebody approach from a direction the viewer cannot see; the woman on the right faces us more directly, her eyes calm while her blue lips hold an unreadable tension between speech and silence. Between them runs a vertical blue formation resembling water, lightning, torn fabric, exposed nerves or a crack opening through the middle of the picture. Showbiz! may be the title, but the cover offers no stage, microphone, marquee or performer. Before MIKE appears as an entertainer, he appears through relationship, inheritance and the faces of women whose presence exceeds whatever spectacle surrounds his career.

The title’s exclamation mark initially suggests excitement. Showbiz! sounds like a flashing sign, a backstage shout or a sarcastic response to some fresh disaster. MIKE and his manager reportedly used the word when touring produced situations too absurd, precarious or exhausting to explain individually. A transcendent performance, a missed connection, a financial problem, an unexpected detention and another night in another country can all disappear beneath the same shrug: showbiz. The word turns instability into occupational routine.
That shrug is the album’s organizing tension. MIKE has reached a level where audiences around the world know his songs, critics follow every release and younger artists recognize him as one of the architects of a major underground rap language. Yet his music still feels handmade, private and close enough to hear the room around it. Showbiz! asks what happens when an inward form of expression becomes a job requiring travel, deadlines, promotion, merchandise, repeated performances and the continual conversion of private experience into public material.
MIKE does not answer by separating the authentic artist from the entertainment industry. The distinction has become impossible. Music is his emotional language, livelihood, community, family structure, travel document and daily labor. He cannot simply preserve sincerity by refusing work, because the work is also how the music reaches the people who need it. The problem is not that art has been contaminated by business. The problem is learning how to remain alive inside a vocation that consumes the same memories and feelings from which one creates.
The album’s twenty-four tracks mostly last between one and three minutes. They behave like hotel-room thoughts, half-remembered conversations, messages sent before boarding, beats constructed during brief returns home and emotional weather encountered between performances. This fragmentation is not merely an aesthetic inherited from beat tapes or internet-shortened attention spans. It reproduces an itinerant life. One place becomes familiar just before departure. One mood develops just before another obligation interrupts it.
MIKE’s production under the dj blackpower name has long treated samples as damaged memory rather than pristine quotation. Voices are pitched until age, gender and distance become unstable. Chords are cut before reaching expected resolutions. Drums may arrive late, lean sideways or disappear beneath a loop that seems too emotionally important to interrupt. The source is not displayed as a collectible trophy. It is worn down, folded and made to live inside another history.
Showbiz! expands this method without cleaning it into prestige. The album contains brighter keyboards, reverberant saxophone, gospel-like vocal masses, heavy drums and moments of open melodic beauty, but its surfaces remain rubbed, dusty and slightly porous. The music sounds capable of leaking into the room. It does not seal MIKE behind production designed to certify his importance.
“Bear Trap” begins with the title’s warning before the album has established any triumph. A bear trap is hidden precisely because its effectiveness depends upon an animal entering freely. Music can operate in the same way. Talent offers mobility, recognition and a route beyond ordinary limitations, but success may gradually close around the artist’s time, body and private life. The more people depend upon the work, the harder it becomes to step away from producing it.
Produced by dj paradise and dj blackpower, the track does not open with a conquering fanfare. Its atmosphere is cautious and slightly suspended, giving MIKE space to examine the career ahead of him without pretending he has escaped uncertainty. His low voice moves with the familiar sensation of thought becoming language only a fraction of a second before it reaches the microphone. The performance sounds relaxed because the labor underneath it has become nearly invisible.
“Clown of the Class (Work Harder)” turns the entertainer into a figure of humiliation and discipline. The class clown receives attention by disrupting order, but that attention rarely produces authority. He is watched because he can be laughed at, and once laughter becomes his role, he may be required to continue performing even when the joke no longer feels voluntary.
The parenthetical command changes the title. Work harder sounds like encouragement, accusation and the permanent instruction placed upon anyone whose creative labor appears effortless from outside. An artist may spend years developing a style loose enough to feel spontaneous, only to have the resulting ease interpreted as a lack of effort. The clown must keep smiling and increase production.
