Kacey Musgraves And Owen Wilson Confirm Everything Is Bigger In Texas In Their ‘SNL’ Promo

The season premiere of Saturday Night Live is just a day away and that means that the hilarious pre-show promos featuring the guest host and musical guest have also returned. In this week’s promo, series regular Kenan Thompson joins Owen Wilson and Kacey Musgraves to contemplate whether things really are bigger in Texas, try to start a belly band, and tease Kenan’s lateness. Musgraves especially looks like she’s struggling not to break in the last clip.

The first clip is of special significance, as both Wilson and Musgraves are Texas natives. Kenan asks them whether something like burgers fall under the “everything is bigger in Texas” motto, to which Wilson replies, “Depends who’s makin’ ’em.” Musgraves brags, “I make ’em about the size of my fist.” Thompson declares he’s never going to one of her barbecues — and if I may interject here, I will gladly take his spot. He’s missing out.

You should absolutely not miss out on Musgraves’ performance, which will feature songs from her new album Star-Crossed. Each time she’s performed songs from it — such as the fiery rendition of the title track she gave to the MTV VMAs this year — it’s been a show-stopper. Personally, I’m hoping for a redux of her fun “Simple Times” video.

Watch Kacey Musgraves, Owen Wilson, and Kenan Thompson hype up the upcoming season premiere of SNL above.

All The New Albums Coming Out In October 2021

Keeping track of all the new albums coming out in a given month is a big job, but we’re up for it: Below is a comprehensive list of the major releases you can look forward to in October. If you’re not trying to potentially miss out on anything, it might be a good idea to keep reading.

Friday, October 1

  • Audiobooks — Astro Tough (Piccadilly Records)
  • Ben Marc — Breathe Suite EP (Innovative Leisure)
  • Black Dice — Mod Prog Sic (FourFour Records)
  • Bonnie Cosby — Virginiana EP (Pax Aeternum)
  • Boy Scouts — Wayfinder (ANTI-)
  • Brandi Carlile — In These Silent Days (Elektra Records)
  • The Colorist Orchestra & Howe Gelb — Not On The Map (Dangerbird)
  • Couplet — LP1 (Storm Chasers LTD)
  • Dar Williams — I’ll Meet You Here (Renew Records/BMG)
  • Diet Cig — I Don’t Like Driving Like I Used To EP (Frenchkiss Records)
  • The Doobie Brothers — Liberté (Island Records)
  • Ducks Ltd. — Modern Fiction (Carpark Records)
  • Explosions In The Sky — Big Bend (An Original Soundtrack for Public Television) (Temporary Residence)
  • Four Stroke Baron — Classics (Prosthetic Records)
  • Gustaf — Audio Drag For Ego Slobs (Royal Mountain Records)
  • Hovvdy — True Love (Grand Jury)
  • Illuminati Hotties — Let Me Do One More (Hopeless Records)
  • Jeremy Zucker — Crusher (Republic)
  • Jojo — Trying Not To Think About It (Warner Records)
  • Joshua Speers — Midnight Horses EP (Warner Records)
  • JW Francis — Wanderkid (Sunday Best Recordings)
  • Kalabrese — Let Love Rumpel (Part 1) (Rumpelmusig)
  • Kit Grill — Fragile (Primary Colours)
  • Leisure — Side B EP (Nettwerk)
  • Lily Rose — Stronger Than I Am (Big Loud Records/Back Blocks)
  • Logan Mize — Welcome To Prairieville (Big Yellow Dog Music)
  • Lonr. — Land Of Nothing Real 2 EP (Epic Records)
  • Matt Robidoux — At Dust (Already Dead Tapes and Records)
  • Meek Mill — Expensive Pain (Warner)
  • Ministry — Moral Hygiene (Nuclear Blast)
  • Misty River — Promises (The Workshop Tapes)
  • Mod Con — Modern Condition (Poison City)
  • Nine Pound Hammer — When The Shit Goes Down (Acetate Records)
  • Olan Monk — Auto Life EP (CANVAS)
  • The Persian Leaps — Drone Etiquette (Land Ski Records)
  • Pond — 9 (Spinning Top Records)
  • The Script — Tales From The Script (Sony)
  • Secondhand Sound — The Best & Worst Of Times (Sound Division Records)
  • Shad — TAO (Secret City Records)
  • Silas Short — Drawing EP (Stones Throw)
  • Strand Of Oaks — In Heaven (Galacticana Records)
  • Sun Atoms — Let There Be Light (Little Cloud Records)
  • The The — The Comeback Special (Ear Music)
  • Tirzah — Colourgrade (Domino)
  • Tony Bennett And Lady Gaga — Love For Sale (Columbia)
  • Ustad Saami — East Pakistan Sky (Glitterbeat Records)
  • Wage War — Manic (Fearless Records)
  • Wiki — Half God (Wikset Enterprise)
  • Work Party — My Best Days Are Behind Me (Triple Eye Industries)
  • Valley — Last Birthday EP (Capitol Records)
  • Xander Cameron — Rebel RM Roseme EP (2563977 Records DK)
  • Yes — The Quest (InsideOut Music)
  • Zoodrake — Seven (Elektrofish / Echozone)

Friday, October 8

  • Alice TM — Little Body In Orbit (Whatever’s Clever)
  • Astral Swans — Astral Swans (Madic Records)
  • Atmosphere — WORD? (Rhymesayers Entertainment)
  • AVAWAVES — Chrysalis (One Little Independent)
  • BadBadNotGood — Talk Memory (XL Recordings/Innovative Leisure)
  • Bahamas — Live To Tape, Volume I EP (Brushfire Records)
  • Barrett Martin — Stillpoint (Sunyata Records)
  • Battle Ave — Battle Ave EP (self-released)
  • Billy Bragg — The Million Things That Never Happened (Cooking Vinyl)
  • Birdtalker — Birdtalker (self-released)
  • Blake Rose — A World Gone By EP (AWAL)
  • Boylife — Gelato (Northern Transmissions)
  • Caravan — It’s None Of Your Business (Madfish)
  • Celina Sharma — Cece EP (MUGAL Records)
  • Christian Lopez — The Other Side (Blaster Records)
  • Craig Taborn — Shadow Plays (ECM)
  • Darren Criss — A Very Darren Christmas (Decca)
  • Del Water Gap — Del Water Gap (self-released)
  • Destroy Boys — Open Mouth, Open Heart (Hopeless Records)
  • Don Toliver — Life Of A Don (Atlantic Records/Cactus Jack Records)
  • Dos Santos — City Of Mirrors (International Anthem)
  • Efterklang — Windflowers (City Slang)
  • Elderbrook — Innerlight EP (Parlophone)
  • Fauness — Maiden No More EP (Cascine)
  • G’emma — Types Of Water EP (Sonar Kollektiv)
  • Gia Woods — Heartbreak Country EP (self-released)
  • Grant Pavol — Reflections EP (Accidental Popstar Records)
  • Gregory Dwane — Gregory Dwane (Peacedale Records)
  • Gus G. — Quantum Leap (AFM Records)
  • The Halo Trees — Summergloom (Winter Solitude Productions)
  • Howlin Rain — The Dharma Wheel (Silver Current Records)
  • James Blake — Friends That Break Your Heart (Republic)
  • J.D. Wilkes And The Legendary Shack Shakers — Cockadoodledeux (Alternative Tentacles Records)
  • Jeff Scott Soto — The Duets Collection, Vol. 1 (Frontiers Music)
  • Jojoftheejungle — The Red Line EP (Batakari Music)
  • Joshua Crumbly — ForEver (Figureight Records)
  • Kay Young — This Here Feels Good EP (PIAS)
  • Kevin Morby — A Night At The Little Los Angeles (Dead Oceans)
  • KITE — Currents (Majestic Mountain Records)
  • Kowloon Walled City — Piecework (Neurot/Gilead Media)
  • Ladyhawke — Time Flies (Mid Centry)
  • Lala Lala — I Want The Door To Open (Hardly Art)
  • The Late Ones — The Fourth Quarter (Easy Star Records)
  • Lizard Music — Arizone! (Omnivore Recordings)
  • Local H — Awesome Quarantine Mix-Tape #3 (srcvinyl)
  • Low Hum — Nonfiction (Last Gang Records)
  • LP — Churches (SOTA Records)
  • Magdalena Bay — Mercurial World (Hand Drawn Records)
  • Manimal — Armageddon (AFM Records)
  • Marc E. Bassy — Little Men (New Gold Medal)
  • Matt Maltese — Good Morning It’s Now Tomorrow (Nettwerk)
  • Moody Beach — Assembly Of The Wild EP (Viscera Arts)
  • Morningsiders — Easy Does It EP (Nettwerk)
  • Natalie Hemby — Pins And Needles (Fantasy Records)
  • Newton Faulkner — Interference (Of Light) (Battenberg Records)
  • Nick Zanca — Cacerolazo (Full Spectrum Records)
  • Nightwatchers — Common Crusaders (Lövely Records)
  • Noah Gunderson — A Pillar Of Salt (Cooking Vinyl)
  • Nothing — The Great Dismal B-Sides (Relapse Records)
  • Oh Wonder — 22 Break (Dew Process)
  • The Omnific — Escapades (Wild Thing Records.)
  • Pip Blom — Welcome Break (Red Yeti Records)
  • Plain Mister Smith — Plain Mister Smith EP (Totally Real Records)
  • Porches — All Day Gentle Hold ! (Domino)
  • The Record Company — Play Loud (Concord Records)
  • S. Raekwon — Where I’m At Now (Father/Daughter)
  • Sam Fender — Seventeen Going Under (Dew Process)
  • Sam Teskey — Cycles (Decca)
  • Scott Hirsch — Windless Day (self-released)
  • Sean Rowe — The Darkness Dressed In Colored Lights (Fluff & Gravy Records)
  • Shady Nasty — CLUBSMOKE EP (Royal Mountain Records)
  • Shannon Lay — Geist (Sub Pop)
  • Taraka — Welcome To Paradise Lost (Rage Peace Records)
  • TOMI — Sweet, Sweet Honey EP (In Between Records)
  • Topdown Dialectic — Vol. 3 (Peak Oil)
  • Trivium — In The Court Of The Dragon (Roadrunner Records)
  • UPSAHL — Lady Jesus (Arista Records)
  • Various Artists — Broken Hearts And Dirty Windows: Songs Of John Prine, Vol. 2 (Oh Boy Records!)
  • The Velveteers — Nightmare Daydream (Easy Eye Sound)
  • W.H. Lung — Vanities (Piccadilly Records)
  • Ward White — Dirty Clouds (self-released)
  • We Are Scientists — Huffy (100% Records)
  • Xochimoki. –Temple Of The New Sun (Phantom Limb)
  • Zoe & Cloyd — Rebuild (ORGANIC Records)

