SZA Believes People Label Her As An R&B Artist Only Because She’s Black

In a new interview with Dazed published Wednesday (May 1), SZA spoke on only being considered an R&B artist because she’s Black. It’s a mistake that we and many others have committed in the past, not just as outlets and publications in white-dominant and often exploitative media spaces, but as non-Black audiences comparing Black art to the white-dominant spaces of pop music at large. It’s an issue that many Black artists like Tyler, The Creator have addressed to varying degrees.

Most importantly, it’s not meant to detach the St. Louis native from R&B, which she’s made a lot of, but rather to accurately assess the full range of musical styles that she employs as a pop artist, whose only defining characteristic is… well, being a popular artist that writes with pop song structures, which are not at all exclusive to the typical music genre expectations we associate with “pop.” “The only reason I’m defined as an R&B artist is because I’m Black,” SZA remarked. “It’s almost a little reductive because it doesn’t allow space to be anything else or try anything else. Justin Bieber is not considered an R&B artist. He is a pop artist who makes R&B, folk music, or whatever his heart desires.

Read More: SZA Shows Off Her New Zealand Journey In Instagram Photo Dump As Fans Impatiently Await “LANA”

SZA Performing At Dreamville Fest 2024

SZA R&B Artist Black Comments Music News
SZA performs during the 2024 Dreamville Music Festival at Dorothea Dix Park on April 06, 2024 in Raleigh, North Carolina. (Photo by Astrida Valigorsky/WireImage/Getty Images)

“I simply just want to be allowed the same opportunity to make whatever I want without a label. [Without it being] based on the color of my skin, or the crew that I run with, or the beats that I choose,” SZA continued. “I want ‘F2F’ to be seen as what it is. I want ‘Nobody Gets Me’ to be seen as what it is, I want ‘Kill Bill’ to be seen as what it is.

“At the same time, it’s nothing to get bent out of shape about. Because it’s just how people are processing you,” SZA concluded. “As long as I don’t process myself that way. I don’t necessarily box myself into anything. I’m just trying to make music, trying to vibe out and enjoy the experience.”

Read More: SZA Delivers A Pro-Palestine Message During Recent Concert

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Kanye West Addresses Boosie Badazz Diss, Takes “No Responsibility” For His Music

Kanye West is certainly no stranger to stirring up controversy, and his latest Big Boy TV interview was no exception. During the conversation, which also included Ty Dolla Sign, Ye claimed that he’s behind the past two decades of music in one way or another. Of course, plenty of viewers disagreed with his take, and took to social media to chime in.

“I invented every style of music of the past 20 years, I created the genre. I created Weeknd’s genre. Trav, Drake, everybody. I’mma go ahead and say with all love, Future and Thug also because the auto-tune album, 808s,” he explained. “Everybody thinks about Trav, Weeknd, and Drake but no one thinks about Future and Thug also. The auto-tune album. Now everyone, they added whatever it was to it. But here’s a new genre. It’s called making your own money genre. This music is called, like, take that middle man out.”

Read More: Kanye West Reportedly Banned From Performing In Brazil

Kanye West Claps Back At Boosie Badazz

Shortly after the interview dropped, Boosie Badazz hopped on Instagram to share his take, claiming that Ye is in no way responsible for his music. “NOT ALL GENRES NOT EVERY STYLE,” he said. “NOT BOOSIE MUSIC. YOU CAN’T RELATE TO NOTHING I RAP ABOUT R YOUR MUSIC. NOBODY LISTENS TO KANYE IN THE PROJECTS R THE TRENCHES IM, A GON HEAD N SAY IT ‘ MY PEOPLE DO NOT RELATE TO YOU.’” Now, Ye has responded, and thrown a bit of shade in the process.

“I JUST SAW THAT ‘WIPE ME DOWN’ WAS MADE IN 2007,” he wrote on his Instagram Story today. “I TAKE NO RESPONSIBILITY FOR WHATEVER THAT GENRE WOULD BE CALLED.” Clearly, Ye didn’t appreciate Boosie calling him out, and only time will tell whether or not he’ll fire back again. What do you think of Kanye West claiming to have “invented” the past 20 years of music? What about Boosie’s response? Share your thoughts in the comments section down below, and keep an eye on HNHH for more updates.

