“I’m pushing rap in the direction of God via my music, for actual,” 21-year-old Bktherula says over a bicoastal Zoom name. Although the Atlanta-born rapper is pretty open about her sophisticated relationship with institutional faith, religion, and her eccentric dialogue with the divine — her mission assertion is loaded with a metaphysical twist.
The genre-bending rapper and singer-songwriter is competing in her personal lane — even perhaps in her personal dimension. Bktherula’s enigmatic expertise is indicative of the diversification of rap, a style that was as soon as praised for its insularity and reliance on custom. “I’m making that shit cool once more,” Bktherula says.
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Rap, as an artwork and area, exists on the frontlines of the music business and is in fixed flux. In some ways, 2024’s rap chart-toppers sound unrecognizable to the hip-hop of the millennium’s finish. Previously decade, the style has ascended to the mainstream with unmatchable pressure, with rap artists dominating charts as they incorporate a distinctively pop mentality, one which favors virality over endurance, aiming to churn out information quick and sometimes.
However artists like Bktherula aren’t searching for repeating strategies of success, and positively aren’t enthusiastic about selecting up the playbooks of artists previous. She, like her experimental friends, are vanguards of the style’s evolution — and now rap should play catch-up because it rides of their wake.
Since first producing warmth in Atlanta’s underground scene within the late 2010s, the rapper, born Brooklyn Rodriguez, made her means out of sweaty warehouses into studio periods with the following era of American rappers like Destroy Lonely, Babyxsosa, Money Cobain, and NBA YoungBoy. Along with her 2019 breakout single “LEFT RIGHT” and her head-banging hit “Tweakin’ Collectively” launched the next yr, Bktherula has racked up thousands and thousands of streams on SoundCloud, TikTok, and Spotify, catapulting her underground sound into an indisputably cool echelon of style and tradition. Previously yr, Bk has walked the runway for Nigerian designer Mowalola, starred in Marc Jacobs’ Summer time 2023 marketing campaign, and is now scheduled to tour with PinkPantheress for her 2024 Able to Love tour.
With a shortened nickname out of the studio, Bk Zooms in from the Warner workplace in Los Angeles, carrying a black-and-pink Trapstar shirt and grungy two-toned denims from 2nd Avenue. Seated on a small sofa surrounded by posters, she excitedly flashes her unreleased fifth album to the digital camera. “That’s my eye,” she says, enamored by the tangible actuality of her latest venture, LVL5 P2 (standing for Stage 5 Participant Two).
To really know Bk and her work is to acknowledge the underlying philosophy that contextualizes her music and worldview. “We’re positively in a sport,” Bk says, easing me in slowly to her eclecticism. “After which the degrees are the totally different dimensions of the sport.” Bk derives her philosophy from each a scientific and non secular lens. She’s been taking on-line quantum physics lessons on the College of Tokyo for almost three years, finding out what she calls the “science of the way in which the world is.” By way of her relationship with God, she’s “studied” a excessive energy. “They’re totally different, however they correlate,” she explains.
The third dimension, or Stage 3, is our brick-and-mortar actuality the place most individuals exist, Bk says, candidly. “Those that ‘don’t get it’ are on Stage 3,” she says. I look across the espresso store the place I’m seated and picture the queuing patrons with tubes popping out of their heads, plugged into the matrix. “However lots of people are there. I used to be as soon as there, too.”
For the reason that age of 16, Bk has been working in Stage 5, an “egoless” place the place she’s capable of “change [her] future by believing one thing will occur.” Stage 4 is the “astral realm” the place one’s potentialities and imaginations are limitless. Whereas we could also be unable to manage the fourth dimension, Stage 5 is the place the bodily and unconscious actuality meet. “Now you’re capable of do what you are able to do in your goals whereas nonetheless being amongst individuals within the third dimension,” Bk says. “That’s when it will get scary as a result of you’ll be able to change shit.”
However make no mistake: This isn’t your common TikTokers’ manifestation. “I want individuals had been telling the reality about [manifestation]. It’s not simply writing sticky notes in your mirror. ‘I’m lovely. I’m good.’ That’s not it — that’s bullshit,” Bk says. Not like the witchy TikToks of journaling and sage-burning Gen Zers, Bk has “made a mathematical equation” that proves you’ll be able to change your actuality.
Bk realizes how her maverick dogma could appear to the typical listener. “I’m sorry I’m a nerd about this shit,” Bk says, halting her clarification. However she boasts that her followers are “nerds who perceive music concept” and “get her work” from a “fifth-dimensional perspective.”
