Top 40 Hip-Hop Albums of 2022

It’s that time of the year to break down, discuss, and debate, which artist earned the coveted title of Album Of The Year. Since the beginning of 2022, plenty of artists, rappers or otherwise, have made up for the time lost during the pandemic so there certainly wasn’t a shortage of heat to choose from.

The trinity of Kendrick Lamar, J. Cole (via Dreamville), and Drake emerged to critical and commercial glory throughout the year. At the same time, the next generation preceding them claimed their stake in hip-hop, from J.I.D., Lil Baby and NBA Youngboy. However, it’s also a year when plenty of veteran MCs came through with extraordinary bodies of work showcasing the timelessness in their pens (i.e. Nas, Pusha T, Black Thought). 

Whether it’s an artist like Denzel Curry, whose Melt My Eyez See Your Future defies expectations through strong wordplay and versatile production, or the hedonistic trap god Future, who reminded fans of his innate ability to craft hit records with the release of I NEVER LIKED YOU, 2022 had something for everyone.

As difficult as it was, we ranked the top 40 albums of 2022. Scroll through HNHH’s picks and sound off in the comments with your thoughts on our Album of The Year.

40. Armani Caesar – The Liz 2

39. Nigo – I Know Nigo

38. Central Cee – 23

37. Babyface Ray – FACE

36. Boldy James & Futurewave – Mr. Ten08

35. Rome Streetz – Kiss The Ring

34. billy woods – aethiopes

33. redveil – learn 2 swim

32. Kodak Black – Back For Everything

31. Action Bronson – Cocodrillo Turbo

30. Flo Milli – You Still Here, Ho?

29. EarthGang – Ghetto Gods

28. Benny The ButcherTana Talk 4

27. Westside Boogie – MORE BLACK SUPERHEROES

26. Yeat – Lÿfe

25. Dreamville – D-Day: A Gangsta Grillz Mixtape

24. Megan Thee StallionTraumazine

23. Lil Baby – It’s Only Me

22. Earl Sweatshirt – SICK!

21. Conway The Machine – God Don’t Make Mistakes

20. Tee Grizzley – Chapters Of The Trenches

19. Jeezy – Snofall

18. Westside Gunn10

17. Black Thought x Danger Mouse – Cheat Codes

16. Quavo x Takeoff – Only Built For Infinity Links

15. NBA Youngboy – The Last Slimeto

14. The Game- DRILLMATIC Heart Vs. Mind

13. Metro Boomin – Heroes & Villains

12. SminoLuv 4 Rent

11. Joey Bada$$ – 2000

10. Future – I Never Liked You

9. Drake x 21 Savage – Her Loss

8. GunnaDS4EVER

7. Vince Staples – Ramona Park Broke My Heart

6. Nas & Hit-Boy – King’s Disease III

5. Freddie Gibbs – $oul $old $eparately

4. Pusha T – It’s Almost Dry

3. Denzel Curry – Melt My Eyez See My Future

2. J.I.D. – The Forever Story

1. Kendrick Lamar – Mr. Morale & The Big Steppers

Baby Money Cites Biggie, Babyface Ray & Doughboyz Cashout As His Influences In “On The Come Up”

Baby Money bubbled through Detroit’s underground before joining the Quality Control roster alongside Lil Baby, City Girls, and more. The hustler energy that seeps through his music is why QC’s VP of A&R Wayno Clarke described Baby Money as a resemblance “of Jeezy in a space of motivation.”

The Detroit atmosphere that bred hustlers and rappers alike shaped Baby Money in his formidable years. He witnessed his older brother’s efforts as a member of the local group which taught him the fundamentals of verse structure. 

