Backxwash
Ashanti Mutinta, known professionally as Backxwash, is a Zambian-born Canadian rapper and producer based in Montreal, Quebec.[1][2] Born in Lusaka, Zambia, she relocated to Canada in her late teens to study computer science in British Columbia before moving eastward to pursue music.[3][4] Backxwash's music blends industrial hip-hop with heavy metal samples, drawing from personal experiences of trauma, religious upbringing, and identity struggles within a conservative Zambian tribal context.[2][5] Her production incorporates distorted beats and aggressive flows, often exploring themes of exorcism, fury, and catharsis.[6][7] She achieved breakthrough success with her 2020 album God Has Nothing to Do with This Leave Him Out of It, which won the Polaris Music Prize for its innovative fusion of rap and extreme music influences.[1][8] Subsequent releases, including I Lie Here Buried with My Rings and My Dresses (2021) and Only Dust Remains (2025), continued to refine her sound, emphasizing existential themes of death, violence, and emotional release.[9][10]
Early life and education
Upbringing in Zambia
Ashanti Mutinta was born on October 4, 1991, in Lusaka, Zambia, where she spent her early childhood and formative years until the age of 17.[11] [12] Raised in Lusaka by a deeply religious Christian family within a hyper-conservative societal context, Mutinta grew up immersed in strict religious doctrines and community expectations that emphasized traditional values.[13] [5] Her upbringing as a member of the Tumbuka ethnic group exposed her to cultural norms rooted in tribal heritage, alongside pervasive Christian influences, including frequent church attendance from a young age.[5] [14] This environment, characterized by conservative family dynamics and religious indoctrination starting around age seven, fostered early internal conflicts with imposed beliefs and self-perception.[5] Limited access to external media nonetheless introduced her to Western sounds like hip-hop and R&B via her sister's CD collection, providing initial outlets amid restrictive household norms.[13] [15] These experiences laid foundational tensions between personal inclinations and Zambia's socio-religious framework, precursors to later pursuits in technology and self-expression upon leaving the country.[16]Move to Canada and academic background
In 2009, at the age of 17, Ashanti Mutinta immigrated from Lusaka, Zambia, to British Columbia, Canada, to reunite with her older siblings and pursue higher education in computer science.[17][4] The relocation was driven by practical opportunities for academic advancement and family support, as she enrolled in a university program focused on technical skills for professional stability.[3][15] Upon arrival, Mutinta prioritized her studies, temporarily halting earlier interests in music production to adapt to the demands of immigrant life and coursework in a new country.[18] This period underscored her emphasis on self-reliance through education, aiming for a career in technology rather than creative pursuits.[13] She completed her computer science degree, acquiring skills in programming and software development amid the challenges of cultural and environmental adjustment in western Canada.[3][14] Following graduation, Mutinta relocated to Montreal, Quebec, seeking a fresh start while initially maintaining focus on non-artistic employment pathways informed by her technical training.[3][19] The move to Montreal presented further adaptation hurdles, including navigating an urban, bilingual setting distant from her familial and Zambian background, though she drew on her academic foundation for independence.[15] This phase highlighted her pragmatic approach, prioritizing verifiable skills and economic self-sufficiency over exploratory or identity-driven endeavors.[20]Career
Early projects as WLWL
Backxwash initiated her musical endeavors with conscious hip-hop experiments in her mid-teens, producing original beats and lyrics inspired by artists such as Common and Notorious B.I.G. without relying on samples.[21] [16] These early efforts, dating to the mid-2000s during her time in Zambia, emphasized personal expression over commercial appeal and laid groundwork for her shift toward sampling techniques influenced by producers like J Dilla.[21] By the late 2010s, following her relocation to Montreal in 2017, she released her debut album F.R.E.A.K.S., which incorporated gritty, underground production styles and marked an initial foray into more abrasive sonic territories.[22] [23] This was followed by the EP Black Sailor Moon, further exploring dark, experimental beats that deviated from traditional hip-hop structures.[22] [24] The evolution from these formative works to her established Backxwash identity stemmed from a deliberate pivot toward raw, identity-driven content, as she described moving away from "revolutionary conscious rap" to confront personal experiences as a trans artist in underground scenes.[22] This change prioritized sonic and thematic authenticity over external validation, enabling releases like Deviancy in 2019 that amplified horrorcore elements and self-produced aggression.[22] [25]Emergence as Backxwash and initial releases