Friday, October 15

  • A.A. Williams — arco EP (Bella Union)
  • Allie Crow Buckley — Moonlit And Devious Alternatives EP (Paradise of Bachelors)
  • Allie Dunn — Good As Gone EP (Porter Rose Records)
  • Anz — All Hours EP (Ninja Tune)
  • Astral Brain — The Bewildered Mind (Shelflife)
  • Baker Boy — Gela (Island Records Australia)
  • Bedouine — Waysides (The Orchard)
  • Ben Barnes — Songs For You EP (Label Logic)
  • Billy Joe Shaver & Kinky Friedman — Live Down Under (Sfingter Records)
  • Blackstarkids — Puppies Forever (Dirty Hit)
  • Brin — Water Sign (Sound As Language)
  • Bryan’s Magic Tears — Vacuum Sealed (Born Bad Records)
  • Carlos Santana — Blessings And Miracles (BMG)
  • CD RIM — Songs Of Vienna (Luckyme)
  • The Charlatans — A Head Full Of Ideas (Then Records)
  • Charlotte Greve — Sediments We Move (New Amsterdam)
  • Chris Jones And The Night Drivers — Make Each Second Last (Mountain Home Music Company)
  • Coldplay — Music Of The Spheres (Atlantic Records)
  • Dark Mark Vs Skeleton Joe — Dark Mark Vs Skeleton Joe (Kitten Robot)
  • The Darkness — Motorheart (Cooking Vinyl)
  • Dave Monks — I’ve Always Wanted To Be Me (Ghost Pepper Records)
  • David Keenan — What Then? (Rubyworks)
  • Dean Wareham — I Have Nothing To Say To The Mayor Of L.A. (Double Feature Records)
  • Disclosure — DJ-Kicks (!K7)
  • Dos Santos — City Of Mirrors (International Anthem)
  • Elan Tamara — We Can Fall (BOKKLE)
  • ESP Summer — Kingdom Of Heaven (Disciples)
  • Finneas — Optimist (Interscope)
  • The Georgia Thunderbolts — Can We Get A Witness (Mascot Records)
  • Glenn Echo — Fixed Memory (self-released)
  • Gone To Color — Gone To Color (self-released)
  • Gracey — Fragile EP (Polydor)
  • Hank May — One More Taste Of The Good Stuff (Dangerbird Records)
  • Hayden Thorpe — Moondust for My Diamond (Domino)
  • Jason Isbell And The 400 Unit — Georgia Blue (Southeastern Records)
  • Johnny Marr — Fever Dreams Pt 1 EP (BMG)
  • Joy Crookes — Skin (Insanity Records)
  • JP Cooper — SHE (Island Records)
  • Kacy Hill — Simple, Sweet And Smiling (self-released)
  • Kaley Rutledge — Tender Heart (Tone Tree Music)
  • Le Ren — Leftovers (Secretly Canadian)
  • Lilly Hiatt — Lately (New West Records)
  • Lorne Behrman — When I Hit The Floor EP (Spaghetty Town Records.)
  • Matt Benyayer — She 2.0 EP (Monkeytown Records)
  • Melvins — Five Legged Dog (Ipecac Recordings)
  • Namesake — Redeeming Features (Get Better Records)
  • Old Man Of The Woods — Votives (Totally Real Records)
  • Pokey LaFarge — In The Blossom Of Their Shade (New West Records)
  • Purple Disco Machine — Exotica (Sweat It Out)
  • Remi Wolf — Juno (Island)
  • Ryan Hurd — Pelago (Arista Nashville)
  • Salt Creek — Out Of The Sky (Tooth & Nail)
  • Scott von Ryper — Dream State Treasure (Transient/Silver)
  • Sir Was — Let The Morning Come (Memphis Industries)
  • Skeletoon — The 1.21 Gigawatts Club (Scarlet Records)
  • Stephan Moccio — Lionheart (Decca Records)
  • Steven Bamidele — Uncrowded EP (Park The Van)
  • Stimming & Lambert — Positive (XXIM Records)
  • TK & The Holy Know-Nothings — The Incredible Heat Machine (Mama Bird Recording Co.)
  • ToBy — L’Espirit (Magnetic Moon Records)
  • Toby Keith — Peso In My Pocket (Show Dog Nashville)
  • Various Artists — Pokémon 25: The Album (Capitol Records)
  • Virgil Shaw — At The Time I Didn’t Care (Terrorbird)
  • Vitamin String Quartet — It Feels Like Christmas (Decca)
  • Waylon Payne — The Lost Act (Carnival Recording Company)
  • Weak Signal — Bianca (Blackout Correspondence)
  • Wilderado — Wilderado (National Anthem)
  • Xenia Rubinos — Una Rosa (ANTI- Records)
  • Zache Davis — The Sting (Sheep Chase Records)
  • Zeph — Scared Of Everything EP (Neon Gold)

Friday, October 22

  • Abby Huston — AH HA (Egghunt Records)
  • Adeline Hotel — The Cherries Are Speaking (Ruination Records)
  • Amaunet — While I’m Living (Lövely Records)
  • Angel Dust — YAK: A Collection Of Truck Songs (Roadrunner Records)
  • Belaver — Lain Prone (Niles City Records)
  • Biffy Clyro — The Myth Of The Happily Ever After (Warner Music UK)
  • Big D And The Kids Table — Do Your Art (SideOneDummy Records)
  • Black Marble — Fast Idol (Sacred Bones Records)
  • Blackwater Holylight — Silence/Motion (Riding Easy)
  • Braison Cyrus — Javelina (Sunday Supper Records)
  • Brett Young — Brett Young & Friends Sing The Christmas Classics (Big Machine)
  • Bullet For My Valentine — Bullet For My Valentine (Spinefarm)
  • Can’t Swim — Change Of Plans (Pure Noise Records)
  • Civic TV — Black Moon (Flemish Eye)
  • Clinic — Fantasy Island (Domino)
  • The Convenience — Accelerator (Winspear)
  • Cradle Of Filth — Existence Is Futile (Nuclear Blast)
  • Cuffed Up — Asymmetry EP (Royal Mountain Records)
  • Dave Hause — Blood Harmony (Blood Harmony Records)
  • Deerhoof — Actually, You Can (Joyful Noise Recordings)
  • Demarco — Melody (Ineffable Records)
  • Dillon Carmichael — Son Of A (Riser House)
  • DINNER — Dream Work (Captured Tracks)
  • Don Lifted — 325i (Fat Possum Records)
  • Dream Theater — A View From The Top Of The World (Inside Out)
  • Dummy — Mandatory Enjoyment (Trouble In Mind)
  • Duran Duran — Future Past (Tape Modern/BMG)
  • Elton John — The Lockdown Sessions (EMI/Mercury Records)
  • Every Time I Die — Radical (Epitaph)
  • The F16s — Is It Time To Eat The Rich Yet? EP (House Arrest)
  • Guided By Voices — IT’S NOT THEM. IT COULDN’T BE THEM. IT IS THEM! (Forced Exposure)
  • Hand Habits — Fun House (Saddle Creek)
  • Helado Negro — Far In (4AD)
  • Herbert — Musca (Accidental Records)
  • Hex A.D. — Funeral Tango for Gods & Men (Fresh Tea)
  • Honne — Let’s Just Say The World Ended A Week From Now, What Would You Do? (Atlantic)
  • Iameve — Archetype EP (Firepower)
  • Jacques Greene — ANTH01 (LuckyMe)
  • Jackson+Sellers — Breaking Point (ANTI- Records)
  • Jessica Pavone — Lull (Chaikin Records)
  • John Forté — Vessels, Angels & Ancestors (Soul Land)
  • Ka Baird & Pekka Airaksinen — FRKWYS Vol. 17: Hungry Shells (RVNG Intl.)
  • KEG — Assembly EP (Alcopop!)
  • Kristin Chenoweth — Happiness is…Christmas! (Concord Records)
  • La Luz — La Luz (Hardly Art Records)
  • Lady A — What A Song Can Do (BMLG)
  • Lana Del Rey — Blue Banisters (Interscope/Polydor)
  • Liily — TV Or Not TV (Flush Records/The Orchard)
  • Lomond Campbell — LŪP (One Little Independent Records)
  • Lonely Guest — Lonely Guest (False Idols)
  • Lowland Hum — At Home (Tonetree)
  • Maya Shenfeld — In Free Fall (Thrill Jockey Records)
  • Mazey Haze — Always Dancing EP (LUSTRE)
  • Melanie Charles — Y’all Don’t (Really) Care About Black Women (Impulse!)
  • Mess Esque — Mess Esque (Milk! Records)
  • Morgxn — MERIDIAN: vol 2 EP (Wxnderlost Records)
  • My Morning Jacket — My Morning Jacket (ATO Records)
  • Neutral Snap — Tell Me How I Feel (Orange Music Records)
  • Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds — B Sides & Rarities — Parts I & II (‎Mute)
  • Okay Kaya — The Incompatible Okay Kaya (Jagjaguwar)
  • Orquesta Akokán — 16 Rayos (Daptone Records)
  • Oscar And The Wolf — The Shimmer (PIAS)
  • Parker Longbough — Off Front Street (Phlexx Records)
  • Parquet Courts — Sympathy For Life (Rough Trade Records)
  • Pepe Deluxé — Phantom Cabinet Vol. 1 (Catskills Records)
  • Phew — New Decade (Mute)
  • Power Supply — In The Time Of The Sabre-Tooth Tiger (Goner Records)
  • Richard Carpenter — Richard Carpenter’s Piano Songbook (Decca)
  • Rüfüs Du Sol — Surrender (Warner)
  • Ryan LeVine — Good Things To Remember EP (BMG)
  • Sassy 009 — Heart Ego (Luft Recordings)
  • Self Esteem — Prioritise Pleasure (Fiction Records)
  • SEVENTEEN — Attacca EP (Pledis Entertainment)
  • She/Beast — Violent Tendencies (PNKSLM Recordings)
  • Sixx:A.M. — Sixx.A.M. HITS (Better Noise Music)
  • Skinny Lister — A Matter Of Life & Love (Xtra Mile)
  • Slow Crush — Hush (Church Road Records)
  • Snotty Nose Rez Kids — Life After (Fontana North/Distorted Muse)
  • Sonny Fodera — Wide Awake (Solotoko)
  • Spirit Was — Heaven’s Just A Cloud (Danger Collective Records)
  • Super American — SUP (Wax Bodega)
  • Tip-Top — CHANSONS d’ENNUI (ABKCO)
  • Tonstartssbandht — Petunia (Mexican Summer)
  • Trace Mountains — House Of Confusion (Lame-O Records)
  • Wet — Letter Blue (AWAL)
  • Zachary Williams — Dirty Camaro (Dualtone Music Group)
  • The Zephyr Bones — Neon Body (La Castanya)

