Some of the genre’s most celebrated pieces of work come from the mind of young, passionate, and hungry wordsmiths eager to give the world a piece of their perspective. The coming of age story has become synonymous with classic debut albums like Nas’ Illmatic, Kendrick Lamar’s Good kid, m.A.A.d. city, and Kanye West’s College Dropout, each album cementing the Hip-hop newcomers as unparalleled titans of the culture.
Rapper Big Pooh’s coming-of-age story arrives after 20 years in the music industry, boasting 13 solo albums and five projects with the legendary underground Hip-hop duo, Little Brother. Big Pooh’s 14th studio album, To Dream in Color, is everything you would want from a classic coming-of-age story, but instead of exploring his story of adolescence, Pooh chronicles his journey to becoming a man after 20 years in the rap game.
“The album started out as a story of my journey through the music industry for the past 20 years, but it became a project about my evolution as a man,” Big Pooh explains from his home studio in Charlotte, North Carolina, where the rapper has spent his recent years cultivating this project and reinventing himself.