Latest Release
- 4 OCT 2024
- 1 Song
- Never Lose Me (feat. Lil Yachty) - Single · 2023
- Gift For The Streets · 2024
- Broccoli (feat. Lil Yachty) - Single · 2016
- Let’s Start Here. · 2023
- Light of Mine · 2016
- Lil Boat 3 · 2020
- For All The Dogs · 2023
- Lil Boat 3.5 · 2020
- DO NOT DISTURB (DELUXE) · 2024
- Lil Boat 2 · 2018
Essential Albums
- One of hip-hop's sunnier personalities plays dark and determined.
Albums
- 2020
- 2018
- 2024
- 2024
- 2024
- 2024
Artist Playlists
- Cast-iron bangers and punchy vocals from the U.S. rap star.
- The duo on their collaborative project Bad Cameo.
- Conversation around his album, 'Let's Start Here.'
- The rapper on "G.I. Joe" and his album 'Michigan Boy Boat.'
- The MC and City Girls' Yung Miami talk music, Quality Control.
- Vince and Ty get festive, exchange gifts, and spin 21 Savage.
More To See
About Lil Yachty
Lil Yachty makes it look easy. An Atlanta-raised rapper with a sleepy flow and a bright, almost childlike outlook, Yachty (born Miles Parks McCollum in 1997) rose to prominence in 2016 with a pair of mixtapes (Lil Boat and Summer Songs 2) that recast the booming caverns of 2010s rap as something soft, sweet, intuitive and a little goofy—a sound Yachty once called “bubblegum trap”. Dozens of features and guest appearances followed, including cosigns from Kanye, Chance the Rapper, Calvin Harris and Macklemore. In 2017, he released his first full-length album, Teenage Emotions. His second, 2018’s Lil Boat 2, took a harder, darker turn but retained the clarity that made his early music stand out. Like Lil Uzi Vert (or Young Thug before him), Yachty represents a turn away from the conventional metrics of rap, favouring slogans over bars, hooks over metaphors, fluidity over stricture and vibe above all. (He famously—or infamously, depending on your stance toward tradition—once told Billboard that he couldn’t name five songs by either 2Pac or Biggie.) But he’s also emblematic of a broader shift from understanding rap music as an end in itself to seeing it as an extension of the person who made it, a facet of a bigger image or experience. No wonder he FaceTimes with fans, or started his career primarily as a presence on Instagram—for him, the project is social. Still, it wouldn’t make a difference if the music itself weren’t striking—and if he weren’t so casual about it too. Speaking to Beats 1’s Zane Lowe shortly before releasing Teenage Emotions, Yachty—guileless and ever-intuitive—said, “I didn’t know [my sound] was different. I didn’t know until it took off. Then I was like, ‘Well, I don’t sound like nobody else.’” He paused. “I don’t even know if that’s a good or a bad thing. But it’s a thing. It’s a thing.” Yachty’s only expanded his sonic appetite. In 2021, he paid homage to Detroit-area rap with Michigan Boy Boat, an album that saw him adopt the jittery soundscapes and deadpan bars of the region. He added to his repertoire once again with 2023’s Let’s Start Here., a psychedelic rock album that sees Yachty stretch his vocals and soundscapes in even more unpredictable directions. From there, he released Concrete Boys, the debut project from his Concrete imprint. Featuring dexterous flows and spurts of melody from his crew, the 2024 effort affirmed his knack for curation and aesthetics. He’s graduated to a well-tended status as an industry tastemaker and a spitter capable of trading bars with J. Cole. On the track “The Secret Recipe”, we find Lil Boat rapping about being the source of plenty of rap and fashion trends. It’s a fitting song title for a young veteran who’s made a career out of good taste.
- FROM
- Mableton, GA, United States
- BORN
- 23 August 1997
- GENRE
- Hip-Hop/Rap