Doechii - Alligator Bites Never Heal -2024- -24... [ macOS ]
The beats are elastic, borrowing from the low-end thrum of Memphis horrorcore, the syncopated snap of Atlanta trap, and the fragmented textures of experimental electronic music. Tracks like “Swamp Bitches” (featuring a venomous verse from Rico Nasty) hinge on 808s that don’t just drop—they lurch. On “Denial is a River,” Doechii flips a mournful soul sample into a nervous, bouncing confessional, her voice shifting from a whisper to a guttural bark in the span of a bar.
She is unafraid of silence. The interludes are not filler; they are fever dreams. One minute you’re in a drugged-out car ride with distorted vocals; the next, you’re hit with a spoken-word piece about eating her own tail (an ouroboros reference that ties directly to the cyclical nature of trauma). Doechii - Alligator Bites Never Heal -2024- -24...
In the sprawling, often chaotic ecosystem of 2024 hip-hop, where viral moments are measured in seconds and artistic depth is sometimes sacrificed for algorithmic efficiency, Doechii’s Alligator Bites Never Heal arrives not as a debut, but as a declaration of war. The 24-year-old Tampa native—born Jaylah Hickmon—has been simmering since her 2020 breakout “Yucky Blucky Fruitcake” and her high-profile signing to Top Dawg Entertainment (TDE). But with this project, she sheds the skin of a promising newcomer and reveals the jagged, fluorescent bones of a true original. The beats are elastic, borrowing from the low-end