Read More: Boosie Badazz Slams Kanye West For Claiming He “Invented” The Past 20 Years Of Music

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Royce Da 5’9″ Says J. Cole Is The Only Rapper Still Being Competitive In Hip-Hop

Royce Da 5’9″ says J. Cole is the “only competitive” artist in the current landscape of hip-hop. Appearing on Joe Budden’s podcast, Royce reflected on how the genre has changed over the years with his Slaughterhouse partner. They also discussed where Cole ranks in comparison to Drake and Kendrick Lamar.

“I haven’t taken a real deep look out into the landscape but from where I’m sitting it looks like J. Cole the only one being competitive,” he began “He’s the only one who’s rapping with the kind of conviction that says I still value the number one spot as a lyricist. I see a lot of the younger generations not really hanging their hat on just the lyrical part of creativity at all. They’re finding different ways to impact and resonate with people which is fine.”

Read More: Royce Da 5’9″ Demands More Respect On J. Cole’s Name After Dreamville’s New Mixtape

J. Cole Performs With Drake During Dreamville Festival

RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA – APRIL 02: J. Cole (L) and Drake (R) perform during the Dreamville Festival at Dorothea Dix Park on April 02, 2023 in Raleigh, North Carolina. (Photo by Astrida Valigorsky/WireImage)

“That’s when the elder statesmen like myself start learning,” he continued. “I wanna make myself understand why is this touching people like that. I can’t even understand what they’re saying. It’s definitely moving away from lyricism being the caveat, which I’m cool with ’cause there’s a lot more things I can do without being lyrical-lyrical.” Budden mostly agreed, listing Cole above Kendrick Lamar. “I got Cole as my one,” Budden said. “I’m hoping that Kendrick’s next album could try to fix that for me. Drake is doing his Chuck E. Cheese sh*t. Good for him. That’s it now. Yeah, that’s it.” Check out Royce’s full comments on the podcast below.

Royce Da 5’9″ Speaks With Joe Budden

The two also discussed their expectations for Cole’s upcoming album, The Fall Off. That project will be a follow-up to his 2018 effort, KOD. Be on the lookout for further updates on Royce Da 5’9″ on HotNewHipHop.

Read More: Royce Da 5’9″ Praises J. Cole’s Pro Basketball Career

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Cardi B On The State Of Hip-Hop: “People Just Don’t Know What They Want”

Cardi B says that the current state of hip-hop isn’t as bad as some fans have expressed and instead, fans aren’t sure of what they want out of the genre. She discussed hip-hop during an interview with The Hollywood Reporter published on Friday.

“People keep saying like, ‘Oh, the state of hip-hop is bad right now — blah, blah, blah,’” the 31-year-old began. “I don’t think it’s bad right now; I just feel like people just don’t know what they want. I feel like social media is running too much, so I just feel like just keep doing you, f*ck what people got to say.” Elsewhere in the interview, she discussed the Super Bowl, Usher’s upcoming performance during halftime, Travis Kelce and Taylor Swift, and more.

Read More: Cardi B & Offset Hit Up New York City To Spend Time Together After Breakup

Cardi B Performs At The MTV Video Music Awards

Cardi B performs onstage at the 2023 MTV Video Music Awards held at Prudential Center on September 12, 2023 in Newark, New Jersey. (Photo by Gilbert Flores/Variety via Getty Images)

Cardi’s comments contradict that of Lil Yachty, who recently remarked: “Hip-hop is in a terrible place,” during Rolling Stone’s “Musicians on Musicians” event in Brooklyn. He argued: “The state of hip-hop right now is a lot of imitation. It’s a lot of quick, low-quality music being put out. It’s a lot less risk-taking, it’s a lot less originality… People are too safe now. Everyone is so safe. I rather take the risk than take the L.” Check out Cardi’s more optimistic opinion on the matter below.

Cardi B On The State Of Hip-Hop

Cardi is currently preparing for the release of her long-awaited sophomore album, which she’s said fans can expect sometime in 2024. Speaking with Ebro Darden in September, she explained that she still needed to make some tweaks to the project and it wouldn’t be ready until the following year. Be on the lookout for further updates on Cardi B on HotNewHipHop.

Read More: Cardi B And LL Cool J Added To Already Stacked “New Year’s Rockin’ Eve” Lineup

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Usher Refutes Claim That R&B Is Dead, Says The Idea “Sounds Crazy”

Usher paid tribute to the next generation of R&B artists during a new cover story for Billboard and says that anyone suggesting the genre is dead, “sounds crazy.” The comments come after SZA, Victoria Monét, and Coco Jones, among other artists were recognized at the Grammy Awards, last weekend.

