Capital Bra
Vladislav Balovatsky (born 23 November 1994), known professionally as Capital Bra, is a German rapper of Ukrainian descent. Born in Siberia, Russia, to parents working in the petroleum industry, he was raised in Dnipro, Ukraine, before relocating with his mother to Berlin, Germany, at the age of seven.[1][2] Capital Bra began composing rhymes at age 11 and entered the German hip-hop scene through independent releases in the mid-2010s.[3] His breakthrough came with chart-topping albums such as Berlin lebt (2018), which debuted at number one in Germany, Austria, and Switzerland.[4] By 2019, he had amassed 14 number-one releases on the German charts, including the album CB6, establishing him as one of the most commercially dominant figures in German rap.[5] Capital Bra holds the all-time record for the most number-one albums by a rapper in Germany, reflecting his prolific output and appeal to mainstream audiences through a blend of trap, pop rap, and gangsta rap styles.[5] His success extends to singles, with multiple tracks achieving number-one status, underscoring his influence on the domestic music market despite occasional involvement in rap feuds and production disputes.[4]Early Life and Background
Childhood in Russia and Family Origins
Vladislav Balovatsky was born on November 23, 1994, in a small town in Siberia, Russia.[6] [2] His parents, both of Ukrainian ethnicity, worked in the petroleum sector, an industry prominent in the resource-rich Siberian region during the post-Soviet economic transition.[7] [8] This heritage reflects mixed Russian-Ukrainian roots, with Balovatsky's birth occurring amid the turbulent 1990s in Russia, characterized by economic instability following the Soviet Union's dissolution, though specific family hardships are not detailed in available accounts.[9] Balovatsky's early years in Russia were brief, as his family relocated to Dnipropetrovsk (present-day Dnipro), Ukraine, shortly after his birth, exposing him to bilingual cultural influences from both Russian and Ukrainian environments.[8] [2] The move aligned with broader post-Soviet migration patterns among ethnic Ukrainians seeking stability or familial ties across borders, shaping his foundational experiences in a region marked by industrial development and ethnic intermingling.[7] Later immigration to Germany with his mother around age seven further distanced him from his Russian origins, but his Siberian birthplace and parental background underscore a Slavic Eastern European lineage distinct from Western European norms.[6][1]Immigration to Germany and Formative Years
Vladislav Balovatsky, born on November 23, 1994, in a remote town in Siberia, Russia, to Ukrainian parents employed in the petroleum sector, spent his early childhood in Dnipro (formerly Dnipropetrovsk), Ukraine, following an initial family relocation there.[4] After his father abandoned the family, his mother sought improved prospects amid economic hardship, prompting their migration to Germany in 2001 when Balovatsky was seven years old.[10] They settled in Berlin's Hohenschönhausen neighborhood in the former East Berlin, drawn by opportunities unavailable in their prior circumstances rather than formal asylum processes.[1] In Berlin, the family escaped acute poverty but confronted integration barriers inherent to immigrant life in a post-reunification urban district marked by socioeconomic strain.[11] Balovatsky's formative adolescent years involved direct exposure to street-level criminality, including petty offenses that led to repeated youth custodial sentences and participation in physical altercations.[12] These self-described encounters with local gang dynamics and survival imperatives in challenging environments underscored a pattern of adaptive pragmatism, prioritizing personal agency over institutional dependencies.[11]Musical Career
Early Releases and Underground Beginnings (2014–2017)
Capital Bra first garnered underground recognition through his participation in the German battle rap platform Rap am Mittwoch, debuting in the preliminary rounds on December 17, 2014, with a performance titled "Bra" produced by DJ Pete.[13] He advanced to compete in subsequent battles, including a notable matchup against Master Marv on February 4, 2015, during the BattleMania finale, where his aggressive style and lyrical delivery began cultivating a niche following among hip-hop enthusiasts in Berlin's rap scene.[14] These appearances, disseminated via online videos, laid the groundwork for his transition from battler to recording artist, emphasizing raw, confrontational flows characteristic of early gangsta rap influences. In January 2016, Capital Bra released his debut studio album Kuku Bra digitally on January 29 through the independent label Chapter One, followed by a CD edition on February 12.[15] The 16-track project, featuring collaborations like "Zu viel, zu wenig" with Olexesh, peaked at number 32 on the German Albums Chart and number 61 in Austria, reflecting modest commercial reception with limited physical sales and initial streaming figures confined to underground platforms.[16] During this period, he associated with the emerging collective Team Kuku, collaborating on tracks such as "Kreide" with King Khalil, uploaded to their YouTube channel in 2016, which amassed views in the millions and helped expand his grassroots fanbase through social media sharing rather than mainstream radio play.[17] By 2017, Capital Bra continued building momentum with releases like the album Makarov Komplex, maintaining an independent trajectory focused on trap-infused gangsta narratives, though chart positions remained outside the top 20, underscoring a reliance on organic online growth over label-backed promotion. This era saw incremental increases in YouTube streams and fan engagement, with videos from Team Kuku collaborations contributing to a dedicated following in Germany's urban youth demographic, prior to any major label involvement.[18]Breakthrough and Commercial Ascendancy (2018)
In 2018, Capital Bra attained national prominence with the release of his fourth studio album, Berlin lebt, on June 22, which debuted at number one on the German Albums Chart and sustained a chart presence for 55 weeks.[19] The project, distributed by Team Kuku, featured singles such as "Neymar," "One Night Stand," and the title track "Berlin lebt," all of which reached the summit of the German Singles Chart.[4] This period marked his accumulation of eight number-one singles, establishing a record for the most in a single year on German charts.[20] Preceding the album, the single "5 Songs in einer Nacht" topped the charts on April 13, underscoring his rising momentum. Capital Bra emerged as Germany's most streamed artist that year, with Berlin lebt registering as the top-streamed album domestically, reflecting robust digital consumption metrics amid a 40% national increase in audio streams to 79.5 billion.[20][4] Five of his 2018 music videos ranked among the year's ten most-viewed on YouTube in Germany, amplifying his visibility.[21] Amid these achievements, Capital Bra parted ways with Team Kuku due to irreconcilable business differences, a split reported shortly after the album's launch.[4] This transition highlighted tensions over creative and financial control, paving the way for subsequent industry alignments while capitalizing on his 2018 commercial peak.[4]Independent Era and Ongoing Developments (2019–present)
In March 2019, Capital Bra founded the independent record label Bra Music, transitioning from major label affiliations to greater artistic and commercial autonomy. This move facilitated the release of his sixth studio album, CB6, as the inaugural project under the imprint, which debuted at number one on the German Albums Chart and amassed over 100 million streams within weeks of launch.[22][21] A key collaboration during this period was with fellow rapper Samra, culminating in the joint album Berlin lebt 2, released on October 4, 2019. The project featured six singles, four of which reached number one on the German Singles Chart, underscoring Capital Bra's sustained dominance in a streaming-centric market where digital platforms accounted for over 80% of music consumption in Germany by 2020.[23] Subsequent releases, including CB7 in 2020, 8. in 2022, and VLADYSLAV in 2024, further exemplified adaptations to algorithmic-driven distribution, with emphasis on high-volume singles and playlist placements to sustain chart performance amid fragmented listener attention.[24] By 2025, Capital Bra had accumulated nine studio albums in total, reflecting consistent output despite industry shifts toward shorter-form content and global competition. Recent social media activity, including posts from Dubai in March 2025 signaling imminent projects with phrases like "ICH BIN DA BRA BALD GEHTS LOS," indicates ongoing creative endeavors, even as logistical challenges—such as travel restrictions in the region—prompted cancellations of European tour dates in April.[25][26