In 2018, Backxwash emerged as a distinct artistic persona, releasing her debut extended play F.R.E.A.K.S on June 7 via Bandcamp, which featured tracks with aggressive vocal delivery layered over distorted, experimental beats produced by collaborators including Natsu Fuji and Serge.[23] This self-distributed project introduced her gothic-leaning hip-hop style, characterized by dense production and raw lyricism, initially garnering attention within Montreal's underground music circles despite her self-described marginalization from the city's mainstream hip-hop scene.[3] Later that year, on November 30, Backxwash followed with the EP Black Sailor Moon, also independently released on Bandcamp, expanding on the horror-infused aesthetics of her debut through tracks blending industrial elements and personal introspection, produced in part by herself.[24] These early efforts relied on grassroots promotion and direct-to-fan platforms, fostering a niche following among listeners drawn to her unpolished, self-reliant approach amid Montreal's diverse independent music ecosystem.[26]Breakthrough with 2020 album
Backxwash self-released the album God Has Nothing to Do with This. Leave Him Out of It on May 28, 2020, via Bandcamp, marking a significant evolution in the artist's sound through self-production across 13 tracks.[27] The project features heavy sampling from metal acts, including a prominent loop from Black Sabbath's "Black Sabbath" on the opening title track, integrated with distorted synths, screamed interludes, and aggressive rap flows to create a trap-metal hybrid.[2] Lyrically, it delves into religious trauma, cycles of abuse, and paths toward self-forgiveness, framed through horrorcore aesthetics that emphasize visceral depictions of pain and exorcism-like catharsis.[2][28] The album's raw production initially faced distribution challenges, as uncleared samples from Black Sabbath and Led Zeppelin prompted its temporary removal from streaming platforms shortly after release, limiting early accessibility but highlighting its bold, uncompromised approach.[29] Despite this, it generated critical acclaim for its genre-blending innovation, with NPR noting how Backxwash transforms "fury into forgiveness" via metal-infused rap that confronts personal and spiritual demons.[2] Reviewers praised the work's intensity, describing it as "thrilling trap metal dispatches from the battlegrounds of self-identity."[28] This release propelled Backxwash to wider recognition, culminating in the artist winning the 2020 Polaris Music Prize—a $50,000 award for outstanding Canadian albums—on October 19, 2020, selected from a shortlist of 10 by a jury emphasizing artistic merit over commercial success.[30] The victory underscored the album's impact in fusing hip-hop with industrial and metal elements, elevating Backxwash's profile in underground and experimental music scenes.[31]Albums from 2021 to 2022
Backxwash released the album I Lie Here Buried with My Rings and My Dresses on June 20, 2021, as the second installment in a trilogy begun with her 2020 breakthrough.[32] Self-produced entirely by the artist and issued independently via her Bandcamp page under the Ugly Hag imprint, the project featured contributions from collaborators including Ada Rook and SurgeryHead.[32] [33] This release built sequentially on the prior album's foundation, intensifying industrial hip-hop production techniques while maintaining thematic continuity in personal and spiritual exploration.[34] The album's sound evolved to emphasize heavier industrial and horrorcore influences, reflecting Backxwash's hands-on production approach without major label involvement.[35] Physical vinyl editions followed in 2022, underscoring the artist's commitment to direct-to-fan distribution amid a growing international audience post-2020 recognition.[36] In 2022, Backxwash concluded the trilogy with His Happiness Shall Come First Even Though We Are Suffering, dropped on October 31 via the same independent channels.[37] Again self-produced, it incorporated features such as Vaelastrasz, extending the collaborative network from the previous entry while delving deeper into motifs of regret, suffering, and relational dynamics.[37] This final phase amplified the series' experimental edge, with production layers that heightened atmospheric tension, contributing to the artist's rising profile through sustained DIY ethos and thematic progression.[38] Vinyl pressings were made available concurrently, reinforcing accessibility for fans.[39]Developments from 2023 to 2025
