Hopeadope
Detroit, Michigan, United States | Established. Jan 01, 2017 | SELF
Music
Press
Quite the strong opening to a debut EP, but what do you really expect when the title is Cute AF. Hopeadope is a special talent, excelling both lyrically and vocally. She brands herself as a Hip-house artist, which is truly unique. Most importantly, she isn’t singing about men and how they ain’t shit. Rather, she’s talking about how we ain’t shit but that only encourages her to boss up more. The above line comes from her song “Crybaby” but her album is full of similar quotables. The EP also features production from Chuck Alkazian and Humbeats.
“Triple O.G.” is her truly standing firm on the belief she is not to be messed with. She’s played the games and tried to be considerate of others, but now it’s her time to shine and no one will be able to stand in the way. It’s especially intriguing hearing her belt out these claims in a singing voice, somewhat softening how aggressive they can be but still conveying the message all the same. It’s actually beautiful.
A strong point for me in this project is the experimental sounds. It’s not just all 808s and hi-hats, but she utilizes unique sounding instruments and synths. There’s an island feel to “Just Got My Nails Done” and I’m not sure if I’m alone in that feeling, but I assume she’d want her nails on fleek if she was heading to an island so it can work somehow.
“Watchful” shows a bit of her paranoia. “Watchful, watchful, all these fuckin’ demons be watchful” she repeats over the chorus in this slower tempo offering from Hopeadope. It’s not a song of fear at all though, as none of the watchers stop her grind. You can’t help but notice how much the people who dislike you watch your every move as you continue to rise up.
The introspective ballad “Musical Chairs” hints at her ability to sequence a narrative over an album. Being the slowest song on the album where she’s full-on singing, it feels like a natural and sensible ending. She’s in the midst of a confusing, tumultuous relationship which can often feel like a tough game of musical chairs. “When the music stops, I feel I may never win.” Damn.
There is a lot of upside and a high ceiling for this young artist. Though the women rap game is bubbling, there’s always room for more talent. She has a solid resume already, having studied at Berklee School of Music, performed at Vfiles ‘Be Heard Make Noise’ event and opening up for Cupcakke on her tour. Needless to say, the best is yet to come. She has a single titled “Vibe” that will be released through Vfilesloud on their upcoming Pass The Aux Volume 2 EP.
Congratulations to Hopeadope and her team made up of Molly McDonald and Shane Cardinal. Check out the EP Cute AF below and you too can boss up. - Armon Sadler
BY HASSAN GHANNY
With the release of her fourth independent album Eden, CupcakKe has proven she is among the most versatile MCs out there in the game in 2018. Track after track, she effortlessly glides between the swagger of Chief Keef and other battle rappers from her home city of Chicago; the social consciousness of heritage rappers like The Lady of Rage or Queen Latifah; the sex-crazed bizarro pioneered by Blowfly and perfected by Khia; the agitprop of M.I.A.; the vixen every woman rapper must dabble in to appease a male audience; the hustling young entrepreneur with everything to prove; and finally, the frenetic, forward-thinking trickster that appeals to youth with noses buried in Instagram stories. Cupcakke, alias of Elizabeth Eden Harris, has arrived here at the age of 21 and, yet, she’s nowhere near her peak, and that reality should absolutely terrify both her peers and predecessors. Eden, its tour, and the 12/19 show at The Middle East Downstairs follow her third album Ephorize, released in February of this year, as well as CupcakKe’s appearance at the Glitter Ki 2017 Halloween party, also at The Middle East Downstairs.
Before CupcakKe could take the stage, four openers (and one surprise guest) shared the bill. By 8PM, a crowd of college kids finished with finals, Allston rats, and “slurpers” (CupcakKe’s name for her fans) had already half-way filled the venue. Some local queer celebrities, like Houseboi resident DJ Lunamariposa, could also be found in attendance. Local DJ Babygoat set the tone with a set of female MCs the likes of Rico Nasty and Princess Nokia. When “Bitch I’m Nasty” by the former played, a white queer in a crop top waved his hands into illusions to the music, then a black femme with blue hair dipped and death-dropped to outdo the former concertgoer.
