Black Kray

Last updated
Black Kray
Also known asSickboyrari
Born (1994-02-23) February 23, 1994 (age 31)
Richmond, Virginia, U.S.
Origin Ashland, Virginia, U.S.
Genres
Occupations
  • Rapper
  • producer
  • songwriter
Years active2009-present
Labels
  • Goth Money Records
Member of
  • Goth Money Records
Formerly of
  • Raider Klan
  • Vodeci

Timothy O'Neal Mills [1] (born February 23, 1994), better known by his stage names Black Kray and Sickboyrari, [a] is an American rapper, producer, and songwriter known for his influence on the cloud rap, emo rap, and tread genres. He is a founding member of the hip-hop collective and label Goth Money Records [a] and an early member of Raider Klan. Mills has collaborated with many similar artists, including Working on Dying, Lil Yachty, Bladee, Yung Lean, TeamSESH, Thraxxhouse, City Morgue, G59 Records, Chxpo, DJ Kenn, and DJ Smokey. His music has been described as melodic, hazy, and ethereal. [2] [3]

Contents

Early life

Mills was born on February 23, 1994 [4] in Richmond, Virginia before moving to Ashland sometime during his childhood. He began skateboarding in 2006 which played a vital role in his development, [5] claiming he would skate at a local skatepark "all day, every day". [6] His father owned many CDs and DVDs, causing music and similar media to become a large part of Mills' identity as well. [5]

He spent most of his youth in "the sticks" of Ashland, a place he refers to as "Elm Street" and the "Dirt Road". Alongside skateboarding, he would spend time with his family and cousins, smoking marijuana and playing video games. [6]

Growing up, Mills was alienated by his peers and stuck to his group of similar people. He felt like an outsider to the many goth cliques in his school and faced backlash for being different than them. He described himself as "the Black version of those goth kids". [5] He faced resistance for skateboarding and wearing skinny jeans, as doing so was still considered "white" at the time. Mills and his Black peers also faced racism and would often go out of their way to avoid certain sections of town out of fear that white people would call the police on them. [6]

Career

Mills released his first song on MySpace when he was in the 7th grade. [7]

2009-2013: Beginnings and formation of Goth Money Records

Mills began making music "'round 2009/2010 just bullshittin' 'round on a laptop mic." [8] He was a member of Raider Klan and their skate team around this time. [9]

Around 2012, Mills began to form Goth Money Records alongside Karmah and Hunned Mill (a.k.a. Hunned Stackz) whom he met in school. He then met Marcy Mane (a.k.a. MFK) over YouTube when searching for trillwave beats. In 2012, Mills released multiple notable projects, including Crack Cloud$ Over Art$$ Kitchen, a project which would later be instrumental in solidifying him as a major actor in the underground rap scene. [10]

After moving to Los Angeles, California in 2013, he met Kane Grocerys (a.k.a. YSB OG). Luckaleannn then joined after meeting Mills over the internet. At some point, L.V.X. joined, whom he also met in school. [6] Yung Jugg, Gothlord, and Kons were also members around 2014. [8] As of August 2024, Goth Money Records consists of Black Kray, Hunned Mill, Kane Grocerys, and Luckaleannn. [11]

2014-2016: Collaborations with Drain Gang and Working on Dying

Around 2014 is when Mills began receiving more widespread attention. In a review of the 2014 mixtape City of Doves, the music publication Tiny Mix Tapes wrote "the tape slaps from top to bottom with tear-jerking, uzi toting emo-thug anthems". [12]

By 2014, Mills had also met the Swedish cloud rap collective Drain Gang members Yung Lean and Bladee, as well as the producer collective Working on Dying. These collaborators would all be instrumental in the upcoming years of his career.

2014 also marked the release 700 Dagreez, featuring 'Stevie J and Joseline' which would become a fan favorite song over time. [13] This mixtape was included production from Yung Sherman, suicideyear, Cold Hart, and members of the Working on Dying collective. [14]

Mills, through his collaborations with the Working on Dying collective and its founder F1lthy in particular, would be credited as being instrumental in the development of the Tread genre, a subgenre of Trap music that became popular around the mid-2010s. [15]

Collaborations became limited after Hippos In Tanks' founder and frequent Drain Gang collaborator Barron Machat died in a car crash on April 8, 2015, Mills nonetheless worked with Yung Lean on his 2016 album Warlord, appearing on the song 'Pearl Fountain' along with Bladee. In 2017, Mills also made an appearance on Bladee's Working on Dying mixtape, produced by the collective.