Baby Money on HotNewHipHop’s “On The Come Up.” (Cam Kirk, Collective Gallery)
Baby Money on HotNewHipHop’s “On The Come Up.” (Cam Kirk, Collective Gallery)

Then, he began rapping at 12 years old before gaining a strong grip on the city in his teenage years. Slowly, he became a defining face of the current generation of Detroit’s street rap. He’s an embodiment of the D-Boy (Detroit Boy), integrating influences from the past and present. He cites Biggie and Jay-Z as his musical inspirations along with homebred talent like Babyface Ray, Blade Icewood, and Doughboyz Cashout, who were pivotal in his leap into music as a child.

“My hometown influences my music,” he tells HNHH of Detroit’s impact on his creative approach on the latest episode of On The Come Up. “Everybody knows when you come to Detroit, it’s about money. Back in the day, it was minks, ya feel what I’m saying? Nowadays the young n****s in the 550s, too. So ain’t nothing changed so it motivated me a lot.”

Like any hustler, he understood that results take time. His early videos would score 10,000 views through an organic buzz. Those numbers would increase with each subsequent video until finally he finally hit 1,000,000. “I feel like I was doing something right, you feel what I’m saying?” he says. 

From songs like “Moncler Bubble,” which currently sits at 2.5 million views on YouTube, and a string of potent mixtapes, like Young N***a Old Soul and September’s New Money, Baby Money is bringing his own take on Detroit’s swagger to the rap game with each release. He sat down with HNHH on the latest episode of On The Come Up to discuss his beginnings, his dream collaboration, and the Detroit hustle.

Lola Brooke Wants To Make Jay-Z Proud: The “Don’t Play With It” Rapper On Brooklyn Drill, Kim Kardashian & Pusha T Co-Signs & More

It’s Christmas time, again. It feels like we were ringing in 2022 yesterday but it feels like time is moving at an unfathomably rapid pace these days.  As we’ve done in the past, HotNewHipHop returned with our annual 12 Days Of Christmas series where we chop it up with some of your favorite rappers, musicians, athletes, and entertainers about their annual highlights. 

Kicking off the series is one of the most exciting new voices out of New York City this year, Lola Brooke. Like many of her contemporaries, the Bed-Stuy native had her big break off of TikTok with the success of “Don’t Play With It.” The adrenaline-pumping production and her charismatic delivery became a hit after her “From The Block” performance began to garner attention. However, once TikTok got a hold of the record, it formed a life of its own. Cardi B, Kim Kardashian and North West are among Hollywood’s elite of the strength of “Don’t Play With It.” At the same time, she’s landed on the radars of formidable MCs like Pusha T and Meek Mill, who’ve shown her nothing but love in recent times. 

“I used to say, when I put the song out, I said to my team, ‘Don’t Play With It’ could really be a thing.’ I just thought it could be a thing on TikTok. Like, imagine kids playing with things they not supposed to be playing with. Things that are dangerous. Don’t Play With It, Don’t Play With It, Don’t Play With It,” she told HotNewHipHop.

Lola Brooke. Photo Credit: Felicia Abban
Photo Credit: Felicia Abban

What really sold people was the authenticity of Brooklyn that seeps through each bar. The night before our interview, Lola Brooke performed at the Barclay’s Center during the Wizards vs. Nets halftime show – the same night Ab-Soul linked up with Jay-Z. As a Bedford-Stuyvestant native, that performance stands as a highlight of her year. If not for performing in one of the biggest stages in her borough, then for being able to showcase her talent in front of the biggest export out of Bed-Stuy.

“When he sees you, remind him of where he came from. And he be proud that he came from where he grew up from,” she recalled telling herself during her performance. 

For the first installment of 2022’s 12 Days Of Christmas, we chopped it up with Lola Brooke to discuss co-signs from Pusha T & Kim Kardashian, embodying Brooklyn, and so much more.

This interview has been edited and condensed for length and clarity.

Metro Boomin “Heroes & Villains” Album Review

Hip-hop’s obsession with grading, categorizing, and sweeping statements can be as burdensome as it is flattering, especially when the consensus is that you’re one of the finest in your field. 