The first opener was Shane Slaughter (Plymouth, NH), who brought doom metal fused with trap into the space. Following act Isabella Amarga (Boston) carried on a vibe that was equal parts downtempo and digital distortion. Slaughter and Amarga shared the stage for a duet, “Amphetamine”, and Amarga also performed SoundCloud fan favorite “Thirst and Hunger” in her solo set. Sporting bright red dyed hair, black latex hot pants, and bedecked in chains and studs, Amarga ended her set on a socially-conscious note, imploring the crowd to “Beat up your local creeps!”
Third up was Berklee College of Music student Hope Cranford aka Hopeadope, who previously performed at The Middle East Upstairs in October opening for Junglepussy. Hopeadope immediately initiated a shift in the crowd’s energy with her distorted, decadent take on hip house (witch house?) comparable to Azealia Banks and Lizzo – a vibe no doubt influenced by the young artist’s Detroit roots. Second in her set was “Cheekbones”, a brazen call to action for oral sex and A-1 kush which serves as the artist’s latest single from a forthcoming EP. After “Cheekbones”, Hopeadope revealed a layer of clothing to reveal a neon green leotard and brought a member of the crowd up for a bondage-laden lap dance. For the second-to-last song, Hopeadope stopped the number and brought another member of the crowd up to dance – wouldn’t you know it, that same black femme with blue hair. Two things cannot be overstated: one, the stage presence that Hopeadope carries even as a relative newcomer to Boston; and two, the artist’s physical prowess which enables her to twerk and throw it back while effortlessly rapping or belting.
HOPEADOPE ENTICES A FAN DURING HER SET AT CUPCAKKE AT THE MIDDLE EAST DOWNSTAIRS, 12/19/18. PHOTO CREDIT HASSAN GHANNY.
In tandem with Hopeadope was rapper, dancer, and hair guru Kweeng Doll (Boston), who whipped his Brazilian bundles up to the stage for a guest verse on a Hopeadope track. With Doll’s entrance the energy again shifted – perhaps with the advent of alcohol and/or Red Bull also kicking in – and the crowd was both hyping up and loosening up with every bar spat. But no one was prepared for “Run It”, Doll’s flipping of Missy Elliott’s record “Work It”, accompanied by a cabal of five backup dancers sporting matching fringe. Two of Doll’s numbers were all out twerk-fests, evoking the rhythm and atmosphere of a New Orleans bounce show with Doll shouting out his mentor, New Orleans bounce virtuoso Big Freedia. Doll was exuberant about his identity as a “queer, gay rapper”, and his bars are unapologetic in content in delivery: “I’m the type of f*ggot who’s bougie / and I do say excuse me.”
The surprise guest was none other than Boston’s own Harocaz, who performed a quick set of three songs. Harocaz was perfectly suited to follow the easy-going, body-positive dance vibes of Kweeng Doll, with both Hopeadope and event promoter Tiamarie (@heywhatsuphellno) shaking it out during Harocaz’s set. Kweeng Doll returned to the mic after Harocaz was through – perhaps to kill time, perhaps to amp up the crowd – with an all-out bacchanal of booty-popping between his backup dancers, Hopeadope, and lucky members of the crowd. The only questionable moment of the night was in this interim period when DJ Babygoat dropped “212” by Azealia Banks, a peculiarity given Banks’s digital assault on CupcakKe earlier in 2018. But the choice of music and dancing was perfectly suited for the crowd, and they ate it up.
When CupcakKe finally emerged, she was sporting an extravagant pink ombré afro over a Warhol-inspired, pop art print catsuit. With poise, she immediately launched into cult favorite “Vagina”, the crowd taking every opportunity to call-and-response throughout the song. CupcakKe commands the stage so expertly it’s hard to remember that she only turned 21 in May of this year. That poise is present even when she is performing blue: after remarking on the temperature in the room, CupcakKe nonchalantly announced to raucous applause: “I need some new towels, my p*ssy need to be wiped up!” CupcakKe hit two songs from earlier albums, the uplifting “Lgbt” and the ribald “Duck Duck Goose”, before launching into the opening track from Eden, “PetSmart”.
