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Junglepussy
Junglepussy Releases New Album Jp4 Out Now Via Friends Of / Jagjaguwar?
Shortly after announcing the album New York City’s Junglepussy returns to release Jp4. Out via Friends Of / Jagjaguwar, the new project is an elevation on every level of the larger-than-life Junglepussy persona that she has cultivated. Featuring some of the strongest production Jp has ever rapped over courtesy of Dave Sitek and Nick Hook, Jp4 sees Junglepussy lay full claim to the unique and fiercely independent lane she has carved out for herself.
Jp4 is the follow up to Junglepussy’s 2018 record Jp3, which Pitchfork noted “reestablishes [Junglepussy] as one of the most entertaining one-line spitters working today” and includes features from Ian Isiah and Gangsta Boo. The album also includes the previously-released single “Main Attraction,” which arrived alongside a psychedelically futuristic visual. Jp4 physicals will also release on March 5th.
With a name as bold as Junglepussy and an artistry to match, Shayna McHayle is New York’s premier rap rule-breaker. Honest, funny, and freaky, her rhymes span from the explicitly audacious to the tenderly relatable. Her unfailingly confident flow accentuates her roots in Brooklyn (her parents are from Trinidad and Jamaica), and her bars land with cool impact. In the universe that is Junglepussy, relationships are complicated, vegetables are magic, and an excellently delivered flex on an ex is one punchline away.
Junglepussy’s fourth album Jp4 follows 2018’s Jp3, and is for her an exercise in grounding. “The number three is very powerful for manifestation,” she explains, referencing her acclaimed third album and what it’s meant to her. “Number four though is really securing the foundation.” Her debut album, 2014’s Satisfaction Guaranteed, was an act of resistance—against broke and disloyal men, basic bitches, and texting. Its signature track, “Bling Bling” (Bling bling bitch do my own thing bitch / Fuck a wedding ring that ding a ling was just a fling bitch) propelled her into the pop culture zeitgeist appearing on HBO’s Insecure, and crystalized the grit and wit she first revealed on 2012’s daring single “Cream Team”—a track that found an early fan in Erykah Badu. Junglepussy’s momentum continued in 2013 as she opened a tour for Lil’ Kim. Her second project, 2015’s Pregnant With Success, maintained the quick-witted, tongue-in-cheek lyricism her cult following adored, and cemented her as a formidable force in New York rap. Three years later, Junglepussy Due October 23rd, Jp4 is Junglepussy’s stellar next phase. With contributions from vocalist Ian Isiah, rapper Gangsta Boo, and producers Dave Sitek and Nick Hook, Jp4 is Junglepussy ascended. After almost a decade of experimenting, Junglepussy feels she’s finally living up to her name. “From the genesis of Junglepussy, I struggled with my sound, because what I was doing at the time, I knew it wasn’t really, really, really what I wanted to do,” she says. “But I just didn’t know how to get there. Jp4 really sounds like and feels like I got there.” On album opener “Bad News”, she sings from a welcome new place, introducing a soulful, haunting voice that mirrors the song’s title. The noisy, interstellar melodies that guide “Telepathy” and “What You Want” are the album’s trippy, experimental gifts.
The numerology of four, in its foundational symbolism, is an apt frame for Jp4. Over an eight year career, Junglepussy’s music has led her to lecture at Yale and Columbia, create her own Junglepussy Juice, star in 2018 feature film Support The Girls, and embark on sold-out domestic and international tours. For Junglepussy, Jp4 is a culminating moment—one that holds the essence of closure while hinting at an exciting and expansive future. As comedic and provocative as she can be, she’s an artist who’s held onto a strong sense of purpose. “The only thing that will deter you from doing something you’ve never done before is feeling it’s impossible,” Junglepussy says. “I’ve always really genuinely, delusionally maybe, believed in Junglepussy and saw this vision for it that I couldn’t even explain or describe. It just had to pan out for itself. I do this so nobody sleeps on the awkward black girl never ever again.”