London-based MC, producer, songwriter and Curl collective member Brother May teases the forthcoming "Pattern With Force" with two slithering inverted rap belters that'll have fans of Coby Sey, Tricky, Mica Levi and Dawuna in cold sweats.
A member of the Curl collective alongside Coby Sey and Mica Levi, and occasional collaborator with Jonnine, Brother May is a confident, long-time force in London's underground rap scene. He's drifted from drill and road rap into blunted free associating weirdness as he's developed his voice, landing on a style that's hypnotic and unique but not lacking barbs. 'What's Wot Baby' is the opening track from his forthcoming sophomore album and hints at the raw power of what's to come. Mica Levi's echoing production is evocative enough, but May's delivery drips with wit and intent, poetic and frayed at the edges.
'Gully Hymns' is situated in the same sonic universe - Levi's beat sounds like Timbaland's production for Tweet's 'Oops (Oh My)' slowed to a sensual crawl - and carried by another rhythmically angular turn on the mic from May, who flips casually between "hymn" and "him", playing with language as if it's a box-fresh elastic band.
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London-based MC, producer, songwriter and Curl collective member Brother May teases the forthcoming "Pattern With Force" with two slithering inverted rap belters that'll have fans of Coby Sey, Tricky, Mica Levi and Dawuna in cold sweats.
A member of the Curl collective alongside Coby Sey and Mica Levi, and occasional collaborator with Jonnine, Brother May is a confident, long-time force in London's underground rap scene. He's drifted from drill and road rap into blunted free associating weirdness as he's developed his voice, landing on a style that's hypnotic and unique but not lacking barbs. 'What's Wot Baby' is the opening track from his forthcoming sophomore album and hints at the raw power of what's to come. Mica Levi's echoing production is evocative enough, but May's delivery drips with wit and intent, poetic and frayed at the edges.
'Gully Hymns' is situated in the same sonic universe - Levi's beat sounds like Timbaland's production for Tweet's 'Oops (Oh My)' slowed to a sensual crawl - and carried by another rhythmically angular turn on the mic from May, who flips casually between "hymn" and "him", playing with language as if it's a box-fresh elastic band.
London-based MC, producer, songwriter and Curl collective member Brother May teases the forthcoming "Pattern With Force" with two slithering inverted rap belters that'll have fans of Coby Sey, Tricky, Mica Levi and Dawuna in cold sweats.
A member of the Curl collective alongside Coby Sey and Mica Levi, and occasional collaborator with Jonnine, Brother May is a confident, long-time force in London's underground rap scene. He's drifted from drill and road rap into blunted free associating weirdness as he's developed his voice, landing on a style that's hypnotic and unique but not lacking barbs. 'What's Wot Baby' is the opening track from his forthcoming sophomore album and hints at the raw power of what's to come. Mica Levi's echoing production is evocative enough, but May's delivery drips with wit and intent, poetic and frayed at the edges.
'Gully Hymns' is situated in the same sonic universe - Levi's beat sounds like Timbaland's production for Tweet's 'Oops (Oh My)' slowed to a sensual crawl - and carried by another rhythmically angular turn on the mic from May, who flips casually between "hymn" and "him", playing with language as if it's a box-fresh elastic band.
London-based MC, producer, songwriter and Curl collective member Brother May teases the forthcoming "Pattern With Force" with two slithering inverted rap belters that'll have fans of Coby Sey, Tricky, Mica Levi and Dawuna in cold sweats.
A member of the Curl collective alongside Coby Sey and Mica Levi, and occasional collaborator with Jonnine, Brother May is a confident, long-time force in London's underground rap scene. He's drifted from drill and road rap into blunted free associating weirdness as he's developed his voice, landing on a style that's hypnotic and unique but not lacking barbs. 'What's Wot Baby' is the opening track from his forthcoming sophomore album and hints at the raw power of what's to come. Mica Levi's echoing production is evocative enough, but May's delivery drips with wit and intent, poetic and frayed at the edges.
'Gully Hymns' is situated in the same sonic universe - Levi's beat sounds like Timbaland's production for Tweet's 'Oops (Oh My)' slowed to a sensual crawl - and carried by another rhythmically angular turn on the mic from May, who flips casually between "hymn" and "him", playing with language as if it's a box-fresh elastic band.