Alcohol was a crutch and panic attacks were frequent. Fans were left with song snippets that popped up like Bigfoot sightings on sparse IG Live sessions. Self-doubt consumed Rashad and derailed his attempts to record new music. “Mix that Boosie with that boom bap,” as Rashad said on the standout album track “Brenda.” He’d flashed glimpses of stardom on his 2014 mixtape, Cilvia Demo, which was touted as one of the best projects of that year, and then his 2016 debut proper, The Sun’s Tirade, struck a chord, combining trunk-rattling sonic homages to Master P and Scarface with verses packed with raw vulnerability and introspection. It’s been almost five years since Isaiah Rashad released his first album.
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