Danny Brown came up in the blood and grime of Detroit’s west side.
He grew up in a stew of contradictions, the son of a house DJ father and a teen mom whose childhood was punctuated by musical influence, economic despair, and linguistic precision.
He read Dr. Seuss and listened to Nas, wrote verses in spiral notebooks, and studied dictionary entries like scripture.
He was always too bizarre for the block and too real for the industry.
Following a failed record deal as well as years spent in Detroit’s underground scene juggling jobs, jail stints, and mixtapes, he exploded with “XXX” in 2011, an album that was equal parts party and purgatory.
It was raw. Experimental. Psychedelic:
A journey through a mind cracking under the burden of addiction, poor living, and existential hunger.
He ended up being crowned by Pitchfork, which made him revered by critics.
And yet, he never sold out.
Instead, he turned weird into genius, allowing the listener to sit and laugh in discomfort.