“Then we could be free..” offers freedom as a conditional future rather than an achieved state. Even the two trailing periods create hesitation. Something must happen first, though the condition is never secured. Money, discipline, healing, political change, artistic independence or the end of touring might theoretically create freedom, but each solution introduces another obligation.
The track’s soul-derived movement gives that uncertainty warmth rather than despair. MIKE sounds increasingly aware that freedom may not consist of escaping every structure. It may require learning which structures deserve commitment. Family, community and artistic discipline can limit behavior while protecting a person from the emptiness of total isolation.
“Watered Down” and “man in the mirror” are connected by a sampled statement from someone insisting that he is neither a stuntman nor a show-off, merely doing his job and meeting a deadline. The statement is almost painfully appropriate to MIKE. Listeners encounter imaginative worlds, emotional intimacy and apparent spontaneity; the artist also encounters schedules.
“Watered Down” raises the anxiety that repetition and professionalization might weaken the original force of the work. Once an idiosyncratic sound becomes recognizable, the artist is rewarded for reproducing it. Innovation becomes a brand, then the brand can become formula. The danger is not only that outside executives will dilute the music. An independent artist may learn to dilute himself because consistency pays rent.
The sampled worker refuses theatrical language. He does not claim heroism or danger. He identifies labor. This interrupts the fantasy that every artistic gesture must emerge from inspiration. Some music is completed because the deadline exists, the tour is approaching and people are waiting.
“man in the mirror” takes that occupational pressure inward. The familiar phrase usually promises self-examination followed by moral improvement, but MIKE’s mirror is clouded by travel, grief, intoxication, responsibility and the multiplying images attached to public recognition. The person in the reflection may be the son, brother, label operator, producer, rapper, employer, friend or performer expected onstage that evening.
The scuffed keyboard loop carries a quietly comic bounce, preventing self-examination from becoming ceremonially solemn. MIKE can interrogate his life while allowing the body to move. This is an important development in his work. Grief remains, but it no longer requires every surrounding sound to kneel.
“Artist of the Century” is the album’s grandest boast, yet MIKE performs it with enough dry humor that the title becomes both sincere ambition and protective exaggeration. An artist working outside the largest commercial machinery may declare himself historically important because no institution can be trusted to make the declaration on his behalf. Self-belief becomes infrastructure.
Venna’s saxophone enlarges the track without turning it into a conventional victory anthem. The instrument rises through MIKE’s looped production like breath escaping a crowded room. The celebrated observation about the prize being small while its price is abundant captures the album’s economics: acclaim can be meaningful, but the labor, absence, exhaustion and personal exposure required to receive it may be far greater than the visible reward.
MIKE is not rejecting recognition. “Artist of the Century” clearly enjoys audacity. He is questioning what recognition can actually repair. Praise cannot return time, restore the dead, guarantee safety or convert constant movement into home.
“What U Bouta Do?/A Star Was Born” divides one track into challenge and creation. The first title demands action in immediate street language. The second invokes the enormous machinery through which entertainment culture manufactures myth. A star is supposedly born, as though fame were natural destiny rather than the product of work, access, timing, relationships and repeated public presentation.
454 fits this unstable structure because his elastic voice can make urgency sound playful and playfulness sound chemically accelerated. The track’s rhythmic shift disrupts the album’s generally syrupy movement, briefly producing a harder, more angular momentum. Star-making is not represented as graceful ascent. It is a sudden alteration of pressure.
“Belly 1,” produced by Harrison, places MIKE inside pads that feel humid, green and strangely open. The title returns attention to the body’s center, where hunger, dread, instinct and digestion operate before thought becomes elegant. Touring turns the body into equipment that must continue functioning through airports, unfamiliar food, inadequate sleep and adrenaline.
MIKE’s voice acquires urgency against Harrison’s atmosphere. He remains low and controlled, but the production seems to move more rapidly around him. The contrast resembles somebody trying to preserve an internal pace while the external world keeps accelerating.
“Da Roc” is barely more than a minute, but its concluding expression of fan devotion changes the album’s social scale. Public admiration can be embarrassing, excessive and funny, yet it is also evidence that the private work reached another person. The fan does not speak in polished critical language. He offers unguarded enthusiasm.
This matters because show business often turns the audience into numbers: ticket counts, streams, engagement and market territories. One awkward voice restores the individual person inside the statistic. The relationship may remain parasocial and unequal, but it is not automatically fake. Somebody heard the music and felt less alone.
“The Weight (2k20)” carries an earlier year inside its title, placing unfinished or preserved material from 2020 into the album’s present. Time becomes another sampled source. MIKE does not pretend every track was created within one clean period or emotional state. Older weight can be reopened because grief does not respect album cycles.
The nervous saxophone loop makes burden feel active rather than solid. Weight is normally imagined as downward pressure, but this sound circles, worries and refuses rest. The death of MIKE’s mother remains central to his music, though Showbiz! does not reduce him to bereavement. Grief has become one element inside a larger adult life rather than the only room available.
“Lost Scribe” imagines the writer as both recorder and missing person. A scribe preserves the events of others, but MIKE’s diaristic music often records the process of losing his own location. He writes from inside movement, making language the place where scattered experiences can be held together.
His flow becomes more halting here, with phrases landing like notes recovered from damaged pages. The song does not offer a continuous memoir. It demonstrates why the memoir must remain fragmented. No single account can reconcile every city, family role, memory and version of the self.
“You’re the Only One Watching” is the album’s hidden center. The title initially sounds like the nightmare of a performer whose audience has disappeared, but it gradually becomes more intimate. One watcher may be enough when that witness is spiritually or emotionally central.
MIKE places his late mother’s voice inside the track, allowing her presence to cross the boundary between private memory and public recording. This could easily become manipulative, but the arrangement remains restrained. Her voice is not used to force catharsis from the listener. It arrives as part of the world in which MIKE continues living.
The song also connects private prayer with distant collective suffering, including Gaza and Tigray. MIKE’s grief does not close him inside personal tragedy. It becomes a way of recognizing grief elsewhere. The dead mother is not transformed into an excuse for withdrawal from the world; memory becomes part of the equipment through which the world’s pain is perceived.
This is one reason the title Showbiz! never becomes completely cynical. Public art can be vain, exhausting and economically precarious, but it can also create a channel through which the private conscience speaks beyond its immediate circle. The microphone is both a commodity-producing tool and a vessel for prayer.
“Lucky” turns toward impermanence with unusual brightness. The production eventually opens into enormous drums and dancing synthesizers, momentarily giving MIKE something close to a conventional arrival. Yet luck is understood as temporary access rather than proof of permanent favor.
The song’s wisdom is simple: what exists now must be cherished because it cannot be recovered intact. This applies to family, friendship, health, youth, a city, one night of performance and the audience gathered inside it. Show business sells repeatability, promising the same songs in another venue tomorrow. “Lucky” remembers that no performance actually repeats.
“#82” looks like a filing designation rather than a descriptive title. It introduces the possibility that the album is one selected sequence inside a far larger private archive. Producers who work quickly accumulate hundreds of sketches, loops and numbered files whose eventual emotional importance cannot be predicted.
The title also resists the demand that every track announce a marketable concept. Number 82 may remain number 82 because naming it more dramatically would create a false center. The music is allowed to carry a modest archival identity.
“Too Hot (interlude)” passes in less than a minute, behaving like overheard heat rather than a full composition. Its brevity is not unusual on Showbiz!, but the explicit interlude label acknowledges function. This is corridor music between more furnished rooms.
“Pieces of a Dream” then turns fragmentation into subject. Dreams are already unstable memories, usually recovered as disconnected images after waking. To possess only pieces of one means handling fragments of a fragment. MIKE’s drifting keyboards and intoxicated delivery refuse to assemble them into a clean ambition narrative.
The title might suggest conventional hopes of success, but the song is more exhausted than motivational. Dreams can be desired futures, unconscious messages or the remains of interrupted sleep. For a touring artist, all three meanings begin interfering with one another.
