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Snot Settles Yet Another Score In His Violent ‘Who Do I Trust’ Video

The sardonic, perpetually-sweatshirt-clad Snot hashes out his issues with fake friends and untrustworthy women. …

Snot continues his Beautiful Havoc rampage in the latest video from his debut album, “Who Do I Trust.” This time around, he engages in yet another hyperviolent revenge fantasy, pointing guns at the camera, at a bloody enemy, and even at himself. Lyrically, he challenges fake friends and disloyal women, advising them not to cross him with his signature deadpan delivery. “If I see you in the streets, I know what I’ma do — just wait,” he drones. “N****s talkin’, bodies floppin’, snitches f*ckin’ MIA.”

The buzzy South Florida rapper dropped his debut last Friday after a buildup that included Cole Bennett-directed videos for lead single “Revenge” and its follow-up “Mean” featuring breakout Alabama rapper Flo Milli. He also received a co-sign from his Miami thrash-rap forebear Denzel Curry with “Sangria,” showing off the surprising versatility of his monotone rap attack.

Emerging from the Florida SoundCloud scene in 2017, $not settled on the laconic flow he now uses after trying out different versions of the subgenre’s various approaches, from the scream-rap of XXXTentacion to ad-lib heavy trap. Eventually, he got a hit with 2018’s “Gosha,” propelling him to the forefront of the Rolling Loud-style underground scene before he made good with his 2020 debut Tragedy+.

Watch the “Who Do I Trust” video above.

Beautiful Havoc is now via 300 Entertainment. Get it here.

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Artist Spotlight

Leyla Romanova finds strength in silence on new release “Self-Control”

Leyla Romanova

Leyla Romanova‘s new single, “Self-Control,” is a powerful emotional release that feels more like a manifesto for surviving modern chaos than a song. In a world of opinions, urgency, and emotional exhaustion, Romanova offers a track based on one radical idea: not reacting.

“Self-Control” immediately creates tension and clarity. The drums keep everything together with discipline and purpose. As the textured instrumentals expand like waves of thought through a crowded mind, the bass anchors the listener emotionally.

The contrast between outside noise and inside stillness makes the song compelling. Romanova’s work captures the feeling of being overwhelmed by pressure, opinions, and distractions while silently retaining personal peace. There are no major uprisings. But restraint is power. The song knows energy conservation is a survival strategy.

Connect with Leyla Romanova on Spotify || Instagram || Facebook || Youtube

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Artist Spotlight

J’mall expresses the pain of chasing someone else’s success over your own on “Unattainable”

J'mall

J’mall’s latest single, “Unattainable,” expresses the pain of chasing someone else’s success over your own. The song explores the emotional void caused by constant comparison rather than motivation.

“Unattainable” is about realizing that no matter how hard one works to meet others’ expectations, the reward will never be satisfying. J’mall explores the stress of “keeping up with the Joneses” and the exhaustion of comparing yourself to standards that weren’t meant for you.

The song’s honesty resonates, the message doesn’t feel preachy or polished. It feels personal, like J’mall is sharing life lessons. The record’s quiet strength is its embrace of individuality and personal responsibility without pretending it’s easy.

Connect with J’mall on Spotify || Instagram || Soundcloud

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