“I’m very happy that there’s a new installation of R&B artists who care to be authentic to what they are creating, inspired by artists of the past,” he told the outlet. “Everybody who has ever said to me that R&B is dead sounds crazy. Especially when I know the origins of R&B are in all other genres of music.”

Read More: Usher Shares Tracklist And Features From His New Album

Usher Performs At The Songwriters Hall Of Fame Induction

NEW YORK, NEW YORK – JUNE 16: Usher performs onstage at the Songwriters. Hall of Fame 51st Annual Induction and Awards Gala at Marriott Marquis on June 16, 2022 in New York City. (Photo by Theo Wargo/Getty Images for Songwriters Hall of Fame)

The legendary singer continued: “My point is, I never felt like R&B was dying. I think it just needs expansion. We’re moving toward a standard where people are looking at snippets — TikTok, Instagram and other things — and when fans get it, they take it and do something with it. But if we start to think of it that way and create from that place, the standards for R&B will change. You won’t be able to compare it in an old-versus-new way. It’ll just be what it is.” He added that the genre needs more spaces similar to the Lovers & Friends Festival. “It’s about creating commerce in other spaces. Lovers & Friends is a successful R&B festival that gives you a place to go and celebrate the songs that we make,” Usher said. “We need things that you associate with R&B that you can buy into. Like with hip-hop — glasses, clothes, cars, jewelry, sneakers … ancillary things that people can access. R&B needs and has the potential to have those things as well.”

Usher Poses For Billboard

 
 
 
 
 
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Usher will be releasing a new album, Coming Home, on Friday. After that, he’s scheduled to bring his iconic catalog of hits to the Super Bowl Halftime Show on Sunday. Be on the lookout for further updates on Usher on HotNewHipHop.

Read More: Usher Announces “Past Present Future” Tour

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Is Hip-Hop Dead?

You’ve heard this narrative a nauseating amount: 2023 only held a handful of number-one hip-hop albums and songs on the Billboard charts. These include Nicki Minaj’s Pink Friday 2, Drake’s For All The Dogs (for two weeks), Travis Scott’s UTOPIA (for four weeks), Lil Uzi Vert’s Pink Tape, technically Bad Bunny’s nadie sabe lo que va a pasar mañana, and Rod Wave’s Nostalgia (for two weeks). As for songs, these are Doja Cat’s “Paint The Town Red” (for three weeks), Drake and SZA’s “Slime You Out,” Drake and J. Cole’s “First Person Shooter,” and most recently, Jack Harlow’s “Lovin On Me.” In 2022, there were about twice as many number-one hip-hop albums, and the same number of number-one tracks and weeks those hits spent atop the charts. If you compare this to previous years, you’ll find even larger discrepancies. So what does this mean for the genre?

Well, many declared that “hip-hop is dead,” as the large majority of these success stories came after a significant drought during the year’s first half. While this conclusion is mostly informed by commercial performance, rap fans have plenty of other reasons to “bury” the art form. Original artistic value and expression, quality of output, systemic industry circumstances, and a seemingly deaf ear to the culture are all fair reasons for criticism. But these are ancient arguments within this space that we heard against the 2016 XXL Freshman Class, Soulja Boy, hardcore hip-hop, and more. Furthermore, we need to understand what circumstances are different these days, and how the craft of rap and sick beats has shifted. So, on the year of the genre’s 50th anniversary, let’s take a look at why people think hip-hop is dead, and why– if it is actually dead– it died a long time ago.

Commercial Success: A Downgrade Or A Chance At Revitalization?

To start with this Billboard number-one releases metric, hip-hop hadn’t gone a full mid-year with zero points on this board since 1993, according to NPR‘s Rodney Carmichael. But rather than only use this best-of-the-best approach within all music genres, we need to look at how rap as a whole is performing in the industry market when compared to other styles. Luminate‘s 2023 Midyear Music Report suggests that the genre maintained a majority market share among other sounds throughout this “drought,” although it came with a less than two percent dip in album and song consumption. In addition, an October report from NPR also identified rap’s still-maintained majority among music listeners. That race has gotten closer, though, and will only get closer until it’s eventually beaten out. After all, this culture has been dominant for seven years now, and the house of cards must eventually fall.