Friday, October 29

  • Bad Wolves — Dear Monsters (Better Noise Music)
  • Bat Fangs — Queen Of My World (Don Giovanni Records)
  • Bremer/McCoy — Natten (Luaka Bop)
  • Calling All Captains — Slowly Getting Better (Rude Records/Equal Vision Records)
  • Charlotte Cornfield — Highs In The Minuses (Double Double Whammy/Polyvinyl)
  • Chloé & Vassilena Serafimova — SEQUENZA (Lumière Noire)
  • David Reece — Blacklist Utopia (El Puerto Records)
  • Dear Laika — Pluperfect Mind (Memorials of Distinction)
  • Ed Sheeran — = (Atlantic)
  • Eleanor Buckland — You Don’t Have To Know (self-released)
  • Emily Scott Robinson — American Siren (Oh Boy Records)
  • The Exbats — Now Where Were We (Goner Records)
  • Furrows — Fisher King (Polyvinyl)
  • Gates — Here And Now EP (Wax Bodega)
  • Good Morning — Barnyard (Polyvinyl Record Co.)
  • Good Posture — Changin’ EP (Feeltrip Records)
  • The High Strung — Hannah (Park The Van Records)
  • Hot Garbage — RIDE (Mothland)
  • Jamire Williams — But Only After You Have Suffered (International Anthem)
  • Jerry Cantrell — Brighten (self-released)
  • Joe Bonamassa — Time Clocks (Provogue)
  • Jonathan Blake — Homeward Bound ( Blue Note Records)
  • Levitation Orchestra — Illusions & Realities (Gearbox Records)
  • Lilli Lewis — Americana (Louisiana Red Hot Records)
  • Lily Konigsberg — Lily We Need To Talk Now (Wharf Cat Records)
  • Lone — Always Inside Your Head (Greco Roman)
  • The Lucid Furs — Damn! That Was Easy! (Argonauta Records)
  • Marco Parisi — Untitled (Platoon)
  • Marie Dahlstrom — Safe Place EP (JFH Records)
  • Marissa Nadler — The Path Of The Clouds (Sacred Bones Records)
  • Mary Lattimore — Collected Pieces II (Ghostly International)
  • Mastodon — Hushed And Grim (Reprise Records)
  • Maya Jane Coles — Night Creature (I/AM/ME)
  • Minus The Bear — Farewell (Suicide Squeeze Records)
  • Monolord — Your Time To Shine (Relapse Records)
  • Motörhead — Everything Louder Forever (BMG)
  • Natalie Jane Hill — Solely (Dear Life Records)
  • Naytronix — Other Possibilities (Overseas Artists)
  • Nichols Payton — Smoke Sessions (Smoke Sessions)
  • Nightmares On Wax — Shout Out! To Freedom.. (Warp)
  • Order — The Gospel (Listenable Records)
  • The Parrots — Dos (Heavenly Recordings)
  • Patrick Shiroshi — Hidemi (American Dreams Records)
  • Planningtorock — Gay Dreams Do Come True EP (Human Level)
  • The Pop Group — Y In Dub (Radar)
  • Reno McCarthy — Run Up River (Balustrade)
  • Richard Ashcroft — Acoustic Hymns Vol. 1 (RPA/BMG)
  • Robin Hatch — T.O.N.T.O. (Robin Records)
  • Royston Langdon — Chains EP (BFD/The Orchard)
  • Running Wild — Blood On Blood (Steamhammer/SPV)
  • Sam Evian — Time To Melt (Fat Possusm)
  • Save Face — Another Kill For The Highlight Reel (Epitaph)
  • Soot Sprite — Poltergeists EP (Specialist Subject Records)
  • Spice Girls — Spice25 (Virgin)
  • SUSTO — Time In The Sun (New West Records)
  • They Might Be Giants — Book (Idlewild Recordings)
  • Tori Amos — Ocean To Ocean (Decca)
  • The War On Drugs — I Don’t Live Here Anymore (Atlantic)
  • Wave Racer — To Stop From Falling Off The Earth (PIAS)
  • Whitechapel — Kin (Metal Blade Records)
  • The Wilderness Of Manitoba — Farewell To Cathedral (Popguru Sound & Vision)

Some artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx Is An independent subsidiary Of Warner Music Group.

