Words matter. These are the best Rico Nasty Quotes, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
Taurus and Sagittarius do not get along.
When I started making music, I figured the name Rico Nasty would give a background of who I am.
I think that it is important to mingle with your peers and get to know the people that you coming up with because everything that we’re doing is history.
Shoutouts to Cardi B. She’s going to be a great mom.
I feel like what motivates me is what would motivate the regular average person.
I love Beyonce. I feel like Beyonce is the final form of a person. Like, you gotta get to your Beyonce stage in life. That’s your final form as a human.
It’s a lot of women that was before me, it’s a lot of women that’s gonna come after me!
I don’t want to be that stereotypical black girl that’s mad all the time.
A lot of times I play my music at shows based on the views and the streams.
When I wanted to become an artist I wanted to be versatile but at the same time, fans never know what to expect.
At the end of the day, you have a side of the story that needs to be heard, too.
I don’t want people to expect the hard tracks to continue my whole career. When I started making music, I wasn’t making music like that.
I never wanted to stop making music.
I feel like being a 2019 XXL Freshman is just, it’s important for me because not too many women can say they’ve… gotten anything like this, not too many people from where I come from can say that they’ve gotten anything like this.
Why still be pretty and all that when there’s so many girly female rappers already? You can be a rock star instead.
That aggression came over time from dealing with stuff – ‘Anger Management’ really is what it’s called. That project came out and I felt a weight lifted off my chest. I learned something about myself.
It is kind of easy for me to speak out. Just because I am very vocal in my music about a lot of different emotions, like anger, and normally stuff that people would hide, I’m okay with as a woman.
You gotta be very positive. It helps. It really does.
When I first knew that I wanted to rap I was seven years old and I lost the talent show. It was like spoken word or something. My mom made me do it. It was a Langston Hughes poem. The girl that came on after me, she wound up winning. She was a singer.
I feel like what made ‘Nasty’ so fire was it was finally something that they couldn’t take from me.
It’s just amazing being a parent, being a little nervous at first, but then everything falls into place naturally.
I plan to break the barriers that people try to trap female rappers in. This isn’t about ‘Oh she sounds good for a female rapper,’ it’s about ‘Yo, she sounds really good on this and can really rap!’
Whenever I’m around Spanish people, I’m kind of like a fly on the wall.
I like music where someone is trying to get their power back.
I feel like I get a variety of people in my crowd. Because of that, there’s a nice amount of Hispanic people and Latinos that come to my shows. There’s also a really big amount of Black and White people.
I feel like what I’m bringing to the table that’s different is like not just consistency in the music but consistency in the creativity, consistency in the visuals, in the fashion, participation with the fans and things that I give them and merch and stuff like that. And I’m very active with them.
It’s hard to be dainty and la la la when you’re also supposed to be strong.
Lil Yachty is opening up that lane of being a black weirdo.
I met Yachty through Twitter early 2015.
I shot ‘Poppin’ in L.A. because I love L.A. Because when I came out here, I fell in love with it.
I thought I’d be famous for being cute.
Tales of Tacobella’ showed that I can rap.
Some women can probably be Nicki Minaj and Cardi B, but some of us can’t.
Tierra Whack is very wise.
I’m actually a true lyricist.
I’m like pixie grunge. The perfect blend of sugar and spice.
I want to bring more structure into my shows sometimes but honestly, people have told me they like the randomness and how crazy it gets.
I wanted a future outside my hometown.
Earl Sweatshirt is very wise.
I love that my friends understand that I’m not gonna forget about the old me.
It’s very important when you in the studio to be with a confident creative.
Once I found art, it was a wrap.
I went with Atlantic because I got a lawyer to look at my contract and my contract was fire.
I didn’t want to do music. I was very doubtful. I was like, ‘Oh my God. No one wants to hear a teen mom rapper.’