In the 8 years since Little Brother jumped on the scene, fans have been clamoring for a solo album from one of the group’s emcees, Phonte.  In this exclusive TheUrbanDaily interview, Phonte sheds a little light on where he’s at with the project.

In the years since 9th Wonder split from hip-hop trio Little Brother, a lot has happened on both sides of the coin.

Phonte and Nicolay of the Foreign Exchange will release their third album, Authenticity, in October of this year.

New Music

In one of the most engaging interviews we’ve seen with Drake, quirky Canadian journalist Nardwuar asked Drizzy about everything from his song with Little Brother, the trunk of bras that he takes with him on tour to movie icon Pam Grier. After gazing at an autographed copy of the soundtrack to Coffee Drake confessed that […]

For many fans of Little Brother, “Hiding Place” was one of the shining moments of their critically acclaimed sophomore LP, The Minstrel Show. You had Phonte and Big Pooh teaming up with a  lyrical juggernaut like Slum Village’s Elzhi making it one of the most anticipated team-ups since Marvel Vs. Capcom.

Break out your old school red and blue 3-D glasses to get the full effect of Rhymfest’s latest video, “Say Wassup” featuring Phonte of The Foreign Exchange/Little Brother singing the hook.

Prior to  the release of their latest studio album, Left Back, Phonte and Big Pooh of Little Brother announced that they were breaking up as group.

In part three of Phonte’s interview with Capone-N-Noreaga he asks the duo, who met in prison, how that experience shaped their careers and their interactions in the music industry.

First off, let’s get one thing straight: Hollyweerd rep Atlanta, not Hollywood. That will be more than obvious once you listen to “Love Me” from their forthcoming Edible Phat 2.0 mixtape. These four ATLiens bring to mind the Dungeon Family back in its heyday and they’ve brought along Little Brother’s Rapper Big Pooh to guest […]

In part two of Phonte’s interview with Capone-N-Noreaga, the duo give advice to up-coming rappers and make the case for older rappers being able to have careers into their 50s.

Some things you just can’t plan. When we sat down to interview Phonte Coleman of Little Brother and The Foreign exchange about the dissolution of his group there was an obvious feeling of sadness.

Well this is the beginning of the end for Little Brother. This is the first video for their last album as a group, Left Back, which is in stores today.