Fresh off her new album, Mykki Blanco shares an intimate night in Brooklyn with fans
“I need you to make a motherfucking circle,” Mykki Blanco said as she dropped down from the stage, osmosing into the crowd of hundreds below. “Make a circle for Mykki. Make a circle for Mykki.” She baby-voice pleaded like a kid in an ice cream aisle before switching to a more serious tone. “Make our circle a little bigger. Let’s gooooooooooooo go go go go go go go go go go. We need a little more width in here. We need a little more width in here.” The crowd obeyed, and she relaxed, letting the moment wash over her. “Gimme all your sweet love,” she said before launching into “Haze.Boogie.Life.”
This Market Hotel set in Brooklyn felt more intimate than shows past. Gone was the throttling sea of pushy post-grads that flooded her show at the Good Room back in May. In its place rocked a gentler tide pool, down to get wavy without dragging Mykki too far from shore. That trust seemed important to Mykki Blanco, the onstage “drag-rap showgirl” persona of Michael Quattlebaum Jr. Twenty-four hours earlier, Quattlebaum released Mykki, his debut album under the Blanco moniker: a 13-track collection that comprises his most personal work to date. Make no mistake, the Market Hotel show—which opened with DJ sets by UNiQU3 and TYGAPAW—was no “Mykki does MTV: Unplugged.” But when she asked for a little more room, they backed up.
In one sense, it’s hard to believe that Mykki (out Friday, Sept. 16, on Blanco’s label, Dog Food Music Group) is the first and only full-length album to the 30-year-old musician’s name. Quattlebaum’s output has been impressively steady in the four years since Brenmar collaboration “Wavvy” hit big among Queer Tumblr QTs and VFILES-obsessed club kids, and he has released plenty of EPs (2012’s Mykki Blanco & The Mutant Angels, 2013’s Betty Rubble: The Initiation) and mixtapes (2012’s Cosmic Angel: The Illuminati Prince/ss, 2014’s excellent Gay Dog Food) in the years that followed. In another sense—the one that remembers how quickly Macklemore & Ryan Lewis’ pandering ode to their straight-ally bonafides soared to the top of the Billboard Hot 100 while vastly superior records by an HIV-positive genderqueer artist like Mykki, not to mention other buzzed-about queer black rappers like Le1f and Cakes da Killa, never left the underground—the near half-decade delay becomes more plausible.