
Some artists make music to fit neatly inside a scene. I.K.P. sounds more interested in building their own room, then daring everybody else to catch up. Known as The Infamous King of Positivity, I.K.P. has spent years shaping hardship into art, drawing from experiences that could have hollowed out a less determined spirit: military trauma, homelessness, addiction, and survival. As a non-binary rapper, producer, activist, and U.S. Marine Corps veteran of Garifuna descent, they bring grit, humor, and emotional intelligence into the same frame. That full range comes through on their latest single, “LEAD WITH LOVE.”
At first, the title almost feels like a trick. The record comes in swinging, full of sharp confidence, designer flashes, competitive bite, and lines built for immediate replay. “Golden halos full of ice,” “Hoe niggas get ghost like it’s poltergeist,” and “We on they head, necks under this foot-tuh!” do not exactly sound like language from a gentle affirmation playlist. That contrast is part of the point.
I.K.P. treats love as armor, not surrender. Over a bass-heavy hip-hop beat with plenty of attitude, they move between rap cadences, Jamaican patois inflections, and conversational punchlines that land with a loose, in-the-moment spark. The repeated hook, “I’m leading with love, love, love, love,” anchors the track. No matter how confrontational, funny, or flex-heavy the verses get, the song keeps returning to that phrase like a personal code.
The second verse gives the track its deeper charge. Lines such as “Got it out the mud” and “Know I’m wavie and too fluid” read less like simple boasts than survival statements. Beneath the swagger, there is a quiet but firm comment on identity, visibility, and moving through spaces that were never designed to make room for you. I.K.P. does not plead to be understood. They arrive, speak plainly, and take up space.
By the third verse, “LEAD WITH LOVE” starts to feel like a victory lap. Luxury, friendship, ambition, resilience, and hard-earned self-belief fold into a portrait of someone done shrinking for anyone else’s comfort. The closing line, “If I knew then what I know now… would’ve gave up the fucks a lil quicker,” lands as the track’s real thesis.
I would recommend “LEAD WITH LOVE” to anyone who likes hip-hop with personality, sharp writing, and a message that refuses to be spoon-fed.
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