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Hip hop artists
Hip hop artists











“Rap is definitely poetry,” Latto tells me. She also does the very thing that makes rappers poets: She works the language. In reaccenting the word, Latto charges it with her Southern drawl. “Pandemic” becomes “PAN-demic,” the stress displaced from its natural position. On “Youngest N Richest,” she raps it more deliberately atop a frenetic track fretted with a tense violin sample. On the XXL freestyle, she raps “pandemic” fluidly over a lazy instrumental, so the word sounds like urgent speech. Listen to Latto perform and you understand what she heard in that word. A few bars later, in her cipher verse, she adds: “I donated, too, so don’t mock me!” But boasting about spending $100,000 on a diamond-encrusted chain and watch amid a global health crisis also rates as particularly brazen, even in a musical genre that often centers the self and celebrates conspicuous consumption. It’s standard-issue braggadocio, in praise of her newfound wealth. “I just dropped a hundred on jewelry during a pandemic,” she raps, give or take a word.

hip hop artists

has used it twice on record so far: once last summer during a cipher - a competitive and collaborative freestyle session with other rappers - when the hip-hop magazine XXL named Latto (as she’s known) to its 2020 “freshman class” of breakout stars and again on the opening track from her major-label debut, “Queen of Da Souf,” released last year.

hip hop artists

Not surprisingly, one of the words that has come to mind during the past year is “pandemic” the 22-year-old M.C.

hip hop artists

THE ATLANTA-BASED RAPPER Mulatto collects scraps of language on her iPhone, words and phrases that come to her suddenly, or that she’s picked up while performing online during the pandemic.













Hip hop artists