Browsing Tag

Independent Rap

 Paqx Writes His Own Script Through Dystopian 808 Shockwaves and Dark Electronic Tension in ‘INTRO’

Basslines reverberate into shockwaves in the rapper and producer Paqx’s seminal release, INTRO. The dark electronic taste of how visceral hip-hop instrumentals have the capacity to be arrives in a short and disquietingly sweet showcase of the independent artist’s aptitude for creating tension between atmosphere and attitude. There’s no soft landing. The production lunges as it challenges the listener to steady themselves against the low-end.

EDM-leaning synths cast spectres of light across the syncopated appearance of the 808s, refracting around a blaring baseline that sounds like a dystopian urban war-horn. It’s cinematic. without feeling staged; Paqx didn’t play INTRO by any rulebook we’ve read; he is writing his own script, allowing distortion and discipline to coexist within the same breath. The track may be brief, but its impact lingers through echoes of tension rather than excess.

Raised in Metairie, Louisiana, Paqx began at the piano, developing an ear-led approach that shaped his instinct for melody and structure. Years later, his co-writing contributions to global chart-toppers earned him multiple platinum certifications, yet INTRO feels deliberately independent, stripped of glossy expectation and focused on raw sonic architecture. Following his 2020 independent album release, he continues to refine a sound that merges production fluency with an unfiltered hip-hop sensibility.

INTRO is now available on all major streaming platforms, including Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Armor fixed raw truth into UK rap with Hood Anxiety

East London rapper Armor cut straight through urban mythmaking with Hood Anxiety, taken from his LP Excuse My Mess, which dropped on January 8th alongside an official music video that refuses polish in favour of truth. Built around a cascade of bravado-stripping questions, the track pulls listeners into reflection while rejecting the glamourisation of a lifestyle that often reads as a bitter necessity rather than a sweet victory.

The video sharpens that intent. It visualises the raw reality Armor waxes lyrical on, turning Hood Anxiety into one of the most bruising expositions UK rap has delivered in recent years. The darker realities of trap life sit in full in an era of austerity, when postcode disparity and institutional pressure remain impossible to ignore. Armor places those forces under a harsh light, fixing attention on the systems that decide who gets breathing room and who stays boxed in.

Even under that lyrical gravity, charisma still hums through the track. Armor’s witty, cerebral wordplay carries a natural ease, giving the listener space to reflect without draining momentum. His smooth, impassioned cadence anchors the song, landing with the same contemplative weight found in voices like George the Poet and Kae Tempest, yet filtered entirely through his own lived perspective.

Instrumentally mellow and restrained, the track carries weight through intention rather than volume. Where pride often surfaces as a coping mechanism, Armor captures resignation to a broken system and reframes it through honesty. Hood Anxiety fixes that moment in time, giving listeners something solid to sit with and a sense that articulation itself becomes a quiet form of release.

Hood Anxiety is now available on all major streaming platforms. For the full experience, stream the official music video on YouTube. 

Review by Amelia Vandergast

DEION JOHNSON sanctified hip-hop with high-vibe melodic introspection in ‘Time to Shine’

DEION JOHNSON raised the game for soul-soaked hip-hop with his latest single, Time to Shine. Louisa, Virginia’s multifaceted independent artist, who developed his musicality through quartet gospel and sharpened it across the disciplines of songwriting, engineering, production, and guitar performance, channelled his roots and resilient mindset into one of the most affirming tracks 2025 had to offer.

The melodic arrangement glistens with groove-soaked guitars and airy layers that swirl around Johnson’s killer cadence and hymnal vocal presence. He doesn’t waste a bar preaching hollow platitudes or chasing metrics. Instead, he paints a vivid portrait of spiritual wealth and grounded ambition, pushing past the played-out rags-to-riches arc in favour of something far more valuable: a spotlight on mindfulness, inner peace, and perspective. There’s no compromise between soul and substance; he rides the beat with unshakeable faith-solidified fortitude while staying firmly tethered to his sense of self.

