Friendship Breakups Suck. Little Simz Turned Hers Into Gold on ‘Lotus'
Since she was a kid, Simbiatu Ajikawo has had a low tolerance for disloyalty. There are quick quips lambasting snakes throughout her acclaimed discography, and even at eleven years old, she spit, 'I'm Little Simz and I set trends/Don't like liars/I hate fake friends,' when her older sister took her to rap at BBC's Radio 1 Xtra. Her real breakthrough as Little Simz came much later, with 2018's Grey Area, which was nominated for the U.K.'s prestigious Mercury Prize, then 2021's Sometimes I Might Be Introvert, which won it. She followed that with No Thank You, which rebuked the music industry she was by all-appearances thriving in as something much darker and more draining than it looked.
Inflo – the musician who's been tapped by Adele and Tyler, The Creator, and who's shaped the mysterious collective SAULT with Simz and his wife, Cleo Sol – produced all three of Simz's last albums. Simz has openly coveted her creative partnership with Inflo, a bond they began building when she was 9 years old. Then, in March, The Guardian reported that she was suing him, born Dean Josiah Cover, for allegedly failing to repay a $2.2 million loan – that went, in part, towards SAULT's only live performance in 2023 – which she says eventually left her unable to pay her taxes and subject to penalties.
More from Rolling Stone
Little Simz Previews Upcoming Album 'Lotus' With Cinematic 'Flood' Video
Coldplay Tap Little Simz, Burna Boy for Hopeful Single 'We Pray'
Watch Michael J. Fox Join Coldplay on Guitar at Glastonbury
'Why do you steal? Why do you spill blood and then go hide?' Simz raps on 'Thief,' the jarring opener to Lotus, her sixth album and first without Inflo in seven years. 'Why do you take the rule book from people that hurt you and use it as a guide?/I'm lucky that I got out now, it's a shame though, I really feel sorry for your wife.' The song thrashes like 1990s grunge and Simz is absolutely cutthroat on it, evoking the eerie menace of Kendrick Lamar's whopping Drake diss 'Euphoria.'
The public nature of her fallout with Inflo and how readily she tackles it on Lotus makes it a distinctly personal entry to her oeuvre – listening feels more like living in her skin than any project she's done before. There's a meta-allusion to the way she refuses to bury her truth under convoluted poetic flourishes when she tells Wretch 32 not to do the same on 'Blood,' where she and her fellow British rapper trade bars as they portray siblings in a fight. Lotus is an excellent album, in part because songs like 'Thief' and 'Blood' are so uncomfortable, like peering at a nasty accident on the side of the highway and feeling more alive because of it. In the aftermath of an imploded childhood friendship, Lotus is a rigorous ode to the trauma and wisdom of truly growing up.
Lotus is also an excellent album because of its deeply textured and expansive production, a satisfying victory given the circumstances. On 'Lonely,' she frets, 'Lonely making an album is tackling all doubt/I'm used to making it with [there's censor beep instead of a name], can I do it without?' Yet, under new producer Miles Clinton James, all the album's instrumentals are crisp, careful, and raw, whether they're the rugged rock of the 'Thief,' 'Flood,' 'Young,' 'Enough,' and 'Lotus,' the jazzy R&B of 'Lonely' and 'Free,' the stripped down acoustics of 'Peace,' the softly orchestral lament of 'Hallow,' the vintage Afrobeat of 'Lion,' or buoyant bossa nova of 'Only.' Where Lotus is fun, it's unforced, and where it is grave, it's understated. The album does retain some of the airy, gentle essence of Simz's prior work with Inflo, Cleo Sol, and Sault, a band in which the latter two women were the defining voices amongst mostly shrouded collaborators. The similarities, though, feel like Simz staking her claim to a sound she was integral in pushing forward.
Little Simz's hard-earned sense of self-worth courses through the album. Much of her best rapping here blossomed from hardship – that, in fact, is what a lotus is, a flower that can bloom out of mud. 'I know my mind is a textbook they can learn from even though I ain't got a diploma,' she says on 'Blue,' in the middle of a calm but relentless flow full of empathetic reflections on poverty, incarceration, family, and death. 'Free' is a particularly moving trove of wisdom, expertly crafted with subtle foreshadowing between a cunning first verse on what love really is and a second on how fear threatens it. 'I think that shit is a lethal weapon,' she says.
Though Lotus finds Simz rapping as victim and survivor, it's filled with empathy for just how hard the human experience is, even for her tormentor, whose own pain she acknowledges. 'I don't expect you're not flawed person/But thought you was good at the core person,' she says on 'Hallow,' before reiterating an idea from 'Thief,' that the real resolution she needs is internal: 'I'm tryna forgive myself,' she says there. 'I don't need to forgive you so I can heal.'