The production pans and wobbles, giving the impression that the room is quietly changing its angle. MIKE sounds located inside the sensation rather than narrating safely afterward. Intoxication is neither glamorized nor converted into a simple warning. It becomes one of several imperfect methods for enduring restlessness.
“Strange Feeling” names the album’s emotional atmosphere without solving it. Success can feel strange when it arrives beside grief. Home can feel strange after prolonged travel. Familiar people can become strange when one’s public identity changes the terms of every interaction.
MIKE’s music excels at conditions too mixed to receive one emotion word. Gratitude contains dread; confidence contains exhaustion; mourning contains jokes; isolation contains evidence of community. “Strange Feeling” does not need to identify which element is authentic because the mixture is the authenticity.
“Zombie pt.2” treats exhaustion as a continuing series. The zombie is a body still working after ordinary life has departed, an ideal figure for an industry that expects the performer to remain available regardless of internal condition. The “pt.2” admits that this state has happened before and will likely happen again.
Unlike the theatrical undead imagery of horror-rap performance, MIKE’s zombie is occupational. The body boards the plane, reaches the venue, performs, speaks to people and returns to temporary shelter. Animation continues, but consciousness trails behind.
“Burning House,” produced by Thelonious Martin and Jacob Rochester, is one of the album’s largest rooms. Fire turns private architecture into public emergency. A house contains memory, identity and protection; once burning, it demands the terrible decision of what can still be carried out.
The production carries a Dilla-associated siren and a wider, more dramatic arrangement than many of the short dj blackpower miniatures. MIKE’s voice remains characteristically grounded inside it. He does not become an action hero escaping flames. He sounds like someone measuring loss while the measurement itself is becoming impossible.
The burning house can represent grief, career pressure, political catastrophe or the planet’s accumulating emergencies, but the song avoids one official interpretation. Its strength lies in forcing the intimate and collective scales together. A private room can burn while the world continues. The world can burn while somebody still has to locate his keys and catch a flight.
The title track appears twentieth, late enough that the album has already demonstrated what show business means before naming it. Produced by Laron, “Showbiz!” is not an overture but a recognition. By this point, the listener has encountered traps, clowns, deadlines, stars, weight, absent scribes, prayer, luck, intoxication, zombification and a burning home. Showbiz is the container placed around all of them.
The title’s exclamation mark now feels less celebratory than resilient. It resembles the punctuation added by somebody determined to keep the story lively while acknowledging that the conditions underneath it may be brutal. Another problem occurs, somebody smiles wearily, and the show continues.
“Spun Out” extends that exhaustion through a production that eventually opens toward sleek dub-techno space. To be spun out is to become mentally scattered, physically depleted or trapped inside rotation. Records spin, tour schedules cycle and the same performance returns in another city.
The dub-like ending creates distance by allowing sounds to leave echoes after their apparent sources have disappeared. This resembles touring memory. One city remains present while the next is already beginning. Applause continues internally after the room has emptied.
“Miss U,” featuring duendita, reduces the distance between people to its simplest statement. The abbreviated title resembles a message sent quickly because there is no time for a letter. Missing someone is one of touring’s least glamorous repetitions. It lacks the drama of public crisis but accumulates through ordinary absence.
Duendita’s presence gives the track another emotional body without turning it into a conventional duet. Their voice enters MIKE’s world as companionship rather than celebrity decoration. The song remains small enough that the feeling is not converted into performance spectacle.
“When It Rains” continues the album’s concern with conditions that cannot be scheduled. Rain delays travel, changes cities, alters mood and enters common language as a symbol of accumulating trouble. MIKE does not need to choose between literal weather and metaphor because a touring life continually makes them overlap.
“Diamond Dancing (Broke)” closes with the album’s most concise contradiction. Diamonds suggest wealth made visible, while dancing turns that visibility into movement. “Broke” arrives in parentheses like the financial reality whispered beneath the public image.
Independent success can look far richer from outside than it feels internally. Crowds, international travel, expensive clothes and critical admiration coexist with production costs, payroll, uncertain income, taxes, missed opportunities and the need to begin the next cycle quickly. MIKE can appear to be diamond dancing while remaining conscious of every bill beneath the floor.