As soon as you’re dubbed the “greatest” of an era, time frame, or particular movement, the pressure that this accolade exerts is immense. Suddenly, great is no longer good enough and slip-ups are all but unfathomable to those who believe you have the recipe to make seminal music with every outing. Saddled with this kind of pressure, it’s understandable that many people will wilt. Coupled with the decreasing hunger and tenacity that comes with success, gaining such a degree of reverence too soon can actually be destructive. Suddenly, you’re operating from a vastly different airspace than the one in which you initially thrived. Yet for those who can never lose sight of how and why they embarked on their creative journey in the first place, the added sense of occasion that’s hard-wired into every body of work is anything but demotivating.

In the case of Metro Boomin, the fact that he’s been assigned such subtitles as “the most trusted guy in rap” and the defining producer of a generation since his early 20’s has done nothing to deter him from seeking to continually deliver work that is not only of the highest standard but quite literally alters perceptions of what is sonically possible within his own universe.

A man who leads with the heartening ideology of Why would I wanna do something that I did?, Metro Boomin isn’t a producer who’d off-handedly release any product to the world in order to flood the market. After all, this is a guy who’d already obtained a platinum-selling solo project by age 25 with Not All Heroes Wear Capes. Perhaps, most impressively of all, this is the very same St. Louis-born man who besieged ATL to the extent that his sound practically became the thudding heartbeat of its music scene. 

ATLANTA, GA – DECEMBER 02: Metro Boomin attends Metro Boomin “Heros & Villains” Official Album release Party on December 2, 2022 in Atlanta, Georgia.(Photo by Prince Williams/Wireimage)

So, while it’s fair to say that Metro has very little to prove at this point and could coast by making beats from time-to-time, that doesn’t mean he doesn’t still have the desire to create and realize his own vision in long form. Five years on from his debut standalone project and two years after the release of Savage Mode II, Metro’s latest record, Heroes & Villains is inherently bittersweet and was almost derailed entirely by the tragic death of his mother. Suddenly bereft of his biggest supporter, a talk with his aunt reaffirmed his faith in the power of music. 

“[She] was just like, ‘Everything you’re feeling right now, you could channel that”, Metro Boomin recalled her telling him. “That’s when a lot of the most impactful art and music has ever been made.’”

The result was Heroes & Villains. Although it was made under the all-encompassing shadow of sorrow, it’s safe to say that Metro followed a proud hip-hop tradition of turning tragedy into triumph on this blockbuster, tour-de-force of a project. 

Metro Boomin is best known for his contributions to the world of trap, but his a persistent desire for him to push his sound in recent years has done its part to prevent any stagnation. “As the ambassador-representative of what’s going on, I look at it like a real responsibility,” he recently informed GQ. It’s no exaggeration to say that he certainly lived up to that manifesto with his production across the project. 

Opening with “On Time”, the magnanimous tones of A$AP Rocky signal Metro’s re-entry into our solar system. Built on exultant vocal harmonies as John Legend plays the lead in his very own choir, a sample of a speech from embattled Homelander of The Boys speaks to the duality of man that resides at the heart of the project. 

Lines such as “you need me to save you, I am the only one who possibly can” not only speaks to the gravity of Metro returning as a conquering hero but acts as a symbolic nod to the ingenuity that he brings to the game. He may relish the power that he wields yet knows that what he does is for the greater good of hip-hop’s creative climate.

Segueing with style to spare into the Pluto-led “Superhero”, its 808s and intimidatingly distorted horns permit Future to float like he’s been catapulted back to the days of DS2. 

It’s clear that phoning it in couldn’t have been further from Metro’s mind. Across Heroes & Villains near 50-minute runtime, Metro maximizes the efficacy of every hi-hat and recurring synth motif without ever making them outstay their welcome. Aside from what he’s physically doing behind the boards, the project is also the site of Metro pushing artists into new terrain in one instance, while providing a sleek new take on their trademark style in the very next breath. 