Where others might veer towards indulgence or posturing, Johnson delivers a rare dose of optimistic introspection. Time to Shine is an invitation to see success in a different light. Off the back of his earlier breakthrough, ‘Dream Chasin‘ and following the release of The Audition, Pt. 2, this track affirms Deion Johnson’s place as an artist who creates from conviction, not calculation.

Time to Shine is now available on all major streaming platforms, including YouTube. 

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Won’t Let You Down mapped legacy, love and lyrical weight through Sugarae’s storm-soaked production

SUGARAE knew exactly how to juxtapose luminous synth lines with caustic, bass-heavy reverberations to summon pure emotive tension in Won’t Let You Down. While ‘cinematic’ gets flung about far too freely, few tracks stake a claim to the term as convincingly as this monolithic alt-hip-hop release. From the opening shimmer to the final drop into thunderous resonance, the sound design storms through your chest like a film score written for someone fighting to become everything they promised they would be.

Leaning into the full fortitude of his production alias shdwsound, the Birmingham-based independent artist laid the groundwork at Pirate Studios, where he wrote, performed, produced, recorded, engineered and mastered the track himself.

Leaving all of the volition to the instrumental, he was free to deliver nothing but soul through his chameleonic verses and bars that blur the boundaries between hip-hop and RnB. Rather than posturing, he poured in a deep sincerity fuelled by personal stakes – channelled directly from the recent birth of his son. Every bar lands like a vow, built to be repeated in the ears of those he holds closest.

The high-octane energy hits like walk-in music for a title fight, but the lyricism folds in far more vulnerability and promise than bravado. It’s a statement of devotion. A testimony to legacy. A reckoning with responsibility. Won’t Let You Down isn’t a flex. It’s a foundation.

Won’t Let You Down is now available on all major streaming platforms via this link.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Zaya Sagittarius Flirted with Hyper-Pop Euphoria and Alt-Hip-Hop Vulnerability in Healing Scars

Zaya Sagittarius wasn’t the original reason the phrase “it’s a vibe” seeped into alt-hip-hop vernacular, but Healing Scars makes a solid case that he could have been. The sticky-sweet pop aesthetics and serotonin-sparking cadence of the polyphonic production make it impossible to sit through the track without letting it tattoo a smirk on your face. It flirts with 8bit-adjacent hyper-pop hooks, dips its toes into the cloud rap pool, and still manages to hold ground with a singular energy that’s unmistakably Zaya.

There’s no posturing here. Just pure charm wrapped up in candid charisma and vulnerable lyrical flows that pull you into the kind of intimacy usually reserved for late-night confessions. In a genre often defined by ferocity and swagger, Zaya wore his scarred heart like it was couture stitched by experience and sonic catharsis. Healing Scars doesn’t ask to be understood; it’s already cracked open and offering sanctuary.

Born in Brewton, Alabama, Zaya Sagittarius, formerly known as Zaya2427, has spent over a decade pioneering DIY alt-rap through his prolific SoundCloud drops. After founding the Young Aspiring Musicians label in 2012, he never looked back, even through his time in the Army. As the Sauce Dad moniker stuck, so did his prolific rise. Now a veteran of the underground, with six instalments of So Many Flavors under his belt, Zaya continues to bring his unfiltered expression to life through emotionally candid anthems like this.

Healing Scars is now available on all major streaming platforms, including YouTube. 
Review by Amelia Vandergast

Equation Billionz became UK rap’s most unreckonable renegade in ‘Billionz Affair’

Dropping on April 11th with an official video that confirms his evolution from rising name to underground juggernaut, Billionz Affair proves that Equation Billionz has found far more than a foothold in the UK rap scene. His rapid-fire, grime-licked cadence lands with the head-spinning force of Busta Rhymes, while the boom-bap-infused beats ensure the floor beneath your speakers doesn’t get off lightly. But it’s not just the production or vocal delivery that hooks—it’s the unshakeable energy of an artist who’s done with waiting for his moment and is now making it.

