

I was in school one day and I wrote an extremely vulgar-ass rap.

It’s like, don’t put your eggs in a basket, you’re only fucking ten. They actually didn’t fuck with it at first, mainly because they noticed that I’d rather do that than anything else. How did you parents feel about you rapping since they didn’t listen to it? I used to freestyle on the playground, and I could rhyme anything with anything. It was like a dictionary, but with every word that rhymes with every word. I started writing, and I was good at that shit. Damn, I don’t ever listen to this at home! This shit tight! He’d be playing Bone Thugz, Tupac, Eminem, all type of shit. I found rap cause I’d go to my cousin’s house. I was listening to all kinds of different shit, a bunch of jazz music, a bunch of soul music, so much gospel music. My pops got me anything I was interested in for my music. From that I did more and more music shit, and from that, I began my rap shit, probably around seven. My grandma made my dad buy me some bongos. I be just beating on shit when I was a little kid. Louis to Chicago, and being an album-focused artist in a singles-driven era. In August, Smino sat with Rolling Stone before a downtown Manhattan shopping spree and a performance at Afropunk to discuss how he got into hip-hop, the importance of moving from St.
And his artistic metabolism is wonderfully slow: He has hardly released any music in the 18 months between blkswn and Noir, which comes out today. His rap makes room for southern R&B and imperfect harmony singing the drums are inevitably cooled out, like nth-wave neo soul. Like many artists in this club - especially Smino’s Chicago-based collaborators like Saba and Noname - Smino is not particularly interested in the fierce sound that generally earns rappers the attention of the people programming radio stations and marquee streaming playlists. blkswn earned Smino entry into hip-hop’s growing tier of artists who have steady, dedicated listeners without any major hits to their name. Another was SZA, who took the rapper with her on tour. One of those fans was T-Pain, who recorded a blazing-hot verse for a remix of Smino’s single “Anita” and danced irrepressibly in the accompanying video. “Then people are like” - he adopts a comically high, overly proper voice - “‘Oh my God! Breathtaking! Wowzers!’ Oh, you like it?” “There was a point when I got to the end of the project where I was like, ‘I hate that shit,'” he recalls. Before the rapper Smino dropped his official debut, blkswn, in 2017, he started to loathe the music on it.