CupcakKe didn’t lose her energy at any point during the set, and the crowd was either reciting all her bars back to her or wishing they did when she took hold of concert-goers’ phones and pointed them back at the crowd. CupcakKe performed “Garfield” and “Quiz” from Eden before bringing it back for “Cpr”, from 2017’s release Queen Elizabitch. Then, having tossed one boob-sweat covered towel into the crowed, it was back to new material, with the artist hitting the coquito-flavored trap banger “Prenup”, dirty tropical house number “Typo”, and sensual R&B heartbreak ballad “Dangled” in quick succession. CupcakKe didn’t leave her fans hanging, saving two of her most intense and beloved tracks for last: 2016’s “Spider-Man Dick”, from Audacious, and finally, 2015’s “Deepthroat”, from Cum Cake.
What CupcakKe and the organizers did with this concert, aside from putting on a good show, was unite and display a Boston that is not advertised or celebrated. Each artist brought something unique into the space: Slaughter and Amarga, the sadboy trap that soundtracks every basement in Allston; Hopeadope, the ingenue energy of Boston’s music schools that remains down with the nitty-gritty; Kweeng Doll and Harocaz, the fire of a local rap scene that, as WBUR’s Arielle Gray has detailed, is not dependent on patriarchal masculinity and male aggression; and CupcakKe herself, the distilled essence of talent that can bring together an audience of weird internet kids, rap heads, and geeked-out girls who dragged their boyfriends along all the same. CupcakKe’s show showed off a Boston that is desegregated, unpretentious, polyamorous, and radically gender-nonconforming, a vision of the city that is no doubt present but increasingly hard to find in 2018.
CUPCAKKE AT THE MIDDLE EAST DOWNSTAIRS, 12/19/18. PHOTO CREDIT HASSAN GHANNY.
What’s even more clear is that CupcakKe can evoke this genius and also retain a sense of humor. Tracks like “Garfield” and “Typo” keep the dirty puns and double entendres flowing in the style of her earlier underground hits “Deepthroat” and “Vagina”. CupcakKe’s ribald artistry may seem juvenile a rap novice, but her brazen bars appeal to a trend in black music almost a century old. Take the hook from one track from Eden, the incorrigible “Garfield”: “I got a fat cat, Garfield / This p*ssy heavy just like a barbell.”
Now compare this to the opening lines of “Shave ‘Em Dry”, a blues song written in 1935:
“I got nipples on my titties, big as the end of my thumb
I got somethin’ between my legs’ll make a dead man come
Oh daddy, baby won’t you shave ’em dry?
Want you to grind me baby, grind me until I cry”
The musician who penned this song, a woman named Lucille Bogan who recorded under the name Bessie Jackson, is more like CupcakKe than might meet the eye. The two are both black woman musicians who record without being sexualized as people — yes, CupcakKe is hella cute, but her public image is not reliant on the male-gazey pinup iconography associated with women rappers like Lil’ Kim or Trina. They both were largely independent forces, with Bogan performing as a solo blues traveler in after-hours clubs and CupcakKe forging her way on a headlining tour to support Eden this year. Interestingly, they also both inject(ed) queerness into their music. Bogan recorded a song extolling lesbian women called “B.D. Woman’s Blues”, while CupcakKe’s breakout single in digital circles was literally named “Lgbt”.
The question remains, will CupcakKe’s legacy be as stubbornly subaltern as Bogan’s has proved to be for the mainstream?
Hassan Ghanny is a writer and music journalist based in Boston. He is the author of the essay collection SCORCHED RICE: Manifestos on Caribbean Diaspora Liberation. More of his writing can be found on Instagram @diaspora.gothic and Twitter @hassan_ghanny. - Hassan Ghanny
Up and coming artist Hopeadope is fresh off the high of her latest gig opening for Cupcakke’s Eden Tour at The Middle East in Cambridge Ma. After much hard work she is ready to give back to the fans and proud to announce her DEBUT LP “CUTE AF” set to drop February 11th 2019! In preparation for the release, Hopeadope has been perfecting her on-stage persona and rapport through shows around Boston performing songs from the LP.
After studying Vocal Performance at Berklee School of Music, and only a year in the underground music scene, Hopeadope has combined her love of hip-house music, and outlandish bars with her powerhouse vocals.
