LOS ANGELES â While Lil Babyâs new album blares loudly in the living room, the Atlanta-born rapper stands in the kitchen of his $20 million Bel Air home singing to his son, who dances along on FaceTime.
For Lil Baby, living in one of the most exclusive neighborhoods in the U.S. would have been unfathomable several years ago. He was released in 2016 after being incarcerated on a drug charge and had no intention of starting a rap career until Quality Control founders Kevin âCoach Kâ Lee and Pierre âPâ Thomas saw tremendous potential.
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âI knew Baby had a hustlerâs spirit,â Thomas says. âAll he had to do was transfer his energy from whatever he was doing to the music. Heâs got that hustlerâs mentality of the first one getting up and last one going to sleep. He grinds nonstop. I just knew if he transferred all that energy, he was going to grind all the way to the top.â
Lil Baby, 27, initially wasnât hard pressed to rap. But once he made it a priority, he rose to remarkable success. He won over listeners through his infectious singles like âDrip Too Hard,â âWe Paidâ and âYes Indeedâ with Drake. Heâs worked with some of musicâs best including Future, Nicki Minaj and Lil Wayne. Earlier this year, he won a Grammy in the best melodic rap performance category for Kanye Westâs âHurricane,â which also featured The Weeknd.
In a recent interview with The Associated Press, Lil Baby opened up about decriminalizing rap lyrics, his friends Young Thug and Gunna who are currently locked up in a RICO criminal case and his third studio album âItâs Only Me,â which releases Friday.
Remarks have been edited for clarity and brevity.
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AP: Youâve overcome being a high school dropout and bounced back from serving time in prison. How does it feel now to be successful?
LIL BABY: When I look at everything I had to endure and the process, I think about when I was just sitting in a prison cell to now Iâm living in a pad in California. I feel like anything can happen. Anything is possible. If you believe, you can achieve.
AP: When did you realize you was good with formulating words together?
LIL BABY: Language arts was one of my favorite classes. I could imagine and really write a story about whatever. It could be real or not real. From second to third grade, I always been into writing a good story. Once I got on Instagram, I started realizing that the caption was more important than the picture. Like if you got the right caption, itâll go viral. The caption has to be hard as my picture.
AP: Your protest song âThe Bigger Pictureâ was a big hit at the Grammys last year. Will you do more racial disparity-type topics in your new music?
LIL BABY: I feel like thatâs something I do in my songs anyway. That was a time where so much was going on. I think it got reciprocated like that. But thatâs a song that couldâve been on my album right now â without this going on. Thatâs how I rap already.
AP: Your new album has 23 tracks. With that good amount of songs, did you think about breaking it up into a double album?
LIL BABY: I couldâve put 15 songs out and just added seven more songs then put out another album. I could put out two albums in no time. But I havenât put nothing out in two years. Itâs almost really going on three (years). ... Iâm not going to drop a deluxe.
AP: Your friends Young Thug and Gunna have been jailed since May in a criminal racketeering case. How have you been dealing with that?
LIL BABY: It honestly kind of (expletive) me up, like on a day-to-day. I try my best not to think of it. I havenât been talking to Gunna as much, but I talk to Thug often. Itâs one of those things I try to keep off my mind. If I think about it too much, I get deep into it. Itâs the fact that I know the situation of where we are and what weâve overcome. I know them personally. I know what theyâre doing and what they are not to a certain extent. To know the picture that they are painting isnât really them. Itâs really scary. Iâm in that same position. They could be painting the same picture to me. I know for a fact thatâs not what it is. But Iâm also seeing people in jail when I know itâs not what it is. It kind of (expletive) with your insanity a little bit.
AP: Since you communicate with Thug the most, what advice have you given him?
LIL BABY: I tell him to read. This is a time when we got to do what we to get through this situation. Just read. Stack up on your knowledge. Itâs nothing else to do. Get you some real good books. Let that be the reason.
AP: Are you more conscious of your lyrics now?
LIL BABY: Yep, by default. It automatically makes you conscious. I can say something crazy that I never did. I know that. But with everything going on, I ainât going to say that. Iâm scared for someone who would try to make something thatâs not. I try my best. Weâre rappers. Weâre used to saying a lot of stuff thatâs not true, that didnât happen. Itâs art. Itâs your imagination. You can go as far as you want to take it. But now, I have to be very mindful, because I know as much as people who are listening to what Iâm saying is a critic.
AP: In California, Gov. Gavin Newsom recently signed the decriminalizing artistic expression act. How do you feel about it?
LIL BABY: Itâs a major impact. But I think itâs a catch with this lyric thing. Itâs dead (expletive) wrong to try to use your lyrics and convict you of something youâre just saying. Itâs also (expletives) wrong for putting stuff in your music that youâre actually doing. Itâs a strong battle in that right now.
As a rapper and a person, Iâm leaning more towards decriminalizing lyrics, so itâs doesnât get brought up in court. But I ainât advertising or applauding the people who are actually going out here on nonsense and putting it in their songs. You got to get it how you live, but itâs a finesse. You can finesse it into the music. Thatâs the art of it. That makes it a craft. You can go out there and do something â good, bad, wrong. And then be able to come back and make it into a song. Make art out of it. You donât have to be direct and say exactly what happened. You fabricate it. Itâs art. You give it how you imagine.
AP: Anything you want to do outside of rap?
LIL BABY: Iâve been telling my team to put something together for a cartoon. My baby mother and her friends, they got like a TV show on BET, âThe Impact: Atlanta.â I co-produce that. Iâm into stuff. My momma is trying to come up with a show about the pressure that rap moms have to go through â to be a parent of someone in hip-hop. I got my team trying to come up with a show around that. I got a couple of ideas. Iâll be around.
AP: You were singing to your son over FaceTime. How do you juggle being a rap star and father of two boys?
LIL BABY: Everything is great, except me being in this position, I just donât have enough time as I want. I want to be there, but I want to build this legacy. It (expletive) with my time with them. Thatâs the only problem I have in life: Finding time with my kids. I can say that I donât want to go to work and have all the time in the world for them. But that wonât lead to the life I want to build for them or the life I want for myself.
AP: What kind of life do you want for them?
LIL BABY: I inspire my kids to be business owners and legacy holders. Iâm a first generation millionaire. Iâm trying to keep it going for as long as possible. So my children are in a big situation. They hold the fire, really. I created it as the first generation. Iâm going to make sure I pass it on. They have to make sure they pass it onto the next generation and so forth.