Destroy Lonely’s New Album ‘If Looks Could Kill’: Here’s Everything We Know So Far

Destroy Lonely has his heart set on being rap music’s next household name. After crushing his Rolling Loud Los Angeles performance, the Playboi Carti signee is well on his way. The musician’s upcoming album, If Looks Could Kill, is slated to be his breakout moment.

When asked about what fans should expect from the album, the musician told Complex, “I was out in New York working on my album, If Looks Could Kill. That sh*t’s hard. I got really in my mode on that. On a bunch of the songs, I’m talking about how ‘I’m The Look Killer’ and a whole bunch of sh*t.”

Here’s everything we know about If Looks Could Kill so far.

Release Date

If Looks Could Kill is out 5/5 via Opium/Interscope. Find more information here.

Tracklist

1. “How U Feel?”
2. “If Looks Could Kill”
3. “Fly Sht”
4. “Which One”
5. “Raver”
6. “Came in Wit”
7. “By The Pound”
8. “All the Time”
9. “Biggest Problem”
10. “Chris Paul”
11. “Superstar”
12. “New New”
13. “Right Now”
14. “Which Way”
15. “Wagwan”
16. “Moment of Silence”
17. “Brazy Girls”
18. “Goin Up”
19. “Passenger”
20. “Promo”
21. “Worth It”
22. “Redlight”
23. “Make Sum Work”
24. “Safety (interlude)”
25. “Your Eyes”
26. “Money & Sex” (bonus) with Ken Carson

Features

In the album’s credits, there is only one listed guest feature, Ken Carson, who’s worked with Destroy Lonely in the past.

Artwork

Singles

So far, “If Looks Could Kill,” co-produced by Clayco and Ssor.t is the only single to be released from the project. “Ain’t Free” was previously released as a snippet, but it did not make the album. Different editions of the album will include additional songs. “Too Damn Rich” and “Spillin” will not make the bonus CD release. As for the vinyl edition, songs “Check the Fleet” and “Back Sippin” will be added.

Tour

Although he hasn’t made a formal tour announcement to support the project, on his official website, there are several upcoming festival appearances and one-off shows listed. See the dates below.

05/19 — Montréal, QC @ Metro Metro Festival 2023
06/15 — Manchester, TN @ Bonnaroo Music and Arts Festival 2023
06/16 — Manchester, TN @ Bonnaroo Music and Arts Festival 2023
06/17 — Manchester, TN @ Bonnaroo Music and Arts Festival 2023
06/18 — Manchester, TN @ Bonnaroo Music and Arts Festival 2023
06/29 — Gräfenhainichen, Germany @ Ferropolis
06/30 — Rotterdam, Netherlands @ Ahoy Rotterdam
07/01 — Rotterdam, Netherlands @Ahoy Rotterdam
07/06 — Frauenfeld, Switzerland @ Openair Frauenfeld 2023
07/07 — Frauenfeld, Switzerland @ Openair Frauenfeld 2023
07/07 — London, United Kingdom @ Wireless Festival
07/08 — Frauenfeld, Switzerland @ Openair Frauenfeld 2023
07/21 — Miami Gardens, FL @ Rolling Loud 2023
07/22 — Miami Gardens, FL @ Rolling Loud 2023
07/23 — Miami Gardens, FL @ Rolling Loud 2023
08/03 — Chicago, IL @ Lollapalooza
08/04 — Chicago, IL @ Lollapalooza
08/05 — Chicago, IL @ Lollapalooza
08/06 — Chicago, IL @ Lollapalooza

Destroy Lonely Announced The Release Date For His Debut Album, ‘If Looks Could Kill’

Playboi Carti might be one of the biggest names in hip-hop right now and he’s conferred that excitement onto the artists on his label, Opium. While Destroy Lonely might not be a household name yet, among a certain subset of fans — namely, the ones who rage at Rolling Loud year after year — he’s the next in line to step up to the upper echelon of notoriety, especially after the release of his highly-anticipated upcoming album, If Looks Could Kill. Destroy Lonely announced its official release date today: May 5.

Lonely — whose music is reminiscent of Carti’s, as well as Trippie Redd’s, and whose father I-20 was signed to Ludacris’ Disturbing Tha Peace in the 2000s — also shared the enormous track list, which includes 26 songs. Physical editions will include two additional songs which will be unique to the format. The sole feature is fellow Opium artist Ken Carson on the bonus track, “Money & Sex.” Fans hoping to catch Destroy Lonely live can see him at Bonnaroo and Summerfest in June, then at Rolling Loud in Miami and Lollapalooza in Chicago after he spends most of July in Europe.