For Travis Scott, “Raindrops” invokes the psychedelically-subdued cloud-rap sound of his Rodeo days, before “Trance” sees him and Thugger do battle with poignant violin stabs. The pulsating four-on-the-floor beat on “Trance” forces La Flame to edge closer to the work of frequent Daft Punk collaborator Romanthony on the outro than anything we’ve heard from him in the past. 

Elsewhere, the reverberating, poised piano of “Umbrella” gives 21 Savage the chance to resummon the macabre energy of the Savage Mode team-up, alongside a highly complimentary verse from his cousin Young Nudy. By no means is this 21’s only guest appearance but it’s a testament to the mutual respect and trust that the two have in each other. Metro Boomin later crafts a foreboding soundscape for 21 to unabashedly flex on with “Walk Em Down (Don’t Kill Civilians) — accented with the mournful vocals of Mustafa — that will live on as one of the project’s surefire defining moments. 

Metro expertly aligns The Weeknd’s pained, transcendent vocals with Mario Winan’s “I Don’t Wanna Know” and the famed sample of Enya’s “Boadicea” that gave The Fugees one of their biggest hits on “Creepin.” He opts to keep the integrity, sparseness, and ambiance of the original R&B classic while updating it for a new generation, a welcomed surprise that left every listener pleasantly dumbfounded on the first listen. At the same time, 21 pushes himself out of the austere street storytelling into a place of vulnerability which is not only thrilling to witness but hard to imagine him undertaking for anyone else but his close collaborator. 

Metro Boomin’s capacity to coax greatness out of his core acts is well known, but it’s still encouraging to see that he hasn’t lost his knack for tampering with an artist’s DNA as if they were born to be on his beats. Among the typically exhilarating turns from his tried-and-tested platoon of talent, Don Toliver is one man who seizes every moment that he has on the project. So, when it came time to take the lead on the mesmeric, spacious world of “Around Me,” it’s no surprise that he brought his A-game and continued to steadily switch up as the beat evolved. 

Metro’s trunk-rattling production and infectious refrains make his approach clear on the project. Any track could conceivably be a single, but the album is just as thrilling in its linear setting. Where many producer albums are intended to be fragmented, Metro was set on sequencing and sustaining a vibe that eventually brings listeners to a crescendo. 

INDIO, CALIFORNIA – APRIL 16: 21 Savage and Metro Boomin perform at the Sahara Tent at 2022 Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival weekend 1 – day 2 on April 16, 2022 in Indio, California. (Photo by Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images for Coachella)

In recent interviews, he has claimed that the project was modeled by Dr. Dre’s 2001. The similarities register in both the production’s cinematic gravity to the tight-knit crew of collaborators that make up the album. However, one critique that’s been leveled at the album is that he should’ve incorporated some newer talents into the roster. But, to make this argument is ultimately to overlook the thematic underpinning of the project. Heroes & Villains is devised in much of the same way as a movie, complete with its protagonists & antagonists. The features on the project act more like an ensemble cast rather than a random assortment of names picked from a hat.

Naturally, many of the all-stars of his career are accounted for. Future, 21 Savage, and Young Thug are essentially his de facto Avengers or Justice League. Meanwhile, Travis Scott, Don Toliver (who Metro has claimed is akin to the Nate Dogg of the project) & ASAP Rocky are the newer recruits to his crack team, appearing as if from another franchise entirely. 

On the subject of Jeffery, his delivery over the thunderous “Metro Spider” is almost unrivaled across the project. A track that features one of his most fired-up verses in years can’t be anything other than heartbreaking to hear Thug proclaim, “If anything happens, my kids got Ms so everything’s alright.”