Problem & Snoop Dogg Connect For “Dim My Light”

West Coast fan favorite Problem has come through with a brand new single, and he’s made sure to enlist the legendary Snoop Dogg for the occasion. The new track “Dim My Light” features a beat that’s sure to delight Los Angeles rappers across the board, a clean blend of bass and stabbing orchestral hit; in fact, it almost feels like producer Audio Anthem drew inspiration from some classic Dr. Dre.

In that sense, Snoop Dogg is no stranger to floating over instrumentals like this — nor is Problem, who picks up where the Doggfather leaves off and whips up a few words of advice. “I wanna help, I really, really, really do,” he declares. “I been watching for a while and hustling ain’t really you / so brodie do yourself a favor, find yourself something to do.” 

Check out the new collab from Snoop and Problem now, and sound off if you’d be interested in a new album from the Compton emcee.

Quotable Lyrics

I wanna help, I really, really, really do
I been watching for a while and hustling ain’t really you 
So brodie do yourself a favor, find yourself something to do

King Louie Elaborates On What “Drill” Music Is & Explains Its Origins

The dynamics of the rap game shifted 10 years ago. By the time the 2010s rolled around, Kendrick Lamar, Drake, and J. Cole were foreshadowed as the heirs of the throne, but nobody could’ve predicted the explosive nature of drill music. The sound that Young Chop and Chief Keef produced was refreshing, youthful, and in retrospect, the most impactful of the past decade.

You can’t mention the sounds of drill without the God Of Drill himself, King Louie. He’s an integral part of Chicago’s subculture, even before the rise of Chief Keef, and what we now know as drill music. Louie was hustling actual CDs throughout Chicago in the years leading to his big break. Though many of his classic tapes remain available on sites like DatPiff and YouTube, he’s working towards bringing some of his classic mixtapes from the Tony and Drilluminati series onto DSPs.

king louie new interview 2021

Image provided by the artist. Photo credit: Sugarmilk, Haley Scott Photos.

Years after the release of projects like Drillimunati, there’s a new generation of artists emerging from across the globe who are putting their own spin on Chicago’s sound. The UK, New York, and several other spots in the world have formed their own take on drill that’s currently influencing just about every other genre.

“The shit that they just make, like, all the drill shit sounds the same. It don’t all gotta be like that. It could be different shit,” Louie told HNHH. He added it’s not just the sound but the content that for years, has misidentified what drill music is.

“It’s a way of life, bro. It’s a verb, bro,” he continued. “Like, it could be anything, bro. We did fire drills. Wasn’t no-fucking-body and getting killed, nobody’s shooting or nothin’ in no fire drill when we were in school. That was a drill. So, it’s like anything could be a drill. It’s like the killing aspect of that shit, or just like the term, ‘man drilled his ass.’ Motherfuckas like, ‘that’s raw’ and that’s how they took it.”

We recently caught up with King Louie to chop it up about his catalog, the trajectory of drill music, working with Kanye West, and so much more. 

Read our interview below, edited for clarity and length. Stay tuned for new music from King Louie in the near future.


HNHH: Yo King Louie, what’s going on, bro? 

King Louie: What’s the word? Is it cool if I smoke? 

Yeah, bro. Do your thing, it’s all good. Can you take me back to your early days? Before things popped off when you were handing out CDs and like, trying to get the name out before like the radio play and the fame?

‘06. Late ‘05, like the end in ‘05, I was kicked out of school. That’s when I started going over my homie crib. My homie, E. We would record at his house, at his momma’s house. Started just riding around the city and shit, just passing the CDs out. Like, all around the city, on all sides. And then the city just took to it because there really wasn’t nothin’, you know what I’m sayin’? Nobody was really doing music. So, it was just like, that’s how I got the buzz. Then I started putting out videos and shit. For a minute, they ain’t know how I look. And then when I started putting the videos out, they were like, “Oh, this how he looks,” so it put a face to it and it was just a dope journey.

When you look at guys like Chief Keef and Durk and everybody that’s been part of that era of drill, they propelled through YouTube. What I always found interesting about you is that you really had to go through that, that rapper-rapper grind from like — 

Yeah, for me, getting my buzz and getting my shit out there was, like, the internet was a plus for me. But I was riding around with the guys. Me and the guys, we’re riding around, getting high, listening to the shit, and passing the shit out. All day. That’s what a motherfucka do was sit in the crib all day and just burn CDs and shit. That’s when CDs was in. I remember motherfuckas used to steal my CDs like, with the stuff that I wasn’t putting out on a disk to give out. They would steal the unreleased shit. It’s just dope how shit used to be.

That’s crazy ‘cause, you know, just having a bank of unreleased music and before anything really popped off on the national level, having people really try and get your music that wasn’t out. 

It really wasn’t out anyway. My first mixtape was Boss Shit. I can’t even pinpoint when exactly I put that out, but that was like the first body of work I put out. But this was way before Boss Shit. It was just like mothafuckas been doing it for quite a while, you know? But it was just the journey and the leg work, you know what I’m saying? All the fun with the guys and everything. Putting on the name or whatever or getting myself out there, it was dope.

I believe you put the Drillumnati mixtape and Tony up on streaming services, right?

Drillumnati was already there. I’m working on getting D2 and D3 on there, as of now. Tony is back on all streaming platforms. And, as well as Tony 2 and I got Soprano on there. And Chiraq Drillinois should be there sooner or later. I’m trying to get all my old catalogs put on the streaming platforms.

How was that adjustment from a very grassroots level, to using the internet as a tool, to now having the streaming era take effect? How’s that process been for you? These are tapes that are considered classics in their own right. 

It’s dope off the strength of, like my real fans and shit that wanted that shit on their phones or whatever with all the streaming platforms. But my music wasn’t on there and they had to go to another app. I appreciate them wanting that so it’s like, I’m happy for them to be able to get what they want. And then just to experience the whole streaming shit. That’s decent. That’s another source of income, so that’s decent, as well.

king louie 2021 interview

Image provided to HNHH by artist. Photo credit: Sugarmilk, Haley Scott Photos.