As Equation Billionz waxes lyrical about staying on the grind and rising through the kind of adversity that would flatten most, the resilience hits harder than the hi-hats. Billionz Affair is an ode to fortitude without the preachy overtones—he makes you feel the fire in his determination and the weight of everything he’s carried.

Having started his musical trajectory at 13, Equation Billionz already made international waves with his collaboration with Teni Makanaki and racked up over 12 million streams with Broken Hearted Crook – Remix, which earned him a Spotify plaque. The name isn’t a gimmick—it’s a mantra. “Equation” reflects the balance he chases between health, wealth, and kindness, and with Billionz Affair, he’s adding undeniable respect to the mix. The track doesn’t ask for validation; it exudes self-earned worth from every bar and bassline.

Billionz Affair is now available to stream on all major platforms; for the full experience, watch the official video on YouTube. 

Review by Amelia Vandergast.

CreezOn Unlocked: Inside the Raw Sound of GRIP HOP

At just 21, the Birmingham-based artist CreeZon has pioneered GRIP HOP, a bold fusion of Grime’s razor-sharp lyricism and Hip Hop’s soulful storytelling, layered with melodic choruses and orchestral intensity. In this candid interview, CreezOn reveals how his formative influences—from breakdancing to Ghetts, from gospel to J Dilla—have led him to redefine UK rap’s sonic identity. Fresh from performing alongside Lady Leshurr and JayKae with the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra, he opens up about crafting music rooted in authenticity over virality. CreezOn also shares insights on the cinematic concept behind his forthcoming EP and how his music, including standout track ‘Chosen One,’ is finding its natural place within film, TV, and gaming.

Your signature GRIP HOP sound is a bold sonic statement. What led you to develop this style, and how do you see it shaping the future of UK hip-hop?

Across my journey, I’ve been influenced by and dabbled in many music genres, both as an artist and as a producer. When I first started recording music, I made quite a few Afro-swing, Trap and Drill tracks, cos that’s what was trending at the time. But as I grew older, and more confident in my sound, I started asking myself deeper questions. I asked myself, Even though I’ve proved to myself that I can make music in any genre, what culture do I truly resonate with? How do I want to be seen?

My life has always been rooted in Hip Hop, Grime, RnB, Gospel, Neo-Soul, and Reggae. I even grew up B-boying (breakdancing). Hip hop and Grime have always been my biggest loves, closely followed by Neo-Soul. Once I realised that, I naturally leaned into those sounds. It became a transition, a step into maturity and self-discovery. These genres give me the space to express myself fully, both emotionally and lyrically.   Unlike most people my age, my lyricism has always been inspired by Grime, from writing bars at 13 to tracks like Treble Clef’s Ghetto Kyote. A lot of my peers caught onto the Drill wave heavier than Grime, but this wasn’t the case for me.

For me, these genres all carry a rawness, a distinct soulfulness. And that rawness, that authenticity, is what I believe real creativity is about. I think UK hip-hop has lost a lot of that authenticity ….and this is evident by the repeated lyrical content, visuals and similar sounding beats. That’s not to say people aren’t still out here making substantial, out of the box and raw UK Hip-hop music.  Don’t get me wrong, there are still artists making music that’s substantial, original and powerful… … it’s just clear to see that the music pushed in front of the industry today  is more based on its virality than its substance. Overtime, music has become more in the background of life, like a multitasking activity, as opposed to an activity in itself, where you actually sit down, LISTEN to your favourite album, and take it in, layer by layer.  As attention spans have shortened and talent is often judged by stats over substance, I think we can all agree that UK hip-hop could use a breath of fresh air. GRIP HOP represents that. It demands your full attention, or none at all.

My signature style, which I showcase through GRIP HOP, has been shaped by many influences, both internal and external. Internally, I’m surrounded by creatives every day: producers, MCs, dancers. Within my close circle of friends, the way we make music naturally leans toward that GRIP HOP sound. Because we all listen to Grime, Hip Hop, and Neo-Soul/Jazz, a lot of our beats end up sounding like J Dilla-influenced Grime- raw, soulful, and layered.  Externally, my biggest influences in Grime and Hip Hop have been J-Dilla, Busta Rhymes, Ghetts, and Dot Rotten (Zeph Ellis). Their sounds, energy, and approach to creativity have played a big role in how I express myself musically

GRIP HOP is the result of me sitting alone in a studio I owned in 2023, creating music from the most raw and honest part of myself at the time. From the production to the lyrics, even down to the mixing and mastering, this project is authentically me.  The fusion of Hip Hop and Grime, with a fresh spin of melodic choruses, has been a powerful journey, and one I’m genuinely excited to share. When we talk about Hip Hop, we’re talking about a movement not just about rap music – we’re talking about a culture.

Hip Hop consists of five core elements:

  • MCing
  • Breakin’ (Dance)
  • DJing
  • Graffiti (Art)
  • Knowledge

That’s why, with GRIP HOP, my goal was to include enough substance to feed into all of these elements – from the loose, off-grid drums for the dancers, to the storytelling and concept-deep diving for the knowledge seekers.  I’ve crafted this EP with real depth and precision, with the intention of bringing ART back in style – not just “making a tune and releasing it, tryna go viral.”   Instead, I’m focused on how deeply I can move people. That, to me, is worth way more than any numbers on a screen.  I’m coming from a unique angle.  I’m only 21, but I’m heavily influenced by the past. I’m resurfacing what came before me and giving it a fresh, modern twist. Ultimately, I’m trying to explain something that’s just a feeling- it’s intuitive, and if you know, you know. GRIP HOP is a major restoration of that feeling.

Sharing the stage with the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra alongside Lady Leshurr and JayKae is a massive step for UK rap. What does this performance mean to you, and do you think orchestral collaborations will become more common in the genre?

This performance is easily my biggest milestone so far, and honestly, I’m both grateful and a bit shocked that I was chosen. Because my style and approach are so unorthodox, it can sometimes feel like people don’t fully get it yet. But to see that I’ve made enough of an impact to be placed on a major stage, next to major names, is a big confirmation for me.  This is what I’ve been waiting for. Performing is one of my strengths as an artist, I enjoy it . I’ve just been waiting on a stage that’s ready for me.

Your upcoming EP has been described as cinematic and concept-driven. What’s the central theme behind it, and what do you want people to feel when they hear it?

So, the central theme is, of course, the sound of GRIP HOP itself. The EP serves as both a demonstration and an introduction to my self-crafted, raw sound. But beneath that, each track tells its own story.

1.“Not Everything” – The smooth introduction to GRIPHOP. “Not Everything” has a confident vibe, balancing self-growth and personal ambitions with relationship pressures.

2.“Three Shots” – A Triumphant, bold, cinematic anthem celebrating wins and victory through hardship.

3. “When It Rains” – A deeply personal story-telling track about resilience through broken family structure

4.“Chosen One” – A grime-hip-hop fusion with mysterious, orchestral intensity. perfect for film, gaming, and brand placements.

5.“Hit Record ft. Varntae”– An ethereal anthem about confidence, self-belief, and overcoming adversity with spiritual strength and purpose.

Ghetts put you on his “One to Watch” list on Kiss FM, which is a strong endorsement. How did that moment affect you, and has it led to any unexpected opportunities?

That moment was a huge boost for me. It happened back in 2022, I was 18 at the time, and it honestly felt surreal. It was like… one night I went to sleep with not much going on, and the next morning I woke up to a shout-out from Ghetts. We’ve crossed paths and spoken multiple times since, and every time, it’s a vibe of mutual respect. I’m genuinely and wholesomely grateful for his support. Ghetts has been my favourite MC for years, and I’ve learned a lot just by studying his craft.  As for unexpected opportunities? Let’s just say… there’s more to come.

