Performance

Monthly Listeners

Current

Followers

Current

Streams

Current

Tracks

Current

Popularity

Current

Top Releases

View All

Misunderstood

61.8M streams

61,764,675

My Everything

21M streams

20,998,592

What You Reckon

12M streams

11,987,232

Hit Different

9M streams

9,036,415

Hit Different

9M streams

9,036,415

My Everything (Part III) (feat. G Herb...

5.9M streams

5,917,774

Brotherly Love (Pt. 2) (feat. Dougie B...

5.6M streams

5,619,280

Brotherly Love (Pt. 2) (feat. Dougie B...

5.6M streams

5,619,280

Sorry 4 The Wait... (Deluxe)

4.1M streams

4,089,776

My Everything (Part II) (feat. A Boogi...

3.8M streams

3,774,776

Biography

In 2021, B-Lovee became one of drill music's breakout stars, with "IYKYK" achieving over 13 million YouTube views and even more audio streams. Reviving contemporary samples across his aggressive brand of music, B followed with "Neaky," a drill track that updated Gyptian's "Hold Yuh" and the G-Herbo-assisted "My Everything (Part III)," which grabbed from Mary J. Blige. While he has established a trademark sound, B-Lovee focuses on expanding his range. B-Lovee grew up in the Andrew Jackson Houses along Courtlandt Avenue's dozen or so project buildings in the Bronx. From a West Indian family, music marked an escape. As a teenager, he began rapping. Nicknamed after the "Buddy Love" character in the 1988 cult-classic Child’s Play, B says he would occasionally record but was less interested in posting songs on Soundcloud or YouTube. In 2020, that changed with "No Hook," a hard-nosed video of B-Lovee surrounded by his crew in their gritty surroundings. In the summer of 2021, B-Lovee separated himself from the pack with “IYKYK.” Grabbing melodic elements from Wayne Wonder’s 2003 hit “No Letting Go,” B let everyone in on the secret that he was next up.. Soon, B-Lovee was performing during Meek Mill’s Madison Square Garden concert as well as New York’s Rolling Loud. In December, he celebrated his breakthrough with the 8-track collection My Everything featuring A Boogie, Herbo, and Kay Flock. It also included three versions of the title track, which marked new territory for B-Lovee.