Talk to me about Drilluminati. What was your mentality going into that tape and like recording that tape? Was there even a mission statement when you went into the booth to record this project?

Yeah, you get in that mode. Sometimes, some of the songs might be old songs that might make a new project. But it’s like, the songs that fit the title, you know? Drilluminati was more like a way of life, you know what I’m saying? Like, a secret society-type shit for the drillers. So, that was how I went into that. What at least came up when I’m listening to this body of work was, ah this could be called this. This could be Drilluminati. That’s how I do my shit. I probably had a song, or if I come with the name first, I’ll find the songs that fit the name. Or if I got a certain tracklist that I’m thinking about is going to be a project or my brother might think, ‘all these tracks will be a project.’ Now, I come with a title for how I feel about that, you know I’m saying? So, that’s it go.

What’s the reference to Tony?

Tony’s like an alter ego type shit. Like, I grew up — I was born out west of Chicago. Once I got to the seventh grade, I migrated to the east side of Chicago. Then I kind of moved a little south of the city. But that’s just me saying like, I came from somewhere else, and then I made a name for myself everywhere like Tony Montana. So, that’s Tony. So when the people love King Louie, that’s the Tony effect. It’s just some shit I played with and ran with. Then I got an uncle named Tony. So, you know.

Is it accurate to say that, because you moved so much around Chicago, you were able to build a name for yourself everywhere you go? I mean, everyone loves King Louie. 

I mean, shit. It’s just like, I’m a cool individual. I’m not a fuck individual. I’m likable. I’m compatible, you know?

I ask that because you mentioned in an interview that the essence of drill is how much the streets support you. Chicago has its own divisions and I think you mentioned in that same interview that not many people listened to music from other hoods. However, you said that when you came out, you were able to reach everyone from Chicago.

I remember what you’re talking about now. What I was trying to say was everybody else before me, in the sense of all successful artists like Crucial Conflict and the Twista’s, they made it to the other sides and everything. But when we started rapping, you would seldomly hear it in other areas. When we started rapping, the city’s style, like — we re-lit the fire for the city. Everybody’s listening. If you could be right here, we still listen to you all the way over there. Twista was still dropping albums back then. He had just done the Kanye shit, the “Overnight Celebrity” shit. But the people I had grown up on in the city weren’t really listening to a Crucial Conflict or anything from out west, where I was at. I don’t think they was checking for this shit where I was at. Where I came from. But once I started putting my music out and everybody that came behind me, it was like, shit, the city started listening to that shit.

What was it kind of like witnessing, not even just the music but the culture itself, grow the way it did? With social media, the things that are happening regionally are now getting amplified on a bigger scale. The world was gravitating towards drill but also attaching itself to the lingo and the culture as a whole.

That shit is dope but also, it could be bittersweet because sometimes people don’t genuinely understand what something is. Like, it’s cool. They praise it but you really don’t know. So when people know the history of it and know what they’re talking about, what they be speaking on is, it’s cool. But it’s like, fuck out of here when you really don’t know the origin. Where this shit really originated from and all that. The originators and [people] just don’t pay homage. But it’s successful. Drill is successful and that’s the dope part. Like, you got to overlook all the bad for the good. And the good is drill is successful. Coming from where it came from, it’s successful.

You dropped a song called “Pac Man Drip” in 2018, 2019. What can you tell me about Pac Man and his contributions to drill? Tell me how it shaped from his time to how it influenced your era and moving forward.

Well, Pac. RIP Pac. That’s the originator of drill. Bro, he was killed. And that’s what made me keep going with the shit because it was like, we’re from the same hood. And once folks got killed, it’s like, the drill shit, we were going hard for it, but it was his movement. But I just kept going with the shit for the love, for folks. And it took. But what the streets be thinkin’ on or the world be thinkin’ on, that’s some whole other shit. They won’t even know who Pac Man is.

“Well, Pac [Man]. RIP Pac. That’s the originator of drill. Bro, he was killed. And that’s what made me keep going with the shit because it was like, we’re from the same hood. And once folks got killed, it’s like, the drill shit, we were going hard for it, but it was his movement.”

I always say it’s kind of weird, how the beats and all that shit, like what they consider the drill is like — we, in the beginning, we never rapped on those type of beats. So for people to say that’s drill, it’s kind of weird. Like if you listen to Drilluminati — the beats they consider drill beats now, it’s not those type of beats on Drilluminati. For drill to be what considered what drill is now, is like, how? For it to just be a genre — because the genre could be way bigger than what it is, because drill could be anything.

Do you think drill has kind of been gentrified in that sense? When people have one specific definition of drill yet the way you explain it is far deeper than that. 

I would say it’s fu-washed. You know how they say shit whitewashed? Like, history. They trying to whitewash history and abolish like black history and all that?  They can’t teach that in school anymore? So, it’s fu-washed. Like is fu as fuck. It’s washed. It’s fu. Like, the people who view me, they ain’t keepin’ it funky. So it’s fu-washed. That’s what I would call it. 

How do you feel about the international pockets that have taken on drill?

That’s what I was saying. It’s cool and understandable but motherfuckers got to understand. The shit that they just make, like, all the drill shit sounds the same. It don’t all gotta be like that. It could be different shit. I understand, but what motherfuckers gotta understand is that, this is genuinely not what it is, all the way like that.

It’s a way of life, bro. It’s a verb, bro. Like, it could be anything, bro. We did fire drills. Wasn’t no-fucking-body getting killed, nobody’s shooting or nothin’ in no fire drill when we were in school. That was a drill. So, it’s like anything could be a drill. It’s like the killing aspect of that shit, or just like the term, “man drilled his ass.” Motherfuckas like, “that’s raw” and that’s how they took it. 

“It’s a way of life, bro. It’s a verb, bro. Like, it could be anything, bro. We did fire drills. Wasn’t no-fucking-body getting killed, nobody’s shooting or nothin’ in no fire drill when we were in school. That was a drill. So, it’s like anything could be a drill. It’s like the killing aspect of that shit, or just like the term, “man drilled his ass.” Motherfuckas like, “that’s raw” and that’s how they took it.”

But it’s like drill, it could be anything, bro. You at work? That’s the drill. That’s the drill we on. l don’t know how many interviews you’re going to do today but shit, you know the drill. You gotta do them bitches. It’s like that. They made this shit like this, that shit could be anything, you feel me?

It’s interesting that there’s this blurred definition because I’ve interviewed a couple people in the past who’ve admitted that they weren’t sure about what exactly drill is. 