Best of Rolling Stone
The 50 Greatest Eminem Songs
All 274 of Taylor Swift's Songs, Ranked
The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Sydney Sweeney reveals 'transformation' for 'special' new role
Sydney Sweeney has revealed she had to gain more than two stone to play boxer Christy Martin. The Euphoria actor is playing the former female super welterweight champion in a new biopic. She had to train for hours every day and worked with a nutritionist who helped her pack on the extra pounds for the part. "It was quite a transformation," she said during an appearance on The One Show. Sweeney was on the BBC show on Monday, 9 June along with actor Julianne Moore, as the pair discussed their new film Echo Valley. She was also quizzed about playing Martin in the as yet untitled biopic, and said it would "forever be one of the most special projects that I have ever done". "I trained for like, two-and-a-half, three months before I started filming," she continued. "I had boxing training and weight training multiple times a day for hours a day. I had a nutritionist that would help me put on the weight. So I put on 30 to 35 pounds. "It was incredible." The star said during filming she "did every single boxing sequence". "It was me, I was punching people, I was getting punched in the face," she said. "It was really amazing." Presenter Roman Kemp joked: "I'd be like, 'Go lighter this scene'." But Sweeney insisted: "No, you want to keep getting into it! You get so into it." Sweeney and Moore also talked about Echo Valley, which looks at how far a mum will go to protect her daughter after she turns up at her door covered in someone else's blood. Moore had to film some of the scenes underwater in a tank and presenter Alex Jones noted that it looked "terrifying". "Yeah," agreed Moore. She went on: "We shot the movie in New Jersey on an actual lake so when you see us on the surface of the lake or in a boat on the lake we are in New Jersey but when you see me underwater we are in London, we are in Pinewood." "It was the first time I had done any tank work," said the actor. "It was really exciting, I got to work with a diver. "You don't have a lot of prep. I think I had an afternoon of working with the regulator and going underwater and then you take your regulator and you take it out and then you act for as long as you can and then you come up for air. "But it was exciting. I mean, I was nervous. I am not sporty, unlike Sydney who is a very, very sporty person. I am kind of an indoor person." "I was very jealous of the tank work!" laughed Sweeney. The One Show airs at 7pm on BBC One on weekdays. Echo Valley is out on Apple TV+ and select cinemas from Friday, 13 June.

Wall Street Journal
3 hours ago
- Wall Street Journal
‘Lotus' by Little Simz Review: The Beat of Betrayal
London rapper Simbiatu Ajikawo, who has released albums as Little Simz since 2015, is an important player in her city's fertile hip-hop and R&B scene. In her home country, the 31-year-old can fill an arena, but, like many of her peers, she's more of a cult figure in the U.S. While she's critically respected and admired by American artists—Kendrick Lamar has praised her work, and Lauryn Hill, one of her musical heroes, took her on tour—she's hasn't quite reached the mainstream. Some of that has to do with cultural barriers and lost-in-translation references. And some has to do with her more grown-up style. Across five full-length albums, including 2021's 'Sometimes I Might Be Introvert,' which won the Mercury Prize for album of the year, she has generally favored what one might call a 'classic' aesthetic, with recognizable instruments playing funk and R&B riffs in the tradition of hip-hop artists who emerged in the late 1980s and early '90s. (This stands in contrast to much of the most popular youth-oriented rap of today, in both the U.S. and U.K., which tends toward electronic textures.)
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
BTS Members RM and V Discharged from Mandatory Korea Military Service Ahead of Band Reunion
BTS members RM and V have completed their mandatory military service in South Korea The K-pop stars were discharged on Tuesday, June 10, and welcomed by fans, some whom flew in internationally to celebrate their service The boy band is expected to reunite in 2025BTS members RM and V are heading home. The K-pop singers completed their mandatory military service in South Korea and were discharged on Tuesday, June 10, per NBC. The 18-month commitment prevented the group from performing and touring since 2023. The K-pop stars were welcomed with a saxophone performance and salutes upon their discharge, per the BBC. RM (whose full name is Kim Namjoon), 30, served as a private in the military band unit. Meanwhile, V (whose full name is Kim Taehyung), 29, served in the special forces unit as a sergeant. Their mandatory service began in December 2023. is now available in the Apple App Store! Download it now for the most binge-worthy celeb content, exclusive video clips, astrology updates and more! Fans gathered at the band's agency Hybe's office in Seoul to welcome them back, with some fans flying in from out of the country to celebrate. "Now, I'm ready to hit the ground running again as RM of BTS. Thank you to everyone who waited and looked after us," RM said to fans upon their return. V said that the obligatory army commitment gave him "time for me to reset both physically and mentally." "I really want to run to ARMY as soon as I can. Thank you for waiting for us during our military service," the singer added. V also asked fans to "wait just a little longer" for the rest of the band members to be discharged for a proper BTS reunion, the BBC reported. In South Korea, it is mandated that all able-bodied men aged 18-28 must serve between 18 and 21 months in the military. Other BTS members J-Hope and Jin wrapped up their military commitment in 2024. Jimin, Suga, and Jung Kook are still completing their mandatory military service but are expected to be released later this month, per the Associated Press. BTS, whose name is Bangtan Sonyeondan (which roughly translated to Bulletproof Boys) formed in 2013 and has been nominated for five Grammy Awards. They've had six No. 1 hits on the Billboard Hot 100 list, including "Butter" and Dynamite," the latter which has spent 32 weeks on the charts. Read the original article on People