But while the rappers naturally take a lot of the limelight, they aren’t the only ones who are allowed to stunt with their versatility and technical know-how. Case in point, the seamless transition from “Metro Spider” to “Can’t Save You” with Future & Don Toliver is one that shows the length & breadth of Metro’s imagination. Then, the scintillating guitar strains of “Lock On Me” with Trav and Future prove that he’s finding ways to work within the existing confines of trap without rehashing what’s been done before. It’s these moments that reaffirm that there’s just nobody doing it like Metro. 

As forward-thinking as the project is, it no less ends on a nostalgic, almost dewy-eyed note. Metro leads “Feel The Fiyaaah” through a deft re-envisioning of an old Peabo Bryson joint á la pink polo Kanye. Meanwhile, Flacko’s opening verse is authoritative without ever threatening to overwhelm the instrumental nor detract attention from the man whose moment this really is. It’s almost fitting that Takeoff’s first posthumous track is one that shows off his exemplary and often overlooked rhyming ability in all its glory. Though he was initially slated to be on three tracks on the album before his untimely passing, the late, great Rocket Man enlists an alphabetical flow and propulsive pattern on “Feel The Fiyaaah” that would have MF DOOM or Grand Puba tipping their caps to his dazzling wordplay. 

On his sophomore solo project, Metro Boomin and his all-star cast make it clear that the hero is back to reinvigorate trap music. And what’s more, he did it in style. A project which delivered on all of its promise and pomp & circumstance, its consistency and replay value certainly won’t slow down the GOAT producer calls, either. If anything, this is an album that has sufficient range and consistent quality that will undoubtedly intensify them.  

JELEEL! Reveals His Love For DMX, Talks Rhode Island Origins & More In “On The Come Up”

In the new age of social media, the only way to become successful is through having a strong online presence. Fans need to know where to find you, and if you can manipulate the algorithm, then you have a fantastic shot of breaking through and becoming well-known to millions of people. For JELEEL!, TikTok has been the key driver for his success, although he is much more than just a viral flash in the pan. In fact, he is probably the most energetic artist you’ve ever seen.

Fans who saw the artist at Rolling Loud this past summer got a front-row seat to this energy that he describes as “real raw.” From backflips to crowd surfing, no one does it quite like JELEEL! Even watching his music videos, you can immediately tell that JELEEL! is someone who believes in his own music. It is a mix of hip-hop,  hyper-pop, and pop-punk that is almost impossible not to appreciate. With songs like “DIVE IN!” and “JELEEL JUICE!” making huge noise on TikTok, JELEEL! has proven himself to have a great ear for hitmaking, and his talents are only going to improve from here on out.

JELEEL! on HotNewHipHop’s “On The Come Up” (Cam Kirk, Collective Gallery)

Interestingly enough, JELEEL! is from Pawtucket, Rhode Island, which isn’t exactly the hotbed of hip-hop. As JELEEL! told us during the latest episode of “On The Come Up,” his parents came from Nigeria, and as a first-generation immigrant, he listened to Afrobeats. This eventually led to a love of hip-hop, where he became enamored with the music and energy of DMX. Since that time, JELEEL! has worked on crafting a sound of his own, and there is no denying that he is a unique character.

During JELEEL!’s “On The Come Up” feature, he gave us the scoop on his origin story, his biggest influences, as well as the advice he would give to a young artist working today.


HNHH: JELEEL!, where you from?

JELEEL!: I’m from Pawtucket, Rhode Island. I’m from the smallest state.

How’d you get into music?

How did I get into music? I got into music because I wanted to be an athlete and it wasn’t working out. As you can tell I got an athlete’s build, but, God got better plans. So I started making music you know, and I fell in love and it felt like it was my calling. Something I didn’t feel before but it just felt right. So thank god.

Who are your musical inspirations?

Who are my musical inspirations? Man I love DMX, you know I always loved his energy and I loved how raw and how authentic he was…  and he was very vulnerable, too, so I loved, I love that about D. So, I would say that’s my, like, one of my favorite artists, you know?

What was the turning point for you where you realized you were on your way to becoming successful in music?