So hip-hop is still doing great commercially, but it doesn’t seem that way because we’ve gotten used to that conversation’s highest metrics. The floodgates opened in the 2010s for this to happen, but we’re seeing how the music industry is taking a toll on this wildly successful genre, as it does with every other. In fact, it follows a similar path to that of another Black art form distilled and robbed for largely white consumption in America. Rock and roll held tight as the top genre since the 1960s, and hip-hop’s lived a similar lifespan. Eventually, the genre became so splintered into different subgenres and levels of visibility that it couldn’t hold onto its success in a uniform manner. Alas, this is a natural progression for commercialized art. New trends come along to replace the old ones, backed by a system that is always searching for the largest profits.

The Balance Between Cash & Classics

The real issue is that, these days more than ever, trends don’t define how to commercialize: the commercialization guides the trends. As hip-hop sells more, hordes of aspiring artists try to play that same game and fail despite coming out with similar material to some of the genre’s biggest success stories. Gone are the days of seven-figure first-week debuts. If you’re a massive artist these days, you’re lucky to crack the 100K mark. These number-ones and other massive commercial metrics only apply to the biggest stars, as they’re competing with the whole rest of the industry. That’s not to patronize or infantilize rap, but it’s to show what happens when you reach a peak and then must reckon with the ground beneath you. What this creates is an artistic culture that is more further polarized into mainstream drivel and “underground” resistance than ever. Few in-betweens have ever made it.

However, we had a Big Three of this in the 2010s. Drake, Kendrick Lamar, and J. Cole were the best and biggest, and it’s really hard for artists to receive this accolade in 2023. What’s sold more than anything in hip-hop these days is the most simple, instantly catchy and re-playable, trendiest, and most widely conversation-inducing material. The rest of the genre, though, hasn’t really had the same shot at that highest limelight, at least in a mainstream sense (we’re not talking about rap die-hards here, just the general and casual public). But to say hip-hop is dead just because of these number ones is not only disingenuous, but downright dangerous. Why are we putting this pressure on artists to reach the highest levels or be met with accusations of “mid” everywhere they go? If hip-hop’s history has taught us anything, it’s that commercial success isn’t everything.

What’s Different About Hip-Hop As An Art Form?

Rather, what draws us to hip-hop is its culture, its power, its resonance, and what it stands for. This is another reason why people point to the death of hip-hop: what artists stand for today. Far too often, we see hyper-violence, misogyny, gender and sexual orientation discrimination, drug abuse, traumas, clout-chasing, and so many more societal ills reflected in rap. Of course, that is a much wider conversation on the systemic plague these issues infect communities with, particularly Black U.S. citizens who birthed the culture. Given the shock and popularity of this subject matter, it ends up representing hip-hop at the largest level. Then again, this is nothing new. Since N.W.A. first burst into suburban homes, and even before then, the industry has been interested in taking the most vivid and tragic struggles of Black culture– and therefore hip-hop– and exploiting them to a white audience for mass consumption.

What is newer and newer every day, however, is the sheer variety of rap out there right now. Look on any publication’s “best hip-hop albums” list this year (and on our own coming out in a few days!) and you’ll find some incredible works of art that push the culture forward and really have something to say while checking off the “cool, musically engaging material” box. VOIR DIRE, SCARING THE H*ES, Burning Desire, Sundial, The Genius Tape, Glockoma 2, Ways Of Knowing, and The Patience are just a handful of the hundreds of albums to discover and cherish this year alone. Hip-hop is more dead the smaller your scope of discovery is; you’ll find greatness if you seek it. Rather, we need to think about why we and the systems in the music industry– and society at large– reward greatness inconsistently with little care for actual quality.

The Powers That Be: Creation Under Constrictions & Commercialization

Digital streaming platforms, algorithmic engagement, sites like TikTok’s endlessly scrollable stream of content, a hyper-informed social media age, and constant exposure to new things– plus many more– contribute to the music industry ecosystem’s current chaos. But again, we must remember that these systems existed for decades. Now, with the Internet showcasing everything all the time instantly, these issues just took a much more noticeable and unpredictable shape. The constant need to market yourself, deal with extracurricular endeavors outside of your work, and compete all the time with everything else vying for one’s attention can dilute art a great deal. Just think of all the behemoth 25 or 30+ track albums with short tracks that try to game the streaming world. The sad thing is that we can’t blame these artists for trying. Artists deserve stable income and security for their art, no matter how “good” or “bad” it is.