The arrangement, produced by dj blackpower with background vocals from Jespfur, guitar from Mark William Lewis and saxophone from Venna, expands beyond the solitary loop-maker image. The album concludes through collaboration. MIKE’s independence does not mean doing everything alone. It means constructing a system in which chosen relationships can work without surrendering the center to an outside institution.
The ending also returns us to the women on the cover. Showbiz! is dedicated to MIKE’s mother and surrounded by gratitude toward his father, sisters and expanding family. The album’s deepest answer to professional instability is not solitary artistic greatness. It is relationship.
That answer remains complicated because relationships are precisely what travel interrupts. The career supports family and carries their history outward, while simultaneously requiring absence from them. MIKE cannot solve this contradiction through one triumphant song. He can only keep the people visible inside the work.
The album’s twenty-four-track construction occasionally risks diffusion. Some pieces end just as their production or emotional premise becomes especially compelling, and several neighboring fragments can blur during an initial listen. A more selective sequence might have produced clearer dramatic peaks.
Yet excessive neatness would weaken the record’s underlying truth. A working artist’s life is not composed exclusively of peak experiences. It consists of unfinished thoughts, small pleasures, travel fatigue, remembered voices, deadlines, jokes, political concern, temporary confidence and the need to make something before the next departure. The album gains meaning through accumulation.
Its short tracks also resist the streaming-era demand in a peculiar way. Their length may appear optimized for rapid consumption, but the density of MIKE’s writing and production makes casual absorption difficult. A ninety-second piece can contain more rhythmic ambiguity, personal history and sample movement than a much longer song. Brevity does not make the album simple; it makes details easier to miss.
Repeated listening therefore behaves less like replaying a fixed narrative than returning to a neighborhood. Different corners become visible according to mood. A background voice suddenly acquires importance. A drum entrance changes the emotional balance. A line previously heard as confidence reveals fear beneath it.
This is where MIKE’s debt to MF DOOM feels most meaningful. The inheritance is not merely muffled vocals, eccentric loops or an underground career model. DOOM demonstrated how an artist could construct a world dense enough that listeners wanted to inhabit it without receiving complete explanations. Personality could remain vivid while biography stayed partly hidden.
MIKE extends that lesson into another emotional and historical condition. His masks are not comic-book metal; they are low delivery, blurred samples, multiple production identities and the refusal to translate every private reference for public consumption. The world remains open, but not everything inside it belongs to the visitor.
The 10k label is part of that world-building. It allows MIKE to release music, organize collaborators and create continuity without waiting for an external institution to recognize the culture around him. Yet Showbiz! refuses the romantic fantasy that independence eliminates business. Running the structure means accepting more of its labor.
There is no powerful executive available to blame for every deadline or financial calculation. Autonomy makes responsibility heavier. The artist becomes performer, producer, label, employer, archivist and public face. Freedom and administration share one desk.
The physical editions extend this self-built infrastructure. The album appeared on vinyl and in a two-disc complete edition pairing Showbiz! with a dj blackpower bonus project. These objects convert a streaming-era sequence of short pieces into a substantial package, restoring weight to music whose themes repeatedly question what artistic labor is worth.
The FLAC archive here performs another kind of conversion. The album leaves the official storefront and becomes a privately retained object, capable of surviving account changes, platform decisions and shifting availability. Its 314 megabytes are modest beside the emotional and social network compressed inside them.
That network includes a mother whose voice and memory remain active, a father associated with continual growth, sisters and a new younger brother, producers who widen MIKE’s sound, friends who appear as guests, audiences in distant cities and listeners who may never attend a concert but recognize themselves in the fatigue and perseverance.
Showbiz! finally refuses both the glamorous lie and the cynical correction. Entertainment is not merely fame, luxury and applause. It is also not merely exploitation, loneliness and financial precarity. It is the unstable system through which MIKE has learned to transform grief into community, private memory into shared sound and constant travel into a portable version of home.
The show is re
al. The business is real. So are the people whose faces remain visible after the lights come down.

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