“I just want a roughneck n**** on the tongue,āĀ proclaims Lola Brooke on her sleeper hit āDonāt Play With Itā. Not only has it become the Brooklyn MCās signature introduction but, alongside the likes of the Bronxās Ice Spice and fellow Brooklynite Jenn Carter, itās another statement that proves women are firmly running rap in New York. NMEās conversation with Brooke leads into this territory, to which she replies, āwomen have been leading music in general for a very long time. Itās just been going unnoticed.ā
That opening bar is the perfect example of how Brooke separates herself by rapping about love in a typically masculine way. When we throw the thought out to her, she responds immediately with a nod to NYCās own 50 Cent. āIt was so crazy how people were like, āOh heās so gangsta!ā But heās singing on tracks talking aboutĀ āAre you mad that Iām asking you 21 questions?āā. Just like 50, Brookeās come-up is defined by perseverance since quitting her job as a residential shelter aide in 2017 to pursue music. Similarly, she could bully other rappers off their own track with her gruff vocal presence and barbed romantic talk.
Being away from the studio and put in front of a Zoom mic shows a different side to Brooke ā one thatās giggly and excitable, evident from the very start of our chat as she exclaims, āLetās get it!ā. Part of that excitement could be off the hype of touring the UK last month with A Boogie Wit Da Hoodie, and premiering the remix of āDonāt Play With Itā featuring Latto and Yung Miami of City Girls, which is currently scaling the Billboard Charts. Dialling in from her hometown, NME lets her fly on her hit single, learning to balance a day job and passion, and her hidden love for RuPaul.
NME: Congrats on the success of āDonāt Play With Itā after an incredible two-year campaign. Has that steady rise given you time to plot your next big move?
āIāve been plotting my next big move since before āDonāt Play With Itā even popped off. I believe in [the philosophy of] āeven if itās not in front of your face, itās thereā. āDonāt Play With Itā is not the song that motivated me to go bigger, it was just one of my motivations I wanted to share. But if that song wasnāt the biggest thing right now, I still would be the person I am today. Numbers donāt move me, and hype doesnāt move me.ā
Your nickname is āBig Gatorā, where does that come from?
āThe āBig Gatorā thing came from a freestyle. I had a punchline, āMy skin is bulletproof, Iām big gatorā, and my fans just kept saying it and kept putting gator emojis. Before I went with the name, I asked myself, āDo I actually relate to the animal?ā. Alligators are very patient, and Iāve been patient throughout my whole career.ā
You rep Brooklyn to the fullest. Have you thought about how youāre going to give back to the borough?
āOf course! I wanna buy the block so bad! Thatās why I wonāt have $100,000 until I own some type of property. I donāt care how much money Iāll have seen in my life, Iāve gotta own something.ā
“Iāve been plotting my next big move since before āDonāt Play With Itā popped off”
That sounds like a financially wise thing that Jay-Z would say…
āYou know whatās crazy? Iāve always been tapped into Jay-Z, but recently Iāve been tapped into him as a businessman more than an artist. Iām influenced by him in terms of the way of life, your image and how you approach things. Being mature about things, you know? Thatās something hard to do and he did his big one and heās still doing it.ā
Your BlockWorkTV performance where you jumped off a quad bike during āHere I Comeā is incredible. Thereās got to be a story behind thatā¦
āI always wanted to jump off the bike but I didnāt know how I was gonna do it. Iām a daredevil, I like to do wild things. I jumped off it twice and the second time, I did it so perfect. I didnāt even stumble as I got off, I just ran up to the mic. I was like, āLetās go with the first oneā because I didnāt want to look like a stunt guy where everything was so perfect like in the movies. I wasnāt trying to send out the wrong message to any kids.ā

Youāve said before that you need as few people in the room as possible. How does collaborating in that environment work?
āA lot of people think being in the studio is like lollygagging. You can lollygag [your way] into a hit but at the end of the day, this is what artists use to feed their family. So there are days where you challenge yourself to figure out how to put songs out there that have substance.Ā The best studio is really in a hotel. You can go to a hotel, set up, or pick a room in the house and set up. Those are the best studio sessions.ā
Itās like the Lil Wayne documentary [The Carter] where it showed him recording most of his stuff in hotels…
āItās a vibe, yeah. You get to be more vulnerable because you donāt have to worry about whoās coming in and out of the building.ā
How did balancing a full-time job with music put a roadblock on your creativity?
āThatās the only reason I left my job. It was messing with my creative space, my time. I would be in the studio and clock the time because I had to be at work at one time, which wasnāt cool for me because if youāre thinking about the time so much, what are you thinking about putting on this record thatās actually meaningful? Youāre just getting something done, and thereās a big difference between getting something done and completing something.ā

We hear youāre a big fan of RuPaul. Where did that come from?
āHow you know that? [laughs]. The first time I ever saw RuPaul was in a movie called Crooklyn. That stuck with me as a kid because that movie encapsulated a lot of cultural New York things that I didnāt get to see because that was around when my mom was young. I saw RuPaul and remembered staring, thinking, āThat person is so interestingā. So then heās got a show called Drag Race and I would catch some seasons. I got to see him on the big screen then see him have his own show.ā
Have you had time to explore the drag community in New York?
āYeah! When I was younger, I was in this dance group called Pretty Kitties. The choreographer of the group was transgender ā shoutout to Courtney! I was so fascinated, I was a curious kid, you know? I love gay people, man, I love the trans community ā everything about it. Iāve watched Paris is Burning and Pose. I didnāt get to watch the last series because Iāve been so busy but Iām gonna tap in.ā
Where do you think your ambition can take you?
āLola Brooke will go global.ā
Lola Brooke’s ‘Don’t Play With It’ remix withĀ Yung Miami and Latto is out now
The post Lola Brooke: the Brooklyn MC making New York rap tough again appeared first on NME.