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Figgy Baby Breaks Hearts and Builds Hope on "One Week"

  • Writer: Victoria Pfeifer
    Victoria Pfeifer
  • 2 hours ago
  • 1 min read


When the world feels crumbling, Figgy Baby reminds us that love still finds a way, even if it leaves a few scars. The internationally touring, non-binary rapper from Los Angeles returns with "One Week," the first taste of their upcoming EP, Falling in Love at the End of the World (dropping July 11th). And let's say it's the kind of track that doesn't just tug at your heartstrings, it yanks at them.


Built around a raw, guitar-led beat, "One Week" captures how heartbreak stretches time, turning days into lifetimes. Figgy Baby's lyricism, always razor-sharp yet vulnerable, slices through the noise of the apocalypse with an emotional precision that feels downright surgical. Their flow floats between tender reflection and frustrated confession, painting a vivid picture of a relationship buckling under the weight of a chaotic world.





But what makes Figgy Baby so magnetic isn't just their ability to turn pain into poetry — it's how they insist on finding tenderness amidst the wreckage. "One Week" doesn't wallow; it survives. It aches, but it hopes. This theme resonates through the entire upcoming EP, Falling in Love at the End of the World, a project that promises to explore how, even when everything seems lost, our instinct to love stubbornly refuses to die.


Already known for genre-blurring releases like Blood from a Stone and Spice Boi, Figgy Baby's latest work is shaping up to be their most emotionally potent yet. Their gift for blending biting wit with open-hearted storytelling has earned them spots on NPR's Tiny Desk and BBC, and "One Week" only solidifies their growing reputation as a singular voice in hip-hop's evolving landscape.

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