Woodbridge natives Shaboozey and Tommy Richman are topping the Billboard Charts

Billboard’s Hot 100 Chart from this past week

While the music world has been distracted by Taylor Swift’s new album and the beef between rappers Kendrick Lamar and Drake, two artists from Woodbridge, Virginia have quietly climbed to the top of the Billboard charts. Tommy Richman’s “Million Dollar Baby” and Shaboozey’s “A Bar Song (Tipsy”), have amassed over one hundred million streams each on Spotify since their release dates in April. “Million Dollar Baby” is currently second on the Billboard Hot 100, after Taylor Swift and Post Malone’s “Fortnite”. It also topped Billboard’s Streaming Songs chart and is the third most popular song on Apple Music. Shaboozey’s “A Bar Song (Tipsey”) has reached the top of the Billboard Hot Country chart, and their Digital Song Sales chart. The song also climbed to third on the Billboard Hot 100, just below “Million Dollar Baby” and fifth on Apple Music (since this article was written the song has dropped two places on the Hot 100 Chart.)

Tommy Richman, who crooned “VA next, I’m at they neck”, rose to prominence last year after catching the attention of Maryland R&B artist Brent Faiyaz with his unique hybrid singing rap style and memorable hooks. Faiyaz announced that Richman was the first artist signed to his imprint ISO Supremacy, a joint venture with distributor UnitedMasters and Concord Music subsidiary Pulse Records. Richman appeared on Faiyaz’s 2023 album Larger Than Life. Before the release of “Million Dollar Baby”, the song became popular on TikTok after Richman posted multiple snippets. Maryland natives and long-time DMV Rap producers Mannyvelli and Sparkheem are two of the co-producers on the song.

Shaboozey, born Collins Obinna Chibueze, signed to Republic Records in 2014 (and later American Dogwood and EMPIRE). He rose to prominence after he was featured on two songs from Beyoncé’s most recent album, Cowboy Carter. Born to Nigerian parents and raised in Woodbridge, his artist name is a nod to a mispronunciation of his Igbo-language last name Chibueze. “A Bar Song (Tipsy)” interpolates J-Kwon’s 2004 classic “Tipsey”. In an interview with Billboard earlier this month, his co-manager Jared Cotter explained that Shaboozey was able to capitalize off of the success of Cowboy Carter, pushing the release date for his single forward three weeks. When “A Bar Song (Tipsy)” surpassed Beyoncé’s song “Texas Hold ‘Em” at the top of the Country chart, it was the first time since 1958 that two Black artists have lead the chart back-to-back.

Woodbridge, an outer suburb of Washington D.C., has had notable artists and bands in the Rap, Metal and Punk scenes for decades, but never to this level of commercial success. Country music legend Emmylou Harris also attended high school in Woodbridge and heavy metal pioneers Pentagram are often misattributed as being from Woodbridge (they are from Alexandria).

Tommy Richman's last single

The cover to Tommy Richman’s last single “Selfish”

Shaboozey’s third album, Where I’ve Been, Isn’t Where I’m Going is due to be released May 31st. He will be headlining shows across the U.S and opening for TikTok sensation Jessie Murph on tour. Tommy Richman is scheduled to play Chicago’s Lollapalooza music festival in August.

Brent Faiyaz – Making of Larger Than Life Pt. 2 (Video)

Brent Faiyaz has been cooking up the sequel to his well-received Larger Than Life project, and Lil Lens Kap got some dope behind-the-scenes footage:

Go behind the scenes with Brent Faiyaz and in the studio for the making of the album Larger Than Life – featuring collaborators Timbaland, Chad Hugo, A$AP ANT, Mannyvelli, Lil Gray, Babyface Ray, Princess Cro, and Flee.

Everyone Who Was At The Davis-Garcia Fight This Weekend

First off: big congrats to Gervonta “Tank” Davis, who shook his opponent to the point of temporary blindness. Second: it’s amazing to see how everyone came out to D.C.’s Capital One Arena to make the event as important as it was, and it’s hopeful that there will be more to come in the future. Just don’t give Meek Mill any drinks.