In 2024, Backxwash participated in the collaborative single "BLVCK" with producers La+ch and SVDP, released on February 2.[40] The track, produced by La+ch, featured contributions from all three artists and was accompanied by an official video directed by SVDP.[41] That April, Backxwash issued the single "WAKE UP," produced by herself, as the lead preview for her next project.[42] The seven-minute track emphasized cinematic and existential elements, diverging from her earlier intense, horror-infused aggression toward more introspective production.[43] On February 27, 2025, she followed with the single "9th Heaven," which maintained thematic depth on mortality and personal reminiscence while incorporating melodic structures and a gradual emotional arc.[44] This release heralded further sonic expansion, blending dense instrumentation with reflective lyricism. Backxwash's fifth studio album, Only Dust Remains, arrived on March 28, 2025, self-released via her Ugly Hag Records imprint.[45] Comprising ten tracks including features from pet wife, MAGELLA, Fernie, and Morgan-Paige, the record shifted from prior trilogy's raw rage toward broader landscapes of orchestral swells, melodic hooks, and explorations of death, violence, mourning, and emergent hope.[46] Following a two-year hiatus from full-lengths, it represented her most narratively cohesive work, framing resurrection and haunting as central motifs.[47] To support the album, Backxwash performed a Montreal headline show on April 4, 2025, at Société des arts technologiques (SAT), joined by collaborators MAGELLA and Fernie.[48] Additional 2025 dates included European festival slots, signaling sustained live momentum.[44]Musical style and themes
Genre influences and production
Backxwash's sonic style fuses horrorcore rap with industrial hip-hop and heavy metal elements, prominently featuring chopped samples of guitar riffs from Black Sabbath alongside influences from bands like Slayer, Venom, and Liturgy.[49][2] These metal-derived components are layered over hip-hop drum patterns and 808 kicks, creating abrasive textures akin to Nine Inch Nails' industrialized percussion.[2] As a self-producer on albums such as Deviancy (2019) and God Has Nothing to Do with This Leave Him Out of It (2020), Backxwash employs dense mixing techniques, including heavy distortion on samples and static-laden beats that emphasize plodding, percussive rhythms over melodic hooks.[50][10] Her approach draws from J Dilla's sampling methods, resulting in warbling, experimental soundscapes that integrate nu-metal crunch and industrial noise without relying on traditional choruses.[2][51] This production evolved from the raw, punk-inflected boom-bap of early EPs to tighter, more visceral fusions in later works like I Lie Here Buried with My Rings and My Dresses (2021), where layered distortion and machine-like pulses heighten the underground hip-hop and extreme metal underpinnings.[50][10]Lyrical content and recurring motifs
Backxwash's lyrics are characterized by raw, confessional introspection that delves into psychological torment and existential rebellion, often eschewing conventional rap braggadocio for dense, narrative-driven explorations of inner conflict.[15] This approach manifests in motifs of profound self-loathing and depression, where the artist depicts personal decay and suicidal ideation as visceral processes of rot and resurrection, as in tracks from Only Dust Remains (2025) that portray being overtaken by depressive states leading to near-overdose experiences.[52] [53] A central recurring motif is anti-religious sentiment, framed as a rejection of divine authority amid suffering, exemplified by the titular declaration in God Has Nothing to Do with This Leave Him Out of It (2020), which confronts religious frameworks as inadequate explanations for trauma and mental anguish.[54] This extends to broader critiques of faith's role in perpetuating oppression, incorporating imagery of occult defiance and televangelistic hypocrisy to underscore atheism not as abstract philosophy but as cathartic defiance against imposed moral systems.