In the space of just a year, genre-defying artist midwxst has gone from leading the digicore/hyperpop explosion to signing with a major label and positioning himself as a name to watch in the US rap scene.
While the glitchy video game sounds of his earlier releases âSUMMER03â and âSecretsâ remain, the South Carolina-born, Indiana-raised teenager (real name Edgar Sarratt III) bridges the gap between hyperpop and hip-hop more than ever before on his new EP âBack In Actionâ. Featuring collaborations with Slump6s, KASHDAMI and BabySantana across its eight sonically heavy tracks, moshpit-ready singles like ‘Made It Back’ and âAll Talkâ showcase his penmanship as much as they do his flow.
Compared to the more braggadocious rappers out there, midwxstâs wide-ranging lyrical content is refreshingly honest, open and playful: the hook on âMade It Backâ, for example, is about wanting to make his mum proud, while âTic Tac Toeâ is about Perry the Platypus from Phineas and Ferb. âA lot of people expected me to be a trapper, rapping about guns and all the generic mainstream stuff,” he says. “But when I talk about how your own mental health and emotions can be the most dangerous thing you possess, especially as a teenager or a young adult, people get such a different vibe from me – and that is what I strive for.â
For the latest in NMEâs In Conversation series, midwxst tells us about how getting online and meeting like-minded kids on SoundCloud helped him fit in, why he now wants to break free from the hyperpop scene and the story behind âBack In Actionâ. Hereâs what we learned.
His first track landed him in trouble at schoolÂ
After uploading the song to SoundCloud in the middle of a âdiss track warâ at his school, the track started âspreading like wildfire – everybody was posting about it on Snapchatâ. While the aim was to âdemonstrate my capabilitiesâ to his friends, it quickly caught the attention of someone midwxst didnât really want to hear it – his vice-principal. Itâs safe to say that she wasnât best pleased and actually ended up pulling midwxst aside. Although he tried his best to deny any involvement when he found himself sat in her office, she was having none of it. But what about it caused the commotion? âI namedropped the school in it and made a comment about another student, but it was all out of fun,â he says. âIt was a fire-ass song in my opinion, but I went on my SoundCloud and made it private.â Interestingly, itâs one that he comes back to whenever he needs a little boost. âI listen to it whenever Iâm feeling unmotivated because the comparison from then to the stuff Iâm making now is crazyâ.
midwxst thinks the âhyperpopâ tag is thrown around too muchÂ
âWith my recent stuff, I havenât even been doing anything hyperpop-related â Iâve been making rap music,â midwxst tells NME, adding that the hyperpop tag is a difficult one to shake off. âIâll drop a regular pop or rap song and people will be like, âThis is a great hyperpop songâ. But Iâm like, âNo!â” He thinks itâs partly down to the ambiguous origins of the genre: âPeople would constantly be like, âOh, hyperpop came from PC Musicâ when, actually, I havenât listened to an A.G. Cook song in my life,â he says, suggesting that hyperpop instead âcame from all of our different influences coming together and putting them into a songâ. âThatâs why you hear 808 bass plugs and synths on an EDM song. It just infuses everything,â he theorises.
He never expected to sign to a major label so quickly
Being on the same label as Olivia Rodrigo and Billie Eilish might be a daunting prospect for some, but not midwxst, who always envisioned himself getting a deal â just not this quickly. âI always thought Iâd be 20, just turned into a junior in college, vibing things out and just taking time with my music, and then one song would pop off and things would fall into place from there,â he says. âNo! Didnât happen: itâs senior year, and I guess weâre doing the damn thing.” He also remembers the surreal moment when he got signed. âIâd been working for so long to get the smallest smidgeon of attention.â
midwxst wants people to feel free to be themselves Â
âWith the music I make and the things I say, so many people can connect personally with the shit that Iâm doing and what message Iâm trying to spread,â midwxst says. âIndividuality and creativity is what Iâm trying to push into people. And if that means dropping out of school, painting your nails or wearing a skirt â anything that allows you to express yourself – do that, because Iâd rather have people do that and make others mad or insecure about what theyâre doing than never have done it all.â He cites guys who paint their nails as just one example. âWhy the hell not?! Lil Yachty does it, Playboi Carti does it, Lil Uzi Vert does it and I do it! Everybody that you listen to and love are all comfortable in their own skin and expressing themselves in whatever ways they could.â
He canât wait to go out on tour and play his new “punch-each-other-in-the-face” songs live
When it came to making âBack In Actionâ midwxst realised he didnât have any âconcert songsâ, so this new EP is designed primarily for live shows. âTheyâre all tracks that will make people want to punch each other in the face,â he summarises. âNot violently, but thereâs a really hard, chaotic energy to itâ. With his own run of US dates coming up â as well as support slots for glaive and ericdoa â heâs keen to make the most of being able to get back on stage. âIâm going to be jumping in moshpits, crowdsurfing, keeping the same energy throughout the set⊠itâs gonna be hectic but great fun!â
midwxstâs âBack In Actionâ EP is out now.Â
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