The turning point where I realized I was onto a success point was when I started doing music because I felt like this was what I was supposed to do. So me just taking a leap and moving to L.A… being homeless was part of the story, you know? I’ve always known I was going to be successful doing this sh*t because I had God on my side, but once I hopped on TikTok last year it was game over.

If a music fan were to discover you today for the first time what song should they listen to first and why?

If a music fan was to discover me today the first song they should listen to by JELEEL is “Uncivilized”. Go go go go, go go go go.

Tell us about a valuable lesson you’ve learned during your come-up.

Okay, so a valuable lesson I’ve learned during my come-up is to completely be who you are. Be yourself. You don’t need to do anything to appease anybody. You don’t need to start, you know, popping pills and doing all these drugs… Like, be yourself if that’s not you don’t do it, you know. Like, for example, other people might have tattoos I don’t have tattoos because it’s not me, you know? I don’t smoke weed because it’s not me, you know? I just like to really just be me to the tee, you know. And I have a relationship with God so I like praying and, you know, I would say pray, too.

Faith is important.

Always.

Summarize your debut project and that can be, you know, mixtape… song… and what inspired that.

Okay, so my debut project… wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, which project? Project coming or the project I just released…

…your first song, let’s lean on them first songs. So when you first went to market with that song, what inspired you to create that song?

So the first project I dropped was called Angel From Heaven. Angel… JELEEL!’s an angel, you know. I feel like I’m floating every time I wake up. I feel like I’m on air you know. Walking on air. It feels good I feel like JELEEL! is…  I got my wings you know. I’m finna fly so Angel From Heaven is just a fresh breath of air and it shows people a different side of JELEEL!, but still has that rage element, so. Angel From Heaven is a fresh breath of air, I would feel. I would say. You know so. Hey, if y’all ready, listen to it, too.

JELEEL! on HotNewHipHop’s “On The Come Up” (Cam Kirk, Collective Gallery)

Tell us about your hometown and how it influences your music.

I’m from Pawtucket, Rhode Island. My parents are from Nigeria. I’m first generation and I grew up listening to Afrobeat so that was one of the first sounds I’ve heard, you know. Just been listening to that and also, like, I feel like I was born with a great ear because there was one time, there was a commercial playing at home and I would always try to like rewind that commercial in my mind and try to act like what the person was doing in the commercial because I loved the song so much. So I just felt like I had a great ear and I listened to Afrobeat. I listened to 50 Cent, DMX, like not really my hometown had anything to do with it. I feel like I just always had a strong ear, you know? And I loved what I love. I love Styles P, Jadakiss, all the legends you know. Yeah. 

Have you ever been to Nigeria?

Of course, I’ve been to Nigeria too many times you know. I love Nigeria. I can’t wait to go perform there, you know. People don’t know I’m Nigerian but I love to tell them I’m Nigerian.

What part specifically?

Lagos. You know, so can’t wait to go to Lagos and turn that sh*t up. JELEEL!, yeahhhh.

And you mentioned you’re open to go to Nigeria to perform. Where do you hope your music career takes you overall?

I hope my music career takes me around the world and I make an impact… that’s what I’m really here for you know. I’m here to make an impact. I’m here to help people. I’m here to help people feel who JELEEL! is. I don’t care about the clout or the money. I just want people to feel good you know. So I’m just here for the people man. Yeah.

Tell me about your hometown and how it influences your music.

Okay, so my hometown is Pawtucket, Rhode Island. Rhode Island is an overlooked state. I’m overlooked. Underdog. Always felt like the underdog all my life. I was that kid that nobody wanted to pick. I was that kid that nobody really cared about, but seems like everyone peaks in high school, right? So, I’m here. I’m still the underdog, I’m still the one that people don’t think is real, they don’t see it but God has a plan it’s been written and they going to see it soon.

If you could create your dream song, what would it sound like and who would you feature on it?