Check out the tracklist for If Looks Could Kill, out 5/5, below and get more info here.

DIGITAL Tracklist:
1. “How U Feel?”
2. “If Looks Could Kill”
3. “Fly Sht”
4. “Which One”
5. “Raver”
6. “Came in Wit”
7. “By The Pound”
8. “All the Time”
9. “Biggest Problem”
10. “Chris Paul”
11. “Superstar”
12. “New New”
13. “Right Now”
14. “Which Way”
15. “Wagwan”
16. “Moment of Silence”
17. “Brazy Girls”
18. “Goin Up”
19. “Passenger”
20. “Promo”
21. “Worth It”
22. “Redlight”
23. “Make Sum Work”
24. “Safety (interlude)”
25. “Your Eyes”
26. “Money & Sex” (bonus) with Ken Carson

CD BONUS Tracks:
26. “Too Damn Rich”
27. “Spillin”

VINYL BONUS Tracks:
26. “Check the Fleet”
27. “Back Sippin”

Rolling Loud Los Angeles Made Good Use Of Its New Venue In 2023

Just when I was beginning to worry that I had seen everything Rolling Loud has to offer, the 2023 festival in Los Angeles showed me something new. I don’t know if Lil Yachty’s Sunday night set will be a one-off curio or the blueprint for the evolution of the punk-rap festival’s format, but it delivered a level of production that more of the fest’s mainstays should at least think about adopting – especially those who want to grow beyond the limitations of its audience for that real four-quadrant appeal.

Meanwhile, Rolling Loud continues to be one of the best “starter” festivals around. Even compared to bigger-name, more local events like Coachella and Lollapalooza, Rolling Loud has probably the best handle on both its format and its audience, leading to a level of enthusiasm unmatched by any other festival in the increasingly crowded market. And while sticking so closely to its dedicated format led this weekend to long stretches of samey-sounding material and lots of lineup recycling in general, even this can be useful for the kids who are just getting their feet wet in the festival scene.

That demographic, actually, constitutes a lot of the Rolling Loud audience. This is purely anecdotal, but it didn’t surprise me to note that those attendees in my vicinity who seemed to have the best grasp on the timing of the festival’s sets and the chillest overall demeanor were those wearing Rolling Loud merch from prior festivals – but never more than a year old. It’s always fun to see the teen boys bounding from stage to stage with all the energy of a year-old golden retriever puppy when a leisurely saunter will do the job most of the time.

Likewise, for a show in early March, with a cloudy forecast and lows promised in the 40s, there are always so many young women trying to pull off the skimpy outfits they’ve seen on social media, only to end up draped in layers of merch tent hoodies to fend off the chills and light drizzles that skittered down periodically throughout the weekend. Rookie mistakes, surely – but the kind that I’m sure they’ll look back on fondly in the future, laughing at their youthful naivete as they bundle up for their more experienced festivals.

This year’s event brought a new location: the Hollywood Park area outside of SoFi Stadium in Inglewood. This was also the biggest improvement over the last California show in San Bernardino. First off, it’s just such a scenic venue, with a gorgeously-lit lake sprawling out from beneath the majestic dome. I’d have loved it if this view had been more incorporated into the orientation of the stage near it. Meanwhile, the wraparound setup reminded me of the first few Rolling Loud festivals in LA at Banc Of California Stadium but with a few changes.

First, the good: There was no dust or grass or rugged terrain to navigate, with the streets lining the stadium offering the food concessions, water stations, and rest areas all in an easily traversable thoroughfare with few choke points. Getting around the fest was a breeze. And including three entrances not only increased the sense of convenience but also the feeling that the organizers had prioritized safety, preventing bottlenecking in any one part of the festival grounds as new arrivals got themselves oriented.

Unfortunately, evoking the Banc Of California setup also leads to this year’s fest losing points. In 2018 and 2019, the stage positioning allowed VIP fans to easily get from the two main stages without leaving the VIP area, making it a true VIP experience. This year, the separation between the two main stages left the VIP sections cut off from each other. Meanwhile, all the VIP activations – a barbershop, tattoo parlor, and hair salon – were all situated at Levi’s Stage, leaving the amenities for the GoPuff Stage feeling a little scarce.

Meanwhile, the more underground Culture Kings stage was angled kind of awkwardly, competing with the sound from Levi’s and lacking a spotlight. While its positioning close to the North entrance seemed planned for more exposure for the more underground acts, it felt more closed off once I realized that it was more or less a straight shot between the Levi’s and GoPuff Stages. Once fans were inside, their only incentive to go anywhere near the third stage was if they really wanted to see Kamaiyah, RJ, or OT Genasis (although the latter certainly made the trip worth it with his sneakily hit-laden setlist and roguish, recklessly charming stage presence).

As far as the programming goes, I can’t offer many complaints – but I don’t know how many compliments I can give either. It didn’t feel like this year’s lineup was sufficiently different from any prior year; I’ve seen DaBaby, Future, Kodak Black, Lil Wayne, Lil Uzi Vert, Lil Yachty, Rich The Kid, Ski Mask The Slump God, and Trippie Redd at previous Rolling Loud iterations, and while they were all mostly pretty good, it seems like most of the variety at the fest is in its midline performers. I did enjoy Tyga bringing out YG to perform “Go Loko” and announce their upcoming joint album. Compton.

Destroy Lonely was a new name to me but cut from the same cloth as goth-rock rappers like Playboi Carti, Trippie, and Uzi, he just didn’t seem to stand out – although he attracted a massive, truly exuberant crowd that speaks to the popularity of that sound at the moment. And, not to put too fine a point on it, but there are so many problematic names involved — including among the headliners — that it’d take another paragraph to point out the litany of abuse charges down the lineup.

At various points throughout the fest, it also felt a lot like watching performers doing karaoke to their own music. In some cases, like that of Coi Leray and Kodak, it seemed as though they were more intent on dancing while the song played than in actually rapping their songs (although that was still more entertaining than one local duo, whose stage presence was so lacking I won’t mention them here, so I won’t hurt any feelings). Still, I’ve been to a lot of “real hip-hop” shows, and to be honest, at least they gave something visual and appeared to be having fun. I’ve seen way too many rappers rapping at the floor while rooted to one spot to ever complain about Coi’s twerking or Saweetie’s choreo (Nicki Minaj’s pop-out during Wayne’s set was fun, but plagued by sound issues).

I was pleasantly surprised by Ice Spice. Say what you want about her monotone – which I think is really the primary complaint about her music, although her most vocal critics probably don’t have the vocabulary to pinpoint this – but her breath control is superb. She doesn’t write super complex bars, but she leaves so little space between them that I truly didn’t think she’d be able to rap them live. Not only did she do that, but she also nailed them, while actually utilizing the full stage and engaging with fans. Ice Spice is a star.

The only other knock on Rolling Loud – and this can actually apply to a lot of fests I’ve covered lately – is this weird commitment to cutting the one corner that absolutely no event should be cutting in the wake of Astroworld Festival 2021: Security. Not only was security generally scarce, but whenever it was in evidence, I didn’t have much faith in the guards to do much. On Friday night, scores of kids hopped the barricade into VIP, and while that certainly devalued the VIP experience, far more unnerving was how quickly that section filled up, creating another one of those potential crowd-crush situations. On Sunday, both during Uzi’s set and ahead of Future’s, I more than once overheard a PA announcement demanding fans take two steps back. To their credit, it seemed they were able to receive some degree of compliance.

I’d love to see more festivals work to get on top of these situations earlier, but as I wrote earlier, Rolling Loud seems to get its audience far more than some others. The organizers know that their audience is mostly excited kids overwhelmed by the prospect of their first concert, so they know exactly how to talk to them to get them to watch out for each other, pick each other up, and take stock of their surroundings – something kids have never historically been great at. But for those times when their inexperience gets the best of them, it’d be nicer to know that there are a few more responsible adults around to get things under control.

Still, it’s worth the live experience, even as the festival has begun to stream the main stages for 90 percent of the fest (Travis Scott’s comeback set was reportedly not streamed) (the stream did come in clutch when counterprogramming forced me to make a choice between two acts). The food, the views, the brand activations, the sense of community and camaraderie… all are essential parts of the experience (although for next year, I’ma need y’all to do some dribble drills before you jump on the basketball court, I’m embarrassed for you). And for anyone’s first experience, it’s very difficult to do better than Rolling Loud.

Some artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

The Most Anticipated Hip-Hop Albums Of Spring 2023

Compared to the same time last year, it may not feel like hip-hop has been quite as productive. It’s been a great year for indie releases; Greedo came home with a new mixtape, underground faves Skyzoo and Oddisee both released excellent projects in January, and rising stars like Maxo and Nappy Nina crafted standout projects.

Likewise, plenty of buzzy faves released stuff; ZelooperZ, Ice Spice, Boldy James, Reuben Vincent, Big Scarr, Gloss Up, and Kash Doll all came back strong ahead of a flurry of end-of-month releases in February that seemed to signal a shift. Just check out Key Glock and Don Toliver‘s new projects. But looking forward, it looks like hip-hop’s penchant for surprise releases is gearing to strike, because although very few projects have been announced, such a wide-open field has to be inviting for anyone looking to make a name for themselves.

So, although things are looking pretty bare bones for the time being, here are the most anticipated hip-hop albums of spring 2023.

March 3

De La Soul — 3 Feet High And Rising, De La Soul Is Dead, Buhloone Mindstate, Stakes Is High, etc.

de la soul 3 feet high and rising
De La Soul

Okay, this one is a little bit of a cheat, I admit. None of these are new, so much as folks have been anticipating the coming of De La Soul’s long-lost catalog to streaming since… well… streaming started. Between a prolonged label dispute over publishing rights and a labyrinth of sample clearance issues, it seemed for some time that De La’s discography would be a curio consigned to the memories of Gen Xers and millennials, like the 100-point Wilt Chamberlain game. But here they all are, in high definition, 100 percent intact. The only downside is that Trugoy the Dove isn’t here to see it.

Masego — Masego

The Virginia-based polymath — he sings, raps, and plays the sax — is just about five years removed from his debut album Lady Lady. Since then, he has polished his self-devised TrapHouseJazz style and grown his fan base with a handful of strategically based viral favorite singles and a charming, charismatic social media presence that has rap fans very much looking forward to seeing what he does next.

Slowthai — Ugly

Fresh off the success of 2021’s breakout hit Tyron, the UK punk grime star is picking up right where he left off. Slow is known for the emotional push-pull of his music, which cycles through aggression and processing the trauma behind it. Ugly continues his tradition of fusing rap, rock, and electronic music with surprising vulnerability.

March 6

Talib Kweli & Madlib — Liberation 2

One of rap’s earliest experiments in the “free online release” mechanic gets a follow-up a decade and a half later as the Brooklyn MC reunites with one of rap’s most coveted producers. They’ve proven to be a match made in heaven in the past, and longtime fans are excited to hear the evolution of their chemistry.

March 10

6lack — Since I Have A Lover

It always feels iffy to include 6lack in hip-hop lists considering he’s as much of an R&B traditionalist as he is a bars-first rhyme spitter, and with every project, he can easily split the difference or go all-in on just one side of things. I feel prettty confident in saying this will be one of the better projects to come out this year, though.

March 11

Yeat — Afterlyfe

I’ll be honest and say I don’t quite have the best handle on what exactly makes Yeat so damn popular. There’s a unique blend of Gen-Z nihilism and deep-web-bred meme humor I suspect I’m missing (have I finally found myself on the other side of the Lil B equation?), but anyone with eyes can see that he’s having quite the effect on online discourse. Fans are looking forward to his next album, so I’m looking forward to his next album — even if only in hopes of finally “getting it.”

April

Lil Uzi Vert — The Pink Tape

There’s no hard date attached to this one as far as I can tell — and it would be largely useless, considering the release drama around this album so far, as well as Uzi’s last one, Eternal Atake — but Genius has a tentative April release date. Given Uzi has already blown through the original October date and another February one. All that has only served to increase the anticipation surrounding this release — especially since Uzi promised the delays were to ensure the tape wouldn’t “suck.”

Destroy Lonely — If Looks Could Kill

Similarly to Lil Uzi Vert’s Pink Tape, this one is just posited by Genius for an April date, and simliarly to Yeat, there’s a buzzy, grown-up-confusing element to Destroy Lonely’s music that makes him heavily anticipated, but only by those “in the know.” A clear descendant of the SoundCloud Rap era he’s also a rap nepo baby (his dad I-20 was one of Ludacris’ Disturbing Tha Peace artists in the 2000s), but his vibe is very inspired by Trippie Redd and Playboi Carti — whose label he’s signed to.

May

Your guess is as good as mine. None of the usual forums or resources have any information about what might be coming out, but no one on our Most Anticipated Albums Of 2023 list has dropped yet, and just before summer would be an opportune time for anyone looking to dominate the latter half of the year.

Some artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.