#Versatility ensures longevity. Balancing hard-hitting bars and magnetically catchy melodies, TBoss flexes an unpredictable, yet undeniable signature style. “Being versatile is so important to me,” she explains. “I can do any genre and make it sound good. My music isn’t just for one crowd. I’m never going to give you the same song twice.”
The Baton Rouge, Louisiana rapper defies expectation and categorization as she emanates attitude and empathy in equal measure. She has quietly attracted a growing fan base by surprising them while consistently gaining traction on YouTube and Soundcloud with views and streams in the millions. Now signed to Cash Money Records, TBoss is ready to share her enigmatic style with a global audience.
She grew up in her grandmother’s house. Initially, she gravitated to sports, excelling at both basketball and football. Eventually, she discovered Eminem, DMX, and Grandmaster Flash and developed a passion for hip-hop. She dove into the genre headfirst, studying the likes of Meek Mill and Rick Ross. “I saw how all of the artists would have fun with it, and that made me want to do my own thing,” she recalls. At the age of ten-years-old, she stepped into a recording booth for the first time and never looked back.
TBoss grinded nonstop under the moniker of “Bigg Troye.” She posted up hundreds of thousands of plays and views on “RIP Mone,” “Who I Do It For,” and “RIP Bryant ‘BJ’ Lee.” Armed with independent bangers such as “Truth” and “Ehhbody,” she hit the road in clubs up and down the East Coast and the South, making her SXSW debut in 2022. This grind paid off when her music landed on the radar of Cash Money Records Co-Founder and Co-C.E.O. Ronald “Slim” Williams. He promptly signed her, and she doubled down in the studio. “I’ve been rapping all this time,” she notes. “I was recording, doing my own thing, and just working. I stayed focused. I had faith I could make it, and I did it.”
Now, TBoss ignites her next chapter with the incisive and infectious single “Beatin Down Yo Block.” Against a backdrop of thick 808s, her incendiary wordplay practically burns a hole right through the beat before she carries a hard-hitting chorus. “I tried to get on a different style with more hype and personality,” she recalls. “I was being more feminine and speaking the truth about dealing with men.”
For as much as she flips the script, you can always expect TBoss to bring unlimited energy on any track. “If it’s a turnt song, I want you to be turnt and relate to what I’m saying,” she leaves off. “If it’s something more mellow, I want you to better understand what you’re going through when you hear me. Whatever you get from my music, I just want it to be positive.”