2016-present: SickboyRari

On July 14, 2016, Mills released the 'Working Out da Mud' mixtape, crediting himself as 'Black Kray AKA SickboyRari'. Mills explained this decision as partly because he is "sick" and partly because he "stays in his lane like a rari". [16] This new alias would mark his career from 2016. In a 2018 article, Pitchfork Magazine referred to him by the AKA in an article written about up and coming rappers' new songs. [17]

Mills continues to work with the Working on Dying and Drain Gang collectives to this day, as can be seen by his feature on the F1lthy produced track 'Otherside' off 2024's Cold Visions, of which The Fader writes "Rari enters late, adopting a codeine-coated delivery that allows us to imagine what Chief Keef might sound like if he was born in the south". [18] The publication also put the song on their list of 50 best songs of 2024. [19]

Musical style and influence

Mills has cited Lil B, Yellowman, Big Youth, Gregory Isaacs, Daringer, John Holt, Cults, Wolf Parade, Chief Keef, Lil Prada, Best Coast, Salem, Crim3s, White Ring, and the genre witch house as some of his influences. [5] [8]

His musical style has been described as including elements of Cloud rap, Witch House, Trap, Tread, and Southern Hip Hop.

Notes

  1. 1 2 Often stylized in all uppercase.

References

  1. "Black Kray". YEAR0001 INDEX. 27 October 2023.
  2. Jackson, Reed (2015-11-02). "Meet Goth Money, the Most Positive Crew of Trillionaires on the Internet". Vice . Archived from the original on 2020-11-25. Retrieved 2024-07-31.
  3. Pierre, Alphonse (2024-05-10). "Underground Rap Wouldn't Be the Same Without Black Kray". Pitchfork . Archived from the original on 2024-07-30. Retrieved 2024-08-01.
  4. @GOTHMONEYRCRDS (2020-02-23). "Rt to wish black kray a happy birthday" (Tweet). Retrieved 2024-07-31 via Twitter.
  5. 1 2 3 4 Mass Appeal (2018-07-16). Open Space: Black Kray (Video). Retrieved 2024-07-31 via YouTube.
  6. 1 2 3 4 SICKBOYRARI AKA BLACK KRAY [DOCUMENTARY] "TOLD BY THE LEGEND HIMSELF" (Video). 2016-01-31. Retrieved 2024-08-01 via YouTube.
  7. Kelzer, Joely (October 3, 2023). "Who is Black Kray? (AKA Sickboyrari, AKA Gvcci Kray, AKA La Goth, AKA...)". Carbon Sound. Retrieved August 22, 2024.
  8. 1 2 3 Nagrom, Nedarb (2014-01-22). "INTERVIEW WITH BLACK KRAY". Tumblr. Archived from the original on 2024-07-31. Retrieved 2024-07-31.
  9. Matson, Andrew (2020-03-10). "Bragging Rights Don't Mean Shit: An Oral History of Raider Klan". Passion of the Weiss. Archived from the original on 2020-03-17. Retrieved 2024-07-31.
  10. Black Kray (2012-10-04), CRACK CLOUDS OVER ART$$ KITCHEN , retrieved 2025-03-19
  11. "Goth Money Records® (@GOTHMONEYRCRDS)". Twitter . Retrieved 2024-08-01. @teezyfbaby3 @hunnedmill @ysb_og500 @luckaleannn.
  12. "♫ Listen: BLACK KRAY - City Of Doves". Tiny Mix Tapes. Retrieved 2025-03-19.
  13. BLACK KRAY (2014-09-18), BLACK KRAY - STEVIE J AND JOSELINE OFFICIAL VIDEO , retrieved 2025-03-19
  14. "700 DAGREEZ | BLACK KRAY". web.archive.org. 2014-10-22. Retrieved 2025-03-19.
  15. "Hit the Gym: On the Proliferation of Tread Music". Passion of the Weiss. 2017-09-06. Retrieved 2025-03-19.
  16. "Who is Black Kray? (AKA Sickboyrari, AKA Gvcci Kray, AKA La Goth, AKA...)". www.thecurrent.org. Retrieved 2025-03-19.
  17. Pierre, Alphonse (2018-08-23). "The Ones: 5 Best New Rap Songs From Goonew, Pink Siifu, Black Kray, 70th Street Carlos, and PNTHN". Pitchfork. Retrieved 2025-03-19.
  18. "Songs You Need In Your Life: April 2024". The FADER. Retrieved 2025-03-19.
  19. "The 50 best songs of 2024". The FADER. Retrieved 2025-03-19.