[5] Later works like I Lie Here Buried with My Rings and My Dresses (2021) weave religious trauma with calls for divine intervention that dissolve into irony, highlighting the futility of prayer in the face of unrelenting pain.[55] [56] Identity struggles recur through motifs of familial rejection and bodily dissonance, articulated in verses detailing parental denial of gender authenticity and the ensuing isolation, as on I Lie Here Buried, where such conflicts fuel a narrative of buried self amid rings and dresses symbolizing unclaimed womanhood.[57] These themes intersect with forgiveness as a fraught, incomplete process, grappling with the impossibility of absolution in cycles of abuse and self-recrimination, often resolved through brutal, history-laden storytelling that invokes colonization and systemic violence over escapist tropes.[58] [56] Backxwash favors this esoteric lens—infusing personal catharsis with references to historical atrocities and nihilistic voids—eschewing mainstream rap's materialism for unflinching dissections of trauma's causality, where redemption emerges sporadically from unrelenting confrontation rather than resolution.[59] [60]Reception
Critical responses
Backxwash's 2020 album God Has Nothing to Do with This Leave Him Out of It garnered praise for its cathartic blend of hip-hop aggression and metal sampling, with NPR highlighting how the rapper channels fury into themes of forgiveness while showcasing a broad musical knowledge that challenges stereotypes about Black artists' genre preferences.[2] Critics commended the project's raw emotional depth and genre-defying production, which fused horrorcore elements with industrial noise to create an immersive, transgressive sound.[54] The 2021 release I Lie Here Buried with My Rings and My Dresses intensified this acclaim, as Pitchfork described it as a "heavy and suffocating" work that amplifies murk and intensity to unearth relief amid unbridled anger, emphasizing Backxwash's skill in layering visceral lyrics over punishing beats.[10] Reviewers noted the album's innovative defiance of rap conventions through its gothic, extreme production, which prioritized emotional catharsis over accessibility.[61] By 2022's His Happiness Shall Come First Even Though We Are Suffering, critiques evolved to recognize Backxwash's experimental persistence, with Pitchfork observing attempts at triumphant hip-hop aesthetics amid ongoing thematic suffering, signaling a nuanced push against prior abrasiveness.[62] The 2025 album Only Dust Remains marked a perceived maturation, as Paste Magazine portrayed it as Backxwash's most structurally conventional effort to date—yet one retaining caustic resistance and expansiveness through knotty, interrogative tracks on mental paradoxes.[63] Kerrang! echoed this by lauding its brave, uncompromising confrontation of personal and societal turmoil, while Beats Per Minute noted a shift toward weariness and ambivalence alongside enduring ferocity, reflecting sonic evolution without diluting core intensity.[9][64]Achievements and recognitions
Backxwash won the 2020 Polaris Music Prize for the album God Has Nothing to Do With This Leave Him Out of It, an award recognizing artistic merit in Canadian music, accompanied by a $50,000 prize presented on October 19, 2020.[30][31] In 2025, her album Only Dust Remains was included on the long list for the Polaris Music Prize, announced in June 2025.[65] She established Ugly Hag Records as an independent label in 2021, self-releasing multiple projects through it, including the 2022 album HIS HAPPINESS SHALL COME FIRST EVEN THOUGH WE ARE SUFFERING and the 2025 release Only Dust Remains.[66][46] Backxwash's integration of hip-hop with metal influences has garnered coverage in specialized outlets, including features in Kerrang! highlighting her underground impact and announcements in Exclaim! for new releases.[5][67]Criticisms and limitations
Critics have observed that Backxwash's earlier works, characterized by industrial and heavy metal-infused production, often prioritize intensity over melodic hooks or traditional song structures, such as prominent choruses, which can hinder broader accessibility. For instance, reviews describe the sound as "heavy and suffocating," potentially overwhelming listeners unaccustomed to its unrelenting aggression and lack of conventional relief points.[10] This stylistic choice, while effective for evoking visceral emotional responses, has been noted to confine appeal primarily to underground and experimental hip-hop audiences rather than mainstream ones.