Anyway, check out who was in the building below.

Shy Glizzy

Meek Mill, Wallo, and Gillie Da Kid

Lil Baby

Stephen Jackson

Young E Class & Kacey Williams of Black Alley

Kingpen Slim

D.C. Councilmembers Trayon White and Janeese Lewis George

Freeway Rick Ross

Curtis “Curtbone” Chambers

Journalist/Host Britt Waters

DJ Flexx

Ronald Moten (and — by way of his post — Brent Faiyaz)

Young Moose

OTR Chaz and Roddy Rackzz

Sauce of BYB

Rui Hachimura, Kyle Kuzma, Boosie Badazz, Pusha T, Bradley Beal, Red Grant, Fat Trel, Young Moe, and more

Credit: https://www.instagram.com/cassyathenaphoto/

The 25 Best D.C. Area Albums Of 2022: #10-#6

Another year, another list of the dopest albums that we’ve heard from D.C. and Baltimore area artists over the past 12 months. In 2021, we capped said list at 20 — this go ’round, we’re adding five more in an attempt to better capture the awesomeness that hit our collective ears in what feels like a return to some semblance of normalcy post-quarantine. With that said, JUKEBOX:DC is excited to provide you with 2022’s musical cream of the crop (in no particular order):

PREVIOUSLY: #25-#21#20-#16#15-#11

#10: YounG Moose – My Life Story (STREAM)

Despite still being as young as he is, YounG Moose has been delivering authentic streets raps for several years, and it’s clear that he hasn’t lost a step. Back in February, he liberated the 16-track offering My Life Story, complete with assists from YG Teck, Roddy Rackzz, Love Nova, 6IX, and Boosie Badazz, who appears on two different songs. As far as the rest of his discography, it’s more of the same heat that his longtime fans can come to expect. It’s subsequent deluxe upgrade also adds to the final product.

VIDEOS:

#9: Yung Kayo – DFTK (STREAM)

For those not hip, Yung Kayo has been on a career ascent since signing with Young Thug’s YSL collective. Incorporating punk elements in the same vein as Playboi Carti, Don’t Forget The Krown is a dive into care-free, rave-friendly hip hop, with additional assists from the likes of Yeat, Eartheater, and (a recently released) Gunna. The crazy thing is — this D.C. native is only 19… he’s just getting started.

VIDEOS:

#8: Brent Faiyaz – WASTELAND (STREAM)

Make no mistake: Brent Faiyaz might as will be given the ‘King of R&B’ crown at this point. The long-awaited WASTELAND is a number two success on the Billboard 200 (thanks to an impressive 88,000 album-equivalent units, all independently sold and streamed) and is Gold-certified. Accolades aside, the album contains all of the emotions and vibes that made the Maryland native a music frontrunner; heavyweights like Drake, The Neptunes, Tyler, the Creator, and Alicia Keys can’t even overpower Brent’s unmistakable voice and subject matter.

VIDEOS:

#7: IDK – Simple. (STREAM)

Like fellow peers Rico Nasty and GoldLink, IDK is always looking to push the boundaries of the DMV sound while continuing to rep where he’s from to the absolute fullest. A perfect example of this is Simple., a collaborative effort alongside genre-bending beatsmith KAYTRANADA. Songs like “Southeast To Paris” (and its counterpart, “Paris To Southeast”) encapsulate the P.G. star’s ability to bring high-level lyricism, dance-worthy vibes, and hometown pride to wax.

VIDEOS:

#6: Mererackz – Slime For President (STREAM)

Mererackz is on his way to the top. Outside of one of its standouts (which features Kruddy2800, Shiesty2800, and Lul Wop), the D.C. area star handles the 13-song Slime For President by his lonesome, delivering vivid subject matter about street life and his own journey as a young artist on his way to higher levels of fame. Marlow Heights is in the building.

VIDEOS: