JumpOut Crowd News • New Music
Sturge & Chester Hide Release “Hundred Rubber Bands”
A dark, cinematic boom-bap collaboration built on force, appetite, excess and the kind of confidence that does not wait for permission.
Not a victory lap. A warning.
Sturge and Chester Hide have released “Hundred Rubber Bands,” a record that moves through vice, indulgence, destruction and conquest with the confidence of two artists who already know exactly what they are capable of.
The title uses a hundred rubber bands as a symbol of scale and excess. Money is not the point. It is simply one of the trophies scattered throughout a much larger vision of dominance.
The story behind the record
“Hundred Rubber Bands” is an announcement of force. Sturge and Chester Hide are not asking to be discovered, approved or rewarded. They enter the record already convinced of what they are capable of—and prepared to overwhelm anything standing in front of them.
The title is not a confession about needing money. The hundred rubber bands are a symbol of excess, appetite and scale. Wealth is simply one of the trophies scattered throughout a much larger vision built around power, indulgence, destruction and conquest.
That conviction gives the record its menace. The message is not “watch us try.” It is: get out the way. The beasts are already here.
“Invoke the corners out in public, look at all the shit we summoned.”Chester Hide — “Hundred Rubber Bands”
Manifestation without the clean packaging
The record’s manifestation theme is not presented as motivational content. It sits beside drug use, debauchery, fornication, appetite and the tension of a double life.
That contradiction is part of the point. “Hundred Rubber Bands” allows hunger, temptation, confidence and self-destruction to occupy the same world. The result feels less like aspiration and more like a threat made audible.
How the release was built
Lyrical Chemistry
Two distinct voices were placed inside the same world of power, vice, excess and destruction.
Cinematic Pressure
Lynx Sinatra’s production gives the track gritty boom-bap weight while preserving modern street energy.
Raw by Design
The mix and master preserve impact, density and underground character instead of smoothing away the edges.
One Connected World
JumpOut Crowd connected the artwork, official landing page, editorial story and release marketing into one campaign ecosystem.
A collaboration, not a feature
Sturge and Chester Hide are not presented as a lead artist and a guest occupying separate pieces of the record. “Hundred Rubber Bands” works as an alliance between two forces with the same appetite for domination.
Their chemistry makes the track feel larger than either individual verse. It is a collision, and the record captures the impact.
Release information
donteagreen@jumpoutcrowd.com