So obviously DMX. DMX, he hopping on my song. Who else is hopping on my song? DMX. I’ll have Missy Elliott in there. I’ll have… wow. Ye, will have some Ye in there. I love 50 too so… it’ll just be a bunch of, like, raw energy man. Maybe, even Beyonce, she got some energy, too, you know. And it would sound like…  it would sound impeccable. It would sound like something that the world has never heard before. Like, if you hear it, you might cure yourself from diseases. So that’s what I want it to sound like. I want my music to cure people, like, I want people to hear it and they feel, like, alive! Like, jolted with energy. Like, someone just put a JELEEL! juice battery pack in their back and they just feel like they going to ascend to heaven [laughs], you know. So I want that.

If you could give one piece of advice to aspiring musicians on the come-up, what would it be?

Okay, so the piece of advice I would give to aspiring musicians is to use TikTok. Use that TikTok app, yo. That sh*t helped me out. It might help you out. You just have to have good music and see where it goes. The branding is going to come. For me, I’ve always had the branding because that’s always been me but keep using your Tik Tok. And also like, I would say who gives a f*ck what n***as have to say. Like, people be talking sh*t all the time. They aren’t you. They don’t know. They’re not God. They don’t know the answers. Nobody knows the answers. You don’t know the answers Sway, you know? So just keep doing you…  no one knows when they’re going to die. No one knows when they were going to be born, you know? So just keep flowing and moving. We just living and don’t be hard on yourself, you know? Everybody be too hard on themselves. Keep going. Keep praying. And keep flowing. Have good relationships with your friends. Keep good people around you, you know? So don’t be hard on yourself, we’re all just humans, you know? Yeah, that’s the advice I would say. 

2022: Complex UK’s Highlights From The World Of Music Journalism

  • Image via Joseph ‘JP’ Patterson

    Joseph ‘JP’ Patterson, EIC

  • Image via James Keith

    James Keith, Contributing Editor

  • Image via Claudia Valentina Cagna

    Claudia Valentina Cagna, Social Media Manager

  • Image via Olivia Rose

    Chantelle Fiddy, Contributor

  • Image via Yemi Abiade

    Yemi Abiade, Contributor

  • Image via Robert Kazandjian

    Robert Kazandjian, Contributor

B-Lovee Details The Value Of Hard Work, Talks Bronx Drill Origins & More In “On The Come Up”

Since gaining traction with early cuts like “No Hook Pt 2” and the Kay Flock-assisted “Shot Down”, Maryland-born and New York City-bred artist B-Lovee quickly became a poster child for Bronx’s bubbling sample drill scene.

The 21-year-old artist released his first song, “No Hook,” in April 2020. Then, in the span of just two years, B-Lovee landed collaborations with G Herbo, A Boogie Wit Da Hoodie, Coi Leray, and Don Q. Touting a hyper-aggressive flow that’s coupled with a compelling command of New York vernacular, B-Lovee is one of the most consistent rising artists out.

B-Lovee on HotNewHipHop’s “On The Come Up.” (Cam Kirk, Collective Gallery)
B-Lovee on HotNewHipHop’s “On The Come Up.” (Cam Kirk, Collective Gallery)

As a result of his meteoric rise, he earned a spot on this season of HNHH’s On The Come Up. With at least one new song dropping practically every month and multiple EPs already under his belt, the rising artist is a firm believer in the importance of putting in the hard work even when it goes unnoticed.

“Never stop working. Stay patient. Stay down,” he tells HotNewHipHop on the latest episode of On The Come Up

Last year, B-Lovee inked a major-label deal with New York-based record label RECORDS and Columbia Records. Since then, he’s been on an absolute rampage, releasing a slew of grimy drill cuts and plenty of crossover-friendly tracks, as well — most notably the Mary J Blige-sampling “My Everything.”

During his On The Come Up feature, B-Lovee gives fans a rundown of his entry into rap, his musical inspirations, the rise of Bronx Drill, his dream collaboration, and much more.