With singles such as ‘Cheekbones’ and ‘Triple. O.G.’ both of which have music videos out now, the crowd can't help but dance, vibe and become entranced in her aura. Having done numerous shows in the area such as Vfiles ‘Be Heard Make Noise’ and the Cupcakke Eden Tour it’s clear Hope exudes pure talent and energy beyond belief on any stage.
Prior to the release of “CUTE AF” you can catch her out slaying the mic and twerking at one of her two upcoming performances in Cambridge this January.
● January 24th at The Middle East Upstairs
● January 30th at The Middle East Upstairs
.
Both shows are set to showcase some killer local indie talent and guaranteed to leave you wanting more from Hopeadope!
Get the LP “CUTE AF” February 11t h on all streaming services! Buy your tickets for the upcoming January shows online
at www.mideastoffers.com or at the door!
Links
Website: www.hopeadope.net
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/akahopeadope Youtube: https://youtu.be/udAlM68G-Vc Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/1hopeadope
Private Links to tracks for Press Only
https://soundcloud.com/1hopeadope/cheekbones/s-L4snT https://soundcloud.com/1hopeadope/triple-og/s-ufkyW
Contact
Business Inquires: hopeadopemusic@gmail.com Press: shane.hopeadopemusic@gmail.com - Shane Cardinal
My song “Just Got My Nails Done” literally happened like this: I was at my mom’s house on January 1st celebrating the New Year. My sister Joy, my mom, and I were in my mom’s kitchen. We were eating my mommy’s homemade fried chicken and drinking Mogen David blackberry wine. We were all talking when my mom goes: “Hope is the only one I know that will go get her nails done and cash out at the mall in her moms old ass car!” With Eazy-E’s song “Boyz-N-The Hood” in mind, my rebuttal was: “cruising down the street in mom’s ‘64, just got my nails done, flexing on hoes.” Though my statement made the room erupt in laughter, it became our chant for the rest of the night and the hook to a new song! I’m a huge fan of NWA, Eazy-E, and that entire wave of rap. They definitely have an influence on my music. The rest of the song was built around the idea of just being fresh and showing off to your haters. It’s really just a feel-good summer song that everyone can bop to; a song that girls can play during their morning mantras or in the car on the way to the club.
My song “Dickmatized” came together when I first heard the word from the comedian Sommore. I remember watching Queens of Comedy all of the time as a kid. Sommore’s set, in particular, had me laughing so hard when she talked about being “dickmatized.” “Dickmatized” is when the man you’re involved with is no good for you, but you put up with him because the sex is too good to let go. I decided to create a song off of my own “dickmatized” relationship experience. I love the song because everyone has been through that same situation and probably didn’t know what to call it. Now they do! I also love the song because I really took my time with creating it. I went through so many guitarists until I found Mena Lemos, who played guitar on the song. She’s such beast on guitar, and she’s a woman, which is so badass! I wanted a woman for the song to help me really capture the essence of the song. - Hope Cranford
Discography
Hopeadope's Discography
-EP/Singles-
“CUTE AF” EP 2019
Crybaby 2019
Cheekbones 2019
Vibe 2019
Just Got My Nails Done 2019
Musical Chairs 2019
Watchful 2019
Triple O.G. 2019
Dickmatized 2017
Summer and Bones 2017
No Ordinary Bud 2017
Be Me 2017
-Music Videos-
Name Year
Cheekbones 2018
Triple O.G. 2018
Photos
Bio
Hopeadope is a singer/songwriter, rapper, beat maker and model from Detroit. She loves mixing genres with her powerhouse voice and outlandish bars. Fans and friends describe her vocals as soothing but raw as hell!
A savage lifestyle, growing pains and heartbreak drive her creative ambition. As a bold risk taker, her music invites exotic vocals to mix with unique beats.
To learn more about Hopeadope's sound check out her CUTE AF EP review on Elevator. In the meantime, you can catch Hopeadope focusing on her next music video rollout for singles "Crybaby" (found on the CUTE AF EP) and "Vibe" (found on VFILES Pass the Aux Vol.2).
Band Members
Links