SahBabii isnât your average rapperâin fact, heâs often billed as the âweirdestâ rapper in Atlanta. His songs, eccentric and often comical, take fantastical subjects as diverse as squids, gorillas, and animeâoften in combinationâas their inspiration. But the 24-year-old artistâs newest album, Do It For Demon, reveals a new side of the eccentric artist to his listeners. While SahBabiiâs signature wry wordplay and eargum adlibs remain a pillar of the new record, the emotional tenor is different. Do It For Demon centers on the passing of DemonChild, the rapperâs closest friend, who died as a result of gun violence last December. On the album, SahBabiiâs joy and humor morphs into something somber, grief-stricken, and at times angry. âEvery time I got on the mic,â the artist told Interview on a recent Zoom call, âI was thinking about him.â In spite of its traumatic origins, the record shows SahBabii leaving the protection of his signature absurdist subject matter in favor of something more vulnerable. Below, the rapper sat down with Interview to discuss Do it For Demon, childhood friendships, and projects to come.
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JACKSON WALD: If youâre ready, letâs just jump right in.
SAHBABII:Â Â Yeah, Iâm ready.
WALD: For those who are less familiar with your past work, this album is a major departure. How has your sound and message changed since your start in 2017?
SAHBABII:Â Â Nothing has really changed in my music. But I can say, this project has more substance in it. My sound is still the same, and I still have that sound in my bag from the previous projects. This project was about my friend that passed away. So it was a real meaningful projectârapping about depression and being sad. Itâs just got a little bit more substance, you know what Iâm saying?
WALD:Â Â Totally. When did you decide you wanted to make an album dedicated to DemonChild?
SAHBABII: It happened naturally. After he passed away, I was in the studio working on new music, but something just kept telling me, âyou have to make a project dedicated to him.â Every time I got on the mic, I was thinking about him.
WALD: Could you tell me about your relationship with him? I know he helped you develop Unknownism and was your producer. Can you walk me through how you got to know him and what he meant to you?
SAHBABII: I met DemonChild when I first moved to Atlanta. I met him on Osborn Street. He was a person with no friends, and I ainât had no friends because, Iâd just moved there. I was staying with my uncle, and our family took DemonChild in as one of our own familyâwe already had thirteen people staying in the house at the time. Later on, when we moved away, my family brought him and his brother with us, in exchange for food stamps. Heâs really been with me and my family since I was 13.
WALD: When did you start collaborating on music?
SAHBABII: We always made music for fun, just together in the house.
WALD:Â Â I noticed heâs sampled in the beginning of âStep in the Name of Love.â Why did you decide to put him in the intro there?Â
SAHBABII: The beat just spoke to me when I made that song. Everything I do is based off of feeling. We knew we wanted DemonChildâs voice on this project somewhere. It was actually T3 that went through all the old files on our computer, and found an old DemonChild song with the same beats per minute as âStep in the Name of Love.â
WALD:Â Your is evident in the project. Was it at all therapeutic for you to rap through these emotions?
SAHBABII: Most definitely it was therapeutic. It was my gift to him. It was a very spiritual experience. I look at that project as a final goodbye to him, because Iâm never gonna mention his name again, in any future songs. It was my goodbye.
WALD: There was one bar on the album that I wanted to ask you about. Itâs the Ben Simmons one on Switch: âHe scared to shoot like Ben Simmons, we just checked his stats.â
SAHBABII: It was no disrespect to Ben Simmons. Heâs just scared to shoot. Thatâs just facts. I just want him to take more shots, thatâs all.
WALD: Are you a Sixers fan?
SAHBABII: No, Iâm not. Iâm a Bucks fan. I like Ben Simmons though.
WALD:Â Â Do you think the Sixers should trade him?
SAHBABII: They shouldnât trade him. He just needs to work on that jump shot. He would be good on the Nets, though. I ainât even gonna lie.
WALD: Who you were listening to when you made the album?Â
SAHBABII: Man, I really donât listen to music, to be honest. Itâs not my thing. I donât listen to music for the simple reason that it means nobody can ever say Iâm copying their sound. Eventually, weâre all gonna say the same thing. I donât even want to have a personâs song in my mind, and that way theyâll never think that I copied it.Â
WALD: Are there any songs from the album that youâre especially excited to perform on tour?
SAHBABII: âDo it For Demon.â
WALD: Why that one?
SAHBABII:Â That shit just got the energy.Â
WALD: Do you have any new music cooking right now, or are you taking a break since making Do it For Demon?
SAHBABII: Iâve got a whole new project done, but itâs not finished. It can always be better.Â