Furthermore, this destroys career longevity, as stars burn brightest before they die more than ever these days. Selling hip-hop to audiences outside of its cultural and social context is as harmful as the distillation of any other genre in the industry. So what can we do if the art form is unable to ever “revive” under this streaming era? We as listeners need to actively demand better pay from DSPs, more fair artist treatment in contracts and resources, and we need to acknowledge that these systems exist and that we participate in them. You shouldn’t feel guilty for posting your Spofity Wrapped, but that doesn’t exclude you from being able to speak out against these issues. If you think that’s an impossible goal, then you forget that the markets adapt to our consumption of them. What mostly kills hip-hop is the commercialized spaces it exists in today.

What Can The Culture Do?

Therefore, we need to look to hip-hop’s own culture, community, creatives, and curators to defend its purest forms and potential. But all that we mentioned up until this point contributed to the largest cultural division we’ve seen in the genre’s history so far. Previous generations always push new ones away and vice versa, which– much like everything else in this article– applies to many other art forms. But we thought hip-hop could be different. Instead, whether it’s about content matter, lyrical skill, respect to the old greats, or so much more, discussion is combative and highly polarized. Instead, we need more education and conversation between these groups that go both ways, and that’s also something we need to uphold as fans. Rap exists with so many different forms, appeals, pockets, subcultures, and intents these days. Just because one doesn’t hit you doesn’t mean it lost its chance to prove itself.

Still, this segmentation is normal and natural. What we can control is our response and our acceptance of it, which will breed more amicable and relatable discourse aimed at widening everyone’s slice of the pie. The blind hate that female artists like Sexyy Red and Ice Spice get for their success is a perfect example of this. We allowed the mainstream to only funnel a certain type of hip-hop into its pipeline rather than respecting its unique expressions. Rock and roll died, but so many of today’s biggest stars still work with these aesthetics, and so many number-one artists today involve so much hip-hop into their art. There’s also no shortage of great and innovative rock bands working today– and there never will be. Culturally, there are many things that could improve when it comes to the youth’s pain and path today. But doing so is a joint effort.

Conclusion

When we interviewed the excellent MC Homeboy Sandman this year, he spoke to us briefly about what hip-hop is missing right now. “We need to make sure that we got the window wash rap, and the killer rap, and the race car rap, and the whatever. We need to make sure we have variety, and variety will be based off talent,” he expressed. Right now, it seems that hip-hop got to its highest-ever commercial peak based on pretty similar styles and appeals. The “trap” wave that dominated the 2010s became a hot commodity in the industry, and seven years after the iconic 2016 XXL Freshman Class, the powers that be are looking for a new sound to exploit. And that’s okay. In fact, it’s an opportunity to think about the long-term, and not just about this golden era of mainstream success that we want to desperately cling to.

Today, rap artists are weaving so many more genres and styles into its fabric. Jersey club, drill, drum and bass, Afrobeat, glitch, industrial, K-pop, hyperpop, emo, noise rock, country, city pop, lo-fi, gospel, jazz, funk… the list never ends. Commercially, they will be rewarded more genuinely and intimately than ever thanks to crowd-funding sites like Patreon, live-streaming, and social media. Some of the systemic evils plaguing rap can be counter-exploited to its benefit. These new creatives have more opportunities to positively impact the culture, make their money, and crucially, be artistically free in the process. Maybe the genre is more alive than ever in this way. You can argue that rap died when the industry released “Rapper’s Delight” by the Sugarhill Gang in 1979. But hip-hop is eternal because the people that really define it and care about it will always champion its boundless legacy, and so can you.

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Mariah The Scientist Reposts Critique Of Pitchfork Calling Andre 3000’s Album “Rap”

André 3000’s new album New Blue Sun couldn’t be farther from a rap album in most people’s eyes- or ears, rather. Moreover, many folks took issue with Pitchfork‘s review of it- not because of the score (8.3, Best New Music), but because of the categorization. Instead of “New Age,” “Jazz,” “Ambient,” or other appropriate genres that describe the flute-heavy, fully instrumental project, the publication put it under the “Rap/Experimental” genre. Mariah The Scientist agrees with this criticism, as she reposted a tweet on it on her Instagram Story on Monday (November 20).

“André 300 did NOTHING but play the FLUTE and they STILL labeled it a RAP album,” the tweet in question reads. “Do we not see the problem with this?” However, before we get ahead of ourselves, there’s a legitimate reason for this categorization that might calm Mariah The Scientist down. Pitchfork designed their content management system (CMS) that they use to publish work and organize it in the “backend” so that the genre of an album ties to the principal genre of its artist. As such, since they have the Outkast member as mostly a rap and experimental artist, they couldn’t change the genre to reflect New Blue Sun‘s direction.