Yeah and that’s what I’m sayin’. And that’s what makes people say, “man, I don’t like that drill shit, man.” Because now, it’s like they’re putting you in a box. R&B shit could be drill, bro. If you fucked to an R&B classic — you drilled her, you feel me? It was a drill. It was a real drill last night. It was a mood, it was a vibe, it was real drill, you feel me? You killed the pussy. So it’s like, anything could be a drill, bro. Taking the kids to school. “Come on, kids. Put your shoes on, everybody get they bookbags, you guys know the drill.” C’mon, where’s the violence, bro? Anything is a drill, bro. Boss Shit, it’s a drill, bro. 

king louie new interview 2021

Image provided to HNHH by artist. Photo credit: Sugarmilk, Haley Scott Photos.

When you listen to a song like “Live and Die in Chicago,” it captures what you just said. It’s the epitome of drill in a lot of ways but production-wise, it doesn’t fit inside of that box that you mentioned. 

“Live and Die in Chicago,” I wrote that because I liked the video. Because I ain’t even write it. I lowkey just got in the booth and just spit that shit out off of the head. But I saw a Tupac video, “Live and Die in LA”, and I was feeling that shit so it was just like, I like that vibe. And it was just like it was really just speaking to live and die in Chicago. It wasn’t really no drill beat, though. I don’t even know what kind of beat you would call that shit but it isn’t how the drill beats sound now. 

How much was ‘Pac an influence on you? 

At one point, he was like my favorite artist. 

And what gravitated you to someone like 2Pac?

Really, it was my uncles who were listening to it and I just liked it. He was a dope artist. I like [the way] he recorded his vocals. Like, some of his shit, it was kind of all over the place. It was in sync but it was rough. That shit — ‘Pac used to be doing would be going crazy. I used to love ‘Pac. I used to fuck with ‘Pac when I was a shorty. 

Can you take me back to that session with Kanye for Yeezus? I think I read somewhere you woke up from a nap and stepped into the booth to record your verse on “Send It Up.” 

It was like [laughs] — we were in Paris. And it’s like mothafucka gotta get up, gotta get a cab and all that shit. So it was like yeah, it’s studio time. Gotta go to the studio, get to the studio, it’s early. They set me up and shit. I was still tired. And when I laid the verse, it turned out to be the verse. What I laid down turned out to be the verse and hook. It was dope.

You wrote on the album, outside of your verse, right? 

Yeah, I did some shit. 

Was that your first time writing for someone else? 

For an artist of that caliber. But yeah, I wrote shit for people when we weren’t on.

Is that a different process for you? Writing for yourself as the main artist in comparison to writing for another artist like Kanye West. 

Not really. If you a fan of the artist, you can try to get in and say shit that you would think would be cool if they said. It’s helping. It’s all it is. 

It doesn’t matter what part of the building you helped make. If you help make the mothafucking key to go in the lock, you made the key. It was part of the building like, “we need the key made,” you helped make that mothafucka. Some people do electricity, some people do bricklaying.  Everybody makes the building. So, it’s like, that’s how it is. I look at it like that.

You were also in Wyoming for the Ye sessions too, right? How did working on Yeezus in Paris compare to working in Jackson Hole, Wyoming for Ye?

It’s still like, “what you can bring to the table.” What type of flavor can you bring? Like, does it go with the dish? So like, because you in the studio, I’m not out there kicking it. So if I’m locked in the studio at the crib, I’m not outside. When you get the work, you put in, you feel me? And then if they fuck with it, they fuck with it. 

We artists, so it’s like, all the music we make doesn’t sound the same. You might make a hard-ass song, and then can make the R&B song on the same day. You could have wrote them bitches on the same day. So it’s just what’s the work? What we doing? 

Like at a restaurant, a motherfucka might want some fries. Another motherfucka might want some cookies or a motherfucka might want some ice cream. You gotta know how to make all them shits. You got to know how to do a pop with no ice, you got to remember the no ice, you got to remember extra ice. You gotta know how to do all this shit — cash register. We’re artists and we making music, it’s just like, this how we coming.

king louie kanye west interview 2021

Image provided to HNHH by artist. Photo credit: Sugarmilk, Haley Scott Photos.

How did the relationship with Drake form? You got the OVO tattoo and everything.

Oh, Drake, actually I was at one of his shows, it was close to Chicago. Anywho, he had shouted a motherfucka out at the concert, which was dope. We linked at the club or something later on that night. I think that was the same night he had dropped that “Tuesday” shit. Then I had a show out in Canada, and he had somebody slide to the show. Then after the show, they had took us to link up with Drake. You know, we chilled for a minute, talked, politic and that was about it.

Your connection to Canada is deeper than simply linking up with Drake. So what inspired your single, “In Love With Canada?” You name-dropped a bunch of Canadian cities on the track. 

I think that was part of “Tony” tour that I had did. I got booked in all of them cities or whatever. It was live shit at every city, every show. I was like, “Eee, this shit slick. I love this shit.” This is dope, it’s Canada. I love Canada! And I did a song. I had to do a song about it. It was just a dope-ass experience. It was fun, man. 

Was this the first time you were in Canada?

No, that wasn’t the first time I was there. And you know, it was like for my tour. So we going to all these different cities and shit, and every show packed. It’s mad love out there. This is a whole different country. So, it was dope as hell to me. So I made a song about how happy I was with it. I’m like, yeah I gotta go make a song. 

Oh, that’s dope. Did you record that in Canada?

I can’t remember though, but I don’t think so. I think I came back and it was just like we just talking about it and shit. Then I just made the song about that shit like fuck it.

You dropped “Smoking Cali” earlier. What does that song say about what you have in store for the remainder of the year?

I got a bunch of more shit. That shit is old to me. I just got a bunch of shit. I’m gonna start flooding shit. It’s more to come. 

Are we going to get a new project soon?

I’ll probably put the EP out next month sometime. But like I say, I got a whole heap of shit.

Have you just been stocking up on a mad amount of records?

I just been recording. Ain’t no reason to stop recording. Even though I wasn’t putting out any music, I still gotta record, still gotta practice. I just got a bunch of shit. 

“I just been recording. Ain’t no reason to stop recording. Even though I wasn’t putting out any music, I still gotta record, still gotta practice. I just got a bunch of shit.”

