RAP HITS
Ras Kass & Smif-N-Wessun Pay Homage To Jackie Robinson and the Dodgers With ’42’

Ras Kass & Smif-N-Wessun Pay Homage To Jackie Robinson and the Dodgers With ’42’

Hip-Hop and baseball have always shared a blue-collar heartbeat—built on discipline, legacy, and surviving pressure when the lights burn hottest. That’s the spirit behind 42, the new single linking West Coast lyric giant Ras Kass with Brooklyn’s own Boot Camp generals Smif-N-Wessun. Dropping today on HillTop Ave/Soulspazm, the Amadeus360-produced joint isn’t just another coast-to-coast collab. It’s a cultural bridge between two historic rap territories tied together through the legacy of baseball’s most important number: 42.

Before the Dodgers ever dyed California in Dodger Blue, they were Brooklyn’s team. And before baseball was integrated, they signed a fearless Black man from Cairo, Georgia who changed sports forever; Jackie Robinson. When Ras Kass steps into the booth with Tek and Steele for 42, that number isn’t random. It symbolizes courage, truth-telling, and quiet defiance in hostile territory, which are attributes that define both Robinson’s career and these three emcees’ positions in this rap game.

The single plays like a statement piece. Ras Kass unloads layered bars with surgical precision, while Smif-N-Wessun lace their verses with that authentic Bucktown values; sharp, grounded, and rooted in street integrity. From the opening drums, 42 feels like a throwback to rugged 90s rap, but updated with fresh urgency. It’s Brooklyn blocks and South Central avenues finding a shared frequency: resistance.

The Mo Stafford-directed video doubles down on the theme—set inside Williamsburg’s Sweet Science Restaurant, it nods to Brooklyn’s Caribbean ties and cultural pulse. It’s the kind of spot where Hip-Hop debates spill outside with the smoke, and where Jackie Robinson still lives in murals and memories. The camera work keeps it militant. Unpolished. Real. Just how Boot Camp fans expect it.

“When I first went into this collaboration with Smif-N-Wessun, I initially wanted to recreate Sound Bwoy Bureill,” Ras Kass said. “A lot of creative people don’t want to do the same song over again, so Amadeus played us some tracks. We liked a couple, but the beat for 42 is the instrumental that Tek and Steele really gravitated towards. We recorded the song in New York and Fresh did the hook. We’ve all hung out and been in the studio before, but we had never done a song together until now. So this was one for the bucket list. A mutual friend of ours, James, owns a Jamaican fusion restaurant in Williamsburg called Sweet Science, so we shot the whole video there. I wore my LA 42 Dodger hat, and it came out really dope.”

42 also carries a deeper narrative. Brooklyn Hip-Hop never lost its voice. And even though the Dodgers now call Los Angeles home, the legacy of that number still starts on Eastern Parkway and Nostrand. Tek N Steele remain true to the code. Ras Kass continues his reign among elite lyricists. And Amadeus360 supplies a beat that’s both concrete and cosmic; a boom-bap war cry under a sky lit in Dodger Blue.

Hip-Hop always honors its pioneers. Baseball just retired Jackie Robinson’s number across all of Major League Baseball. Maybe Hip-Hop should do the same because legacy isn’t just a number, it’s the work you leave behind. And this record? It leaves a mark.