LVL5 P2 — which follows a unique participant and alter ego of Bktherula — feels to her like her “first album ever.” Launched at the moment, the album opens with the glitching, techno monitor “CODE,” options mosh pit singles “TATTI” and “CRAYON,” and incorporates wild collaborations with Money Cobain and JID. The venture is distinctively contemporary and completely unusual — as all of Bktherula is — with clear dubstep-inspired manufacturing, whip-smart lyrics, and stellar vocals. “It’s like hip-hop slash dubstep slash instrumental,” Bk says. “If I take out the instrumentals to my songs and take away the 808, I might carry out that shit at an EDM competition.”
The rapper credit rising up in Atlanta for her gritty, swaggering sound. “I usually take into consideration how it could be if I didn’t develop up in Atlanta,” Bk says. “And it’s form of scary. If I used to be born in New York, I’d not be the identical artist.”
In her childhood dwelling in Atlanta, Bk was surrounded by artistic inspiration. “I’ve been making music since I used to be a child,” she says. “My mother’s an excellent singer, and I sing due to her.” Bk says that her first songs had been penned to sing to her mom. “However I additionally rap due to my dad, who was a rapper.” Between her singer mom and her dad, as soon as a member of Planet X, an underground hip-hop group from Atlanta, there was a various mixture of old-school hip-hop and R&B taking part in in her home.
However life in school wasn’t as straightforward. She was bullied and left sophomore yr to be homeschooled. “I didn’t have pals in highschool. I felt so alone,” she remembers. However Bk had the bug for songwriting. “I simply began doing shit.” By 14, Bk was consumed with the sprawling panorama of SoundCloud’s underground rap scene.
“I’d say that I’m probably the most impressed by underground bands,” Bk says. “The fervour of their music is simply fully totally different. It’s uncooked, and it’s actual.” Bk began placing out songs on Instagram and SoundCloud and immediately hit a nerve. “I used to be blowing up in all places however Atlanta,” Bk says, jokingly. “Nobody [here] knew that I used to be making music.”
A gaggle of younger creatives quickly scouted Bk out on Instagram and “supplied to file [her] first studio session, combine [her] music, and even do a video for [her].” The group — Molly, Josh, and Benji — turned her closest pals, taking her to underground reveals and serving to her discover a place as a performer. “I used to be 15 acting at fucking [warehouses] for 20-year-olds on Fridays and Saturdays and shit. That’s how I received within the sport,” Bk says. “And now they nonetheless do all my movies.”
However though Bktherula by no means discovered her groove in the highschool hallways, her rambunctious, youthful spirit is integral to her life offstage. “Recently I really feel like a jock,” Bk says as she slings a letterman jacket over her shoulders. “I wasn’t a jock in highschool, however I’m getting it in my 20s.” When Bk’s not within the studio, she’s “skating with [her] pals, getting dumb tattoos, and doing random shit,” she says, laughing and exhibiting me her Tech Deck assortment. “However that’s Brooklyn.” If it had been as much as Brooklyn, she explains, she’d simply “run away and never reply my telephone and shit.” Fortunately, Bk is extra strategic.
She assures me that her followers know each Bk and Brooklyn, though there’s much more to her adventurous persona than what’s at the moment on the market. “I wish to voice a cartoon, be an actor, make a film, design garments. I wish to do a variety of shit, I’m not going to lie,” she shares.
Bktherula is aware of that individuals are catching onto her rising star, even when some haven’t but voiced their assist for her publicly. “At first you suppose that nobody sees you — however all of them do,” she explains. “Everybody is aware of who I’m proper now, I swear to you. Drake has seen me earlier than, and so they’re simply holding it quiet as a result of in the event that they reveal it, I’m out of there,” Bk says. “A bit bit extra out of there than they’re.”
As whimsical and otherworldly because the rapper could appear, Bk is decidedly tapped in — with a piece ethic as rigorous as a drill sergeant’s. Dropping 5 albums and a sequence of tracks between 2020 and 2024, all whereas sustaining a definite and experimental sound that constantly pushes the boundaries of rap, it’s clear that Bk’s high-vibrational ideology enhances the standard of labor and is, partially, what units her aside as a trailblazer within the area. If the music business needs to capitalize on what’s contemporary, it’s clear they’re going to should embrace artists like her, with out shepherding down the paths of their successors.
“It’s about to be my rattling time,” Bk says. “I pulled up, I’m right here, and I are available peace.”