Tom Brady Originally Wanted To Retire With This Team

Tom Brady is one of the greatest team sport athletes of all time as he currently has seven Super Bowl titles and a plethora of accolades at the quarterback position. After spending 20 years with the New England Patriots, Brady is now a member of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, where he won a title just last year. Now, he is going into his second season with the team and there is a real belief that he can get them right back to another Super Bowl.

When Brady decided to leave the Patriots in 2020, there were various teams looking to sign him. The Tennesee Titans were rumored to be in the running for Brady, and the San Francisco 49ers were as well. According to Seth Wickersham’s book It’s Better to Be Feared: The New England Patriots Dynasty, Brady reportedly admitted to former teammate Wes Welker that he wanted to retire as a member of the 49ers.

Tom Brady

Harry How/Getty Images

Brady has always stated that the 49ers helped him fall in love with the game, so it only makes sense that he would have this kind of take. In the end, however, the 49ers weren’t keen on Brady as they felt like he was coming up on the end of his career and that he simply wasn’t an elite QB anymore. This backfired spectacularly on the 49ers, who struggled last season and are now dealing with a QB battle that is less than inspiring.

While Brady didn’t exactly get his wish, he still came out ahead, which has been the story all throughout the quarterback’s career.

Tom Brady

Harry How/Getty Images

[Via]

Twitter Clowns Kevin Gates After Jumping Photo From His Kansas City Concert Goes Viral

On Thursday, rapper Kevin Gates took to Instagram to show off a jump he did during a recent performance in Kansas City. Little did he know, the post would end up going viral on Twitter after being made into dozens of different memes.

“Oh Ye who Believe – Gifted – dive into the crowd no safety harness #HealingExperience #iamHim #KhazaTour,” the 35-year-old captioned his photo.

In the picture, Gates can be seen leaping into the air, with his legs and arms tucked behind his back. Many couldn’t help but notice that the artist has become noticeably slimmer throughout the COVID-19 pandemic.

“Kevin Gates got slim and been actin different ever since,” one person tweeted.

“Kevin Gates did this shit in a fedora bruh. Mfs lose weight and start doing all sorts of unnecessary movements,” another viewer wrote.

Others pointed out that the “2 Phones” singer looked as though he could fit into the cast of various movies with his jumping skills, including Step UpHigh School Musical, and Stomp The Yard.

Some couldn’t help but question which of Gates’ songs could possibly prompt him to leap into the air like he did.

“There’s absolutely no Kevin Gates song that requires dis maneuver but to do it in Kansas City in a small venue is da craziest shit,” one Twitter user pointed out.

Gates has yet to address those that have been clowning him, although he did post a tweet about semen being “Life Force,” which only prompted more jokes at his expense. 

What do you think about Kevin Gates’ new dance moves? Let us know in the comments. 

Headie One Accepts The Truth On New Mixtape “Too Loyal For My Own Good”

Headie One is back. Last year, the Ghanaian-British rapper released his debut studio album EDNA, which featured artists such as Drake, AJ Tracey, Stormzy, Future, Mahalia, Kenny Beats, Kaash Paige, and several others.

Almost a full year later, Headie One follows up EDNA with Too Loyal for My Own Good, a hard-hitting mixtape that finds the UK rapper stepping back from the star-studded features riddled throughout his chart-topping debut. The result is a personal and honest project that offers insight into Headie One’s current mindstate.

Backed by the previously released singles “2 Chains” and “Beggars Can’t Be Choosers,” Too Loyal for My Own Good houses 11 new tracks for Headie One fans to dive into, including early highlights such as “Long Night in Knightsbridge” and “…For My Own Good.” In celebration of the tape’s release, the UK artist has also shared the music video for the album’s sixth track, a song titled “Cry.”

If you were rocking with the “Cry” music video, be sure to check out the rest of Headie One’s Too Loyal for My Own Good below. Let us know what you think about the UK rapper’s latest project.

Tracklist:

1. Too Loyal…
2. Love Me for Me?
3. Beggars Can’t Be Choosers
4. 2 Chains
5. Nothing to Me
6. Cry
7. Finer Things
8. Louis Vuitton Collar
9. Indecisive Interlude
10. Long Night in Knightsbridge
11. PTSD
12. Satisfy Me
13. …For My Own Good

600Breezy Reveals He Quit Taking Hard Drugs, Lean, & Pills

Chicago rapper 600Breezy is really about that street life, but he’s made some important changes as he grows older to remain healthy, revealing to his followers that he has quit taking hard drugs, pills, and lean. These days, Breezo is eating healthy, going to the gym several times a week, and staying out of trouble.

The Art Of War rapper took to Instagram to share a video of himself flexing his muscles in the mirror, revealing that he’s living a new, much cleaner life.

“7 months clean, No Lean No Pills No hard drugs at all,” said Breezo. “6’5 240 pounds, Gym 3-4 times a week. Take care of yourself, don’t shorten your life span following trends.”

This is a very impressive feat, and it’s one that should be celebrated by anybody who is familiar with 600Breezy’s journey over the years. This is a formidable step for him to take towards the betterment of his life. His post is being praised by fellow rappers OT Genasis, Jim Jones, Hitman Holla, KenTheMan, and more. 

Earlier this year, Breezo was part of a heated feud with Tekashi 6ix9ine, where they went back-and-forth on social media. They were sparring about seven months ago, so the beef may have actually inspired him to get clean and avoid drama. 

Check out some recent photos of 600Breezy below and send him some love in the comments.

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“Queens” TV Supergroup With Eve, Brand, & More Drop “Nasty Girl”

ABC is getting ready to premiere the new drama series QUEENS on October 19th, which centers around a hip-hop supergroup comprised of four female rappers (played by Eve, Brandy, Naturi Naughton, and Nadine Velazquez) who decide to reunite in their forties for another go-around. In true immersive fashion — not to mention a clever bit of viral marketing — the fictional group has come through with their lead single “Nasty Girl.” 

The track itself is a nostalgic breath of fresh air, and it’s genuinely refreshing to hear the Ruff Ryders legend Eve spitting a verse once again. But if early consensus is anything to go by, it’s Brandy — or her alter ego Xplicit Lyrics — who really steals the show. While Queens aren’t technically a supergroup in the traditional sense, being that they’re playing roles in a series — the commitment that each party shows in “Nasty Girl” bodes well for the series when it drops in a few weeks.

Quotable Lyrics

This is embarassin’, mass murder harassment, I’m the advocate
No one can fathom this nasty bitch flow with the arrogance
Lyrical cynical savage, visuals plain scriptures
And my mystique is Mona Lisa in faded pictures