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“Black Minq” is a forceful rap sign of Day Badara’s return from a hard time

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POSTED BY :Kurt Beyers, Publicist

Day Badara has been here before, releasing a song, and finding success. Then it was hijacked. Now he’s back with his new artist name and “Black Minq,” a defiant rap track with intertwining melodies in the background.

“It is defiant,” he said. “It’s telling the world that I’m coming. No matter what gets put in front of me, no matter what obstacles I had to go through when people made me feel like I wasn’t who I said I was, that’s where the song came from.”

Life change I’m calling an audible
Ima keep stunting I see that it bothers you
Focus on the love the hate Ima smother you
I walk in smooth they all look uncomfortable

Under his earlier stage name, Reem Iidol, he got a million views on his YouTube with his song R.B.F. He also had a fan base already but then his Instagram got hacked.

“The person was using my Instagram to make money off my name and depreciating my brand, and I decided ‘You know what? I’m gonna create a whole different version of myself.’ And that’s how ‘Black Minq’ came about. That’s the song that defines this next chapter of myself, a new artist.”

“Black Minq” was the first song on the 10-track album When It’s Dark, released in early 2024. He is promoting it now as a kind of introduction to H¥DR^ (pronounced hydra), a mixtape coming out later this year.

Black Minq, driven by its rich blend of electronic strings, horns, and piano melodies, emerged from the hard-hitting trap beat that served as its foundation. The instrumental backdrop set the stage for the track's essence, shaping its direction from the very beginning.

The beat spoke for itself," Day reflected. "I sat with it for about 10 minutes, and during that time, I started to envision luxury and success, what that level of achievement would feel like, and how it would resonate with others. I wanted to create something that would make people say, 'You really did what you said you would do.' That's exactly how the beat made me feel."

The union of beat story and created energy fit where he has come from and made him say to himself, “I’m going to tell my story and let them know who I am and that I’m coming.”

All the songs on When It’s Dark feature Day’s intricate melodies behind the beats. He raps and he sings.

“I just do what comes to mind. I don’t really have a technical way of doing things. It’s freestyle the majority of the time. It’s more like me thinking about what the music is saying over what is coming to mind. It’s kind of like a mesh of both, but it’s more of what comes just from the music itself and what is the music telling me at the time. So, I just go with that.”

He describes the process as purely creative. The music can come from some offhand thing that somebody says or from a conversation. “I pull from so many different energies when it comes to my music. I just let the spirit of the music control.” But, with the work leading to the finished song, “I’m very hands-on with that process.”

With H¥DR^, his music will make another turn. For one thing, it will be more upbeat. For all the variety in When It’s Dark, hard beats and soft, fast melodies and slow, the tone is overall contemplative or insistent. The track is saying something.

“I want people to be able to see I can do all kinds of different things so they won’t be expecting any one thing, so they won’t expect me to give them anything but great music. I want to be looked at not as a rapper but as a musical artist. What they can expect from H¥DR^ is music.”

“Black Minq,” he says, is great music, a “taking-charge” kind of song with a gala, champagne vibe that can be played anywhere, like Nicki Minaj’s “Moment 4 Life” or Jay-Z’s “Roc Boys.”

Connect to Day Badara on all platforms for new music, videos, and social posts.

“Black Minq,” Youtube
Amazon Music
Apple Music 
Spotify
YouTube
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