Your work with Toddla T on “It’s Our Team” caught attention from The Guardian and Sky Sports. How did that collaboration come about, and what have you learned from working with him

That collaboration came about in a super unorthodox way. So, long story short… my mum went to uni with Delroy Corinaldi, the Founder and CEO of an organisation called The Black Footballers Partnership (BFP). Delroy needed a catchy theme tune for BFP; they had a major campaign coming up focused on the 2024 European Cup. My mum was working with BFP at the time and recommended me and my cousin Ke4t (bad boy producer) for the job. We made the track — and Delroy loved it.  One of BFP’s Co-Founders, Eartha Pond, is friends with Toddla T, so Delroy linked us up and arranged for me and Ke4t to head down to Toddla’s studio in London for post-production and mastering. That’s also where Sky Sports came through and interviewed us.  The Guardian got involved too — about a week later, they came up to Brum and interviewed us at No.5 Barristers’ Chambers, who support BFP and let us use their space for the piece. Big up BFP for the opportunity.  Since then, me and Toddla T have been proper bredrins. We even dropped a freestyle challenge recently on a beat I made at his studio, The Steeze Factory.  So yeah… big shout out to my mum, for real. None of this would’ve happened without her. She’s a real action taker.

UK rap is always changing, but few artists take orchestration and cinematic elements as far as you do. What do you think stops more artists from exploring those kinds of sounds?

Reason 1 – Musical IQ.  To put it bluntly, and I don’t say this lightly,  being good at music is a form of creative intelligence, just like being good at English, Science or Maths. You can learn to be good at music, but the realness, the instinct,  that’s something you’re either born with or not. Rhythm is felt. It’s resonance. That level of musical IQ, the ability to arrange layers of sound with true depth and intention, is rare. And without classical or theoretical training, not many artists are able to take orchestration or cinematic elements to that next level.

Reason 2 – Fear of standing out. Let’s be real,  people are scared to step outside the box of what’s considered ‘normal’. If one person starts dancing in the street alone and no one joins in, what do people say? “It’s embarrassing.” “They’re crazy.” Exactly.  That’s why not many take creative risks. They’re waiting for someone else to move first.

As an independent artist, you’re handling both creative and business decisions. How do you stay in control of your vision while making sure your music reaches a wider audience?

It’s not a task for the weak. Seriously.  But the one thing that has kept me grounded and motivated along this path is… my own music.   My creations are like my babies. When I listen back to them, I think to myself, “I can’t leave this world without putting these out.” I just know the feeling my music gives is valuable and not just the feeling, but the thoughts it provokes too.  I genuinely believe it would be a disservice not just to myself, but to the universe if I didn’t share my music with as many souls as possible.

“Chosen One” has the kind of production that fits into gaming, film, and TV. Have you had any discussions about getting your music into those spaces, and what kind of projects do you think would suit your sound best?

“Chosen One” has given me shivers up my spine more than once. The dark yet luminous harmony of the instruments and vocals, especially on the chorus,  makes me instantly picture an intense, emotional, action-packed movie trailer.  The outro breakdown, where the track strips back to just drums and e-piano, adds this powerful, cinematic tension that I think would land perfectly in a trailer or dramatic scene.  If you listen closely to the project, you’ll notice there’s a recurring theme of rain, both sonically and symbolically. So any intense, meaningful media with a visual rain theme – whether that’s a film, series, or high-concept game – would pair really well with “Chosen One.”

The EP drops on April 25th, right in the middle of both the Birmingham and London CBSO shows.  Big waves are moving right now – don’t miss the ride

Discover CreezOn on all major platforms via this link.

Interview by Amelia Vandergast

The Megazord Effect: MannyPacquiloud & LjayNFG Sync Firepower on ‘Fantastic’

MannyPacquiloud

When MannyPacquiloud and LjayNFG collide on Fantastic, the outcome isn’t just collaborative chemistry—it’s juggernautical. The hyper lo-fi hip-hop speaker slammer rides a rift in the genre’s continuum, shooting 8-bit synthetics and phasers across the mix like it’s an arcade battleground loaded with charisma-charged artillery. The conviction behind every bar proves MannyPacquiloud isn’t just tracking with the future of hip-hop—he’s hauling it on his back with unapologetic force.