Read More: André 3000 Says Writing Raps “Feel Inauthentic” To Him

Mariah The Scientist Agrees With Pitchfork Slander For André 3000 Review

 
 
 
 
 
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So, with that in mind, maybe you understand the music media icons a little bit more. But the criticism itself is very valid and applicable to other people’s discussions around the project. In fact, it’s something that the 26-year-old has addressed about her own music. “I put music out, and it’s automatically supposed to be R&B?” Mariah The Scientist asked Complex during a video interview.

“Anybody that sings and is Black, or they think you Black… they, like, put you in this category of ‘She makes R&B music,’” she continued. “But if Lana Del Rey is singing about heartbreak, why [do they categorize] her album as alternative? But I put music out, and it’s automatically R&B? What if it’s neither of those? I told somebody that I wanted to make a new genre and I wanted to call it A&B for alternative and blues. I don’t know if it will happen, but if I did have to categorize myself, it would be that.” For more news and the latest updates on Mariah The Scientist and André 3000, log back into HNHH.

Read More: Mariah The Scientist Says She & Young Thug Will Get Married After He Gets Out Of Prison 

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Lil Yachty Responds To Backlash Over Saying Hip-Hop Is In A “Terrible Place”

Lil Yachty has responded to the backlash to his recent comments on the state of hip-hop. After arguing that the genre is in a “terrible place,” Yachty went back and forth with users on social media over the topic on Saturday. The posts began with one fan accusing Yachty of copying Earl Sweatshirt.

“U just signed 4 female veezes and u imitate earl when he raps over alchemists beats dude,” they wrote to Yachty, who replied: “I signed one girl. And I don’t imitate earl… u n****s just be talkin bro.. u n****s who hide behind pop culture pictures just be sayin anything for likes and retweet’s.. people act like the world is goin to shit when a n***a gives an opinion.” When another user tried to promote their own music, Yachty replied: “And this sh*t suck n***a, like bra ur never gonna make it.”

Read More: Lil Yachty Claims Hip Hop’s In A “Terrible Place,” Thinks Artists Play It Too Safe

Lil Yachty Performs At Wireless Festival

LONDON, ENGLAND – JULY 08: (EDITORIAL USE ONLY) Lil Yachty performs during day two of Wireless Festival 2023 at Finsbury Park on July 08, 2023 in London, England. (Photo by Joseph Okpako/WireImage)

As for Yachty’s original opinion, he spoke at Rolling Stone‘s Musicians on Musicians event in Brooklyn, New York on Friday. “Hip-hop is in a terrible place,” Yachty said, as noted by Complex. “The state of hip-hop right now is a lot of imitation. It’s a lot of quick, low-quality music being put out.” He continued: “It’s a lot less risk-taking, it’s a lot less originality. People are too safe now. Everyone is so safe. I rather take the risk than take the L.”

Lil Yachty Responds To Backlash From Fans

Even despite his comments, he clarified that not everything coming out is bad. In particular, he praised JID, saying he’s “never heard a bad verse from JID ever.” Be on the lookout for further updates on Lil Yachty on HotNewHipHop.

Read More: Lil Yachty And Viral Self Defense Guy Share New Pics

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Rappers Like 6IX9INE: Trippie Redd, Lil Pump, ZillaKami And More

As the hip-hop genre continues to evolve, it’s impossible to overlook the vibrant influence of artists like Daniel Hernandez, better known by his stage name, 6IX9INE. Bursting onto the scene with his aggressively energetic style, 6IX9INE has carved out a niche in the genre that is both colorful and controversial. This article takes a look at rappers who share similar sonic textures, aesthetic choices, and thematic elements as 6ix9ine, establishing themselves as artists within the same vibrant sphere of hip-hop.

Read More: NBA Youngboy Says He Would Work With Tekashi 6ix9ine

Trippie Redd

Trippie Redd, born Michael Lamar White IV, often comes up in conversations about artists with a style akin to 6IX9INE. Both rappers hail from a similar SoundCloud-influenced background, and they share a preference for blending elements of punk and hip-hop. Trippie’s music often incorporates the same raw emotional intensity and raucous delivery that 6IX9INE employs, resulting in an audacious sonic experience.

