Cakes Da Killa is conquering hiphop, one gatekeeper at a time
At 9:53 PM, Brooklyn Bazaar was still in its eighth-grade semiformal phase. Most of the few dozen concertgoers who’d already arrived steered clear of the wood-paneled dance floor in the center of the room, preferring to hug the mirrored walls on the carpeting that framed it instead.
This impromptu game of “The Floor Is Made of Lava but Only the Wood Part” came to an abrupt end as soon as Cakes came out. He hopped down off the stage and was quickly swallowed up by the crowd as they osmosed to the center of the venue. “Slow seduction, fuck the introduction/ I’m here to bust it open for you, no interruption,” he rapped, boasting the same mix of technical skill and stage presence that he’s been boasting since his first mixtape, Easy Bake Oven, Vol. 1, came out a half decade ago. What he’s boasting has only grown stronger on his debut full-length album, Hedonism, released a couple of Fridays back on Ruffians. Listening to it, I wonder if even more people will stop hugging the walls and pay attention to the formidable talents Cakes is, and has been, bringing to the floor. Maybe it doesn’t matter. The Jersey-born rapper will keep doing what he’s been doing for years now, whether you join him in the center of the room or not.
There’s plenty to pay attention to on Hedonism. The album—which features collaborations with Calore (“Keep It Goin'”), Peaches (“Up Out My Face”), Rye Rye (“Gon Blow”), and Josh Dst (“Tru Luv”), along with production by LSDXOXO, Jeremiah Meece, BoyGenius, and more—is not the more literal personal statement record that one might expect from an artist making their debut. Rather, it sounds like a bigger and better version of the nearly half a dozen EPs and mixtapes of Cakes’ that preceded it. His delivery punches harder and his enunciation is more anti-Ariana Grande than ever. His Rube Goldberg machine-precise flow has never been more focused, and the boundary-pushing transcontinental club beats buoying his complexly interlocking lyrics are unlike any you’ll find in his back catalog, much less anywhere else in the genre.
This “myself, but better than ever” approach was intentional, Cakes said in a phone interview a couple weeks back, but he insisted that the keyword is still “myself.”