It’s a spacy oscillation of pure lyrical volition. The beat bucks expectations with distorted minimalism, letting the distorted textures run riot while the vocals carve clarity out of chaos. The collaborators match the momentum with equal intent, making sure the tag-team format never slips into competition—only combustion.

There’s no gloss, no clean-cut production polish; it’s raw by design. Each element is engineered to elevate the energy, not dilute it. The low-fidelity framework serves the track’s ethos—it’s punchy, primal and built for the underground, where aesthetics bow to authenticity. This is what it sounds like when artists prioritise force over pretence and still land every blow on beat.

MannyPacquiloud’s ability to channel chaos into cadence shows he’s not just rapping for the now—he’s setting the stakes for what comes next. And if Fantastic is anything to go by, the altitude of hip-hop vibes might just be reaching stratospheric new levels through his talent.

Fantastic is now available to stream on all major platforms, including Apple Music.

Review by Amelia Vandergast.

Stay on Your Grind with ScarFace Dior’s trap track, Cash Fever

ScarFace Dior wastes no time making an impression with the opening track of his seminal EP, DIOR SZN. While the artist prefers to keep an enigmatic profile, his seminal single, Cash Fever reveals everything you need to know about his calibre as a lyricist.

As his intricate bars glide over atmospheric trap beats infused with the seductive twang of Latin guitars, it becomes clear that ScarFace Dior is more than a wordsmith; he’s a rapper unafraid to balance raw conviction with intimate vulnerability.

His delivery connects through the grounded sincerity in his cadence that pulls listeners into his narrative, which takes aim at breaking the mould of typical hustler hip-hop. The track pulses with resilience as Dior delivers his cry for individuality and determination to be recognised as the two pillars of authenticity and success. His lyrics underline the importance of staying true to yourself, weaving inspiration into every line without ever crossing into cliché. ScarFace Dior’s sharp wit and ability to inject emotional depth into his bars will undoubtedly put him on the contemporary map of hip-hop icons.

While Cash Fever celebrates ambition and fortitude, it also warns against distraction and complacency, reminding listeners that sticking to your lane isn’t just a mindset but a means of reaching your destination.

With Cash Fever, ScarFace Dior proves that even in a saturated hip-hop scene, there’s always room for innovation when style and substance go hand in hand.

Stream DIOR SZN on Spotify and Apple Music now.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

In Conversation: Frostbyt3 Breaks Down ‘OUTCHA MOUTH’ and Talks New Horizons

This week, we explored the defiance and high-energy expression in Frostbyt3’s latest track, “OUTCHA MOUTH,” featuring Juice Box and ETHNL. Released on April 12th, this single marks a significant shift from Frostbyt3’s earlier pop and R&B influences, diving into a realm of gritty, experimental rap with a live-performance feel designed to rally the crowd.

In this interview with A&R Factory, Frostbyt3 reveals the inspiration behind the creation of an anthem that not only challenges the negativity from others and self-doubt but also sets the stage for a much-anticipated album. Dive into the conversation as Frostbyt3 discusses the transformative journey from SoundCloud experiments to major stage ambitions, offering insights into collaboration dynamics, creative processes, and long-term visions

Frostbyt3, welcome to A&R Factory! Thanks for the opportunity to sit down with you and discuss your latest single, OUTCHA MOUTH, featuring Juice Box and ETHNL which dropped on April 12th. We love how you brought your high-vibe energy to a track that asserts boundaries with maximum conviction in the bars and beats; what inspired you to create this track and run with this infectiously expressive style?

Thank you so much for having me! I am super excited to talk about my music! I would say coming off of my last album, “EMOTIONALLY UNAVAILABLE”, that was very pop and R&B based. I wanted to create something that sounded different from what I usually make. I wanted to create an anthem that was show-ready and had a hook that was easy to memorize. Recently, I have been watching a lot of rap performances and seeing what artists have brought to the table with that type of energy. That is exactly what I wanted to bring out with this new single. A fresh new take on how I want everyone to turn up when they listen to the song.