[63] Lyrical content, frequently delving into deeply personal traumas, demonic metaphors, and philosophical existentialism, has sparked debate over its esoteric density alienating casual listeners. Some analyses highlight how the "caustic, knotty monoliths" of verses demand repeated engagement to unpack, risking disengagement from those outside niche circles familiar with horrorcore or introspective rap traditions.[63] [64] This approach, rooted in raw catharsis, contrasts with more digestible narrative styles in commercial rap, contributing to sustained underground status despite critical acclaim.[68] The persistence of a rage-dominated aesthetic across albums raises questions about long-term sustainability, as the unyielding ferocity—evident in prior releases' "abrasive" and "tearing" delivery—may fatigue devotees amid calls for evolution.[64] [69] Recent shifts toward trap sampling in Only Dust Remains (2025) signal an attempt to mitigate these constraints, yet underscore prior works' niche-bound limitations without broader structural concessions like hooks.[68]Personal life
Identity and transition
Ashanti Mutinta, professionally known as Backxwash, was born in Zambia and immigrated to Canada, where she established herself in Montreal's music scene.[1] Following her relocation, she publicly identified as a Black trans woman, with a notable social media announcement in October 2019 describing herself as a "trans rapper."[70] This self-identification aligned with her embrace of a transfeminine identity, as reported in contemporaneous profiles.[14] Her gender transition unfolded in the late 2010s, intersecting with a career pivot to intensive music production around 2018–2020, during which she encountered rejection tied to her changing identity.[2][15] By 2021, sources described her as having come out as a trans woman in "recent years," reflecting a period of personal acceptance amid broader life upheavals including sobriety.[13] Backxwash has consistently used she/her pronouns in professional contexts, though some outlets note they/them usage as well.[22]Philosophical and political positions
Backxwash, born Ashanti Mutinta, has articulated a rejection of the Christianity in which she was raised in Zambia, describing it as a source of instilled fear and trauma due to its emphasis on a vengeful deity and unquestioned doctrines. She has noted that Bible stories, such as those involving Jonah or Abraham's sacrifices, permeated her childhood, fostering a worldview centered on divine wrath rather than inquiry.[71] [13] This religious framework, she argues, was weaponized through colonial missions in the 19th century to enforce oppression, leading her to undergo a process of "unlearning" after relocating to Canada at age 17.[71] [72] Following an initial atheist phase upon arrival in Canada, Backxwash shifted toward Tumbuka tribal spirituality, honoring ancestors over Christian narratives like Eden or Noah, which she views as mythological impositions.[13] [71] She has critiqued Christianity's incompatibility with queer identities, attributing personal struggles to its rigid structures that suppress questioning.[13] This causal link between her upbringing and emotional intensity informs her artistic output, where religious rejection manifests as thematic confrontation rather than passive disbelief.[72] Backxwash identifies as an anarchist, framing her perspective around opposition to institutional authority, including police and colonial legacies.[73] [74] Her self-description emphasizes autonomy, as seen in her reluctance to engage in overt political rhetoric, which she has called uninspiring "leftist tweets in rhyme-form."[71] [75] Instead, she prioritizes individual agency and personal catharsis, viewing collective narratives as secondary to authentic self-expression.[71] This stance aligns with a broader dismissal of formulaic activism in favor of direct, unmediated confrontation with societal constraints.[74]Discography
Studio albums
Backxwash released her debut studio album, God Has Nothing to Do with This. Leave Him Out of It, on May 28, 2020.[27] The follow-up, I Lie Here Buried with My Rings and My Dresses, came out on June 20, 2021, via Ugly Hag.[32][34] His Happiness Shall Come First Even Though We Are Suffering followed on October 31, 2022, also on Ugly Hag.[37][39] Her fourth studio album, Only Dust Remains, was issued on March 28, 2025, through Ugly Hag Records.[45][76]| Title | Release date | Label |
|---|---|---|
| God Has Nothing to Do with This. Leave Him Out of It | May 28, 2020 | Self-released |
| I Lie Here Buried with My Rings and My Dresses | June 20, 2021 | Ugly Hag |
| His Happiness Shall Come First Even Though We Are Suffering | October 31, 2022 | Ugly Hag |
| Only Dust Remains | March 28, 2025 | Ugly Hag Records |