Read More: Trippie Redd Has Interesting Take On The State Of Hip-Hop

Ski Mask The Slump God

Stokeley Clevon Goulbourne, known professionally as Ski Mask the Slump God, is another artist who walks a similar path as 6IX9INE. Like 6IX9INE, Ski Mask uses his music as a platform to express his energetic personality, often employing an eccentric and fast-paced flow. His unique vocal style, coupled with his flair for off-kilter lyrics, places him in a league similar to 6IX9INE.

Read More: Ski Mask The Slump God Most Streamed Songs

Lil Pump

Gazzy Garcia, better known as Lil Pump, also shares stylistic similarities with 6IX9INE. Both artists have a penchant for turning up the energy and tempo in their tracks. Lil Pump’s music, characterized by its repetitive hooks and brash lyrics, mirrors 6IX9INE’s audacious style. The flashy aesthetic and larger-than-life personas of both rappers make them icons in this wave of hip-hop.

Read More: Lil Pump Reveals Conversation With J. Cole: “You’re Actually Smart”

ZillaKami

No conversation about artists similar to 6IX9INE would be complete without mentioning ZillaKami. Junius Rogers, the man behind the ZillaKami persona, was instrumental in shaping 6IX9INE’s early sound. ZillaKami’s music, much like 6IX9INE’s, blends aggressive rap and punk influences, complete with thunderous beats and screamed vocals.

Read More: ZillaKami Delivers Experimental New Album “Dog Boy”

Rico Nasty

Rico Nasty, whose real name is Maria-Cecilia Simone Kelly, is one of the few female rappers who share 6IX9INE’s aesthetic and sonic palette. Her music exudes raw energy and aggression, often incorporating elements of punk and metal into her tracks. Rico’s rebellious spirit and her refusal to conform to traditional norms make her a standout in the genre.

Read More: Rico Nasty On Pandemic Takeaways, New Music & Potential Flo Milli Collab Project

Conclusion/TLDR

In conclusion, while 6IX9INE’s style is undeniably unique, there are several artists in the industry who share his eclectic blend of hip-hop and punk, his high-energy delivery, and his vibrant aesthetic. Artists like Trippie Redd, Ski Mask the Slump God, Lil Pump, ZillaKami, and Rico Nasty have all made their mark in this rainbow-tinted wave of hip hop, each bringing their distinct flavor to the mix.

The post Rappers Like 6IX9INE: Trippie Redd, Lil Pump, ZillaKami And More appeared first on HotNewHipHop.

Macklemore Agrees He & Eminem Are “Guests” In Hip-Hop

Macklemore says that he and Eminem are “guests” in hip-hop. When Nate Burleson prompted him with the idea during an interview on CBS Mornings, while asking Macklemore about being a White rapper in a predominantly Black genre, he agreed. He added that no matter how “great Eminem is,” even he is also a guest.

“I think it’s true. It is true and I agreed,” he stated. “If you look at the origin of where hip-hop came from and what was happening in New York City and what was happening in the Bronx. And the way that Black people and people of color been treated historically from the jump, this music was birth out of oppression.”

Macklemore At The 56th Grammy Awards

LOS ANGELES, CA – JANUARY 26: Recording artist Macklemore, winner of Best New Artist attends the 56th GRAMMY Awards at Staples Center on January 26, 2014 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Christopher Polk/Getty Images)

While continuing, he clarified that the two rappers still “belong here,” they just need to be respectful and abide by house rules. “Hip-Hop is inclusive so there’s always been an open door to a certain extent…but I’m a guest, Em’s [Eminem] a guest,” he continued. “Doesn’t matter how good we get. Doesn’t matter how great Eminem is. We’re guests in the culture. A hundred percent. And that’s not to say that I don’t belong here. I absolutely belong here. But you still have to realize this is not your house. And that you’re a guest. Take Your shoes off and help with some dishes.”

Even Eminem has admitted to being a guest in the genre. Appearing on KXNG Crooked’s show Crook’s Corner, he explained why he never refers to himself as the “king.” “That’s the funny thing. I don’t know if I got a chance to say this yet. The funny s**t is, with the whole beef of a certain person, I never said I wasn’t a guest. I’m absolutely a guest. I never said I wasn’t. I never said I was king of anything, right?” The comments seemingly came in response to criticism from Lord Jamar.

Macklemore On Being A “Guest” In Hip-Hop

[Via]