What inspired you to create the track?

The track idea came at a time when I noticed not only with myself but with the media in general how people like to try and drag others down once they see they are making something good out of their own life. Not only that, but it also plays a role in how we sometimes talk down about ourselves and we might not even realize it. There have been moments in my own life where I was like “Am I even built for this?” or “Am I good enough for this?” when I know I am and have proven myself time and time again. I would say this single is a commentary on negative talk in general, whether it’s from others or yourself. Keep any sort of negativity out of your mouth. As far as the production on this track, in the car, I listen to tracks like “FE!N” by Travis Scott and Playboi Carti. I did take huge inspiration from the album, “TESTING” by A$AP Rocky. That album is so amazing and the energy on that album is incredible. If you’re a fan of grundy and experimental rap, check that album out.

Could you walk us through your creative process for writing and producing a track like “OUTCHA MOUTH”? Where do you usually start, and how do you know when a song is ready to be released?

It’s honestly been trial and error. I usually either have a hook already in mind and create the production around the hook and verses, or I’ll start from scratch and make the beat and then add the lyrics of what I believe the song should be about afterwards. I think, this time around, the beat was finished and I had demo lyrics. In my mind, I was like, “ETHNL would go crazy on this!”. Two weeks after sending it to ETHNL, I told myself “No. ETHNL and Juice Box would be an insane combo!”. The rest is history.

How did the collaboration with Juice Box and ETHNL come about, and what was it like working in the studio with them?

I have worked with both artists before. ETHNL and I have worked numerous times to a point where we know what works and doesn’t work. Juice Box I worked with a lot behind the scenes and we have one song out called “Honorable Mentions”. I thought this was the perfect time to have both of them back and they delivered.

From your early days on SoundCloud to now, how have you evolved as an artist? In what ways have your initial influences shaped your current music style?

As a music artist, I’m always learning. I’m always listening. I have learned so much from not only learning what my fanbase is like, but also tuning in to other musicians and understanding how they operate in the music realm. I’m always asking questions. How do you engage the crowd on stage? How do you get the fans asking for more? How did they create certain songs? I feel like these are the key concepts that, over the years, have helped shape my sound and who I want to be as an artist.

Does OUTCHA MOUTH set the tone for your upcoming album?

I would say OUTCHA MOUTH is just one piece to an entire theme-driven album. The album itself has a bunch of different tones. I’d like to think of each song on the album as having its personality. It’s cool because OUTCHA MOUTH as a single can stand on its own, but on the album, it brings life to the album listening experience.

Engaging with your fanbase seems integral to your approach. How do you hope your music, especially the new single and upcoming album, will resonate with your listeners, both old and new?

I want this album to give people hope. I don’t want to spoil a lot, but this album has been a reminder to me of why I wanted to make music in the first place. It has so many different feels and vibes, but it all has that Frostbyt3 feel that fans know and love. It truly has a lot to offer for familiar listeners, as well as people listening to my music for the first time. I encourage people to listen to some of my recent work to get a good feel of the genres I have worked with so far.

Beyond the upcoming album, what are your long-term goals for your music career? How do you see your sound and artistic identity evolving in the future?

I have some big plans in the works. I am currently planning on doing live shows. That is what has been important to me. People love and need live music. The last two home studio albums I dropped, “WHINTER SEEZYN” and “EMOTIONALLY UNAVAILABLE”, I call “quarantine albums”, because they were released during the middle of the pandemic. At that point, musicians and artists weren’t able to do much. Live music was in a weird place. Now, I feel like this is the time to go hard! I want to give people that Frostbyt3 experience live! I would love to do a mini-tour! As far as my sound and artistic identity, I see myself pushing myself further with my music. I’m always making music every day. My music and creativity are always evolving and changing. I can’t wait for the world to hear more from me.

Stream OUTCHA MOUTH on Spotify now.

Follow Frostbyt3 on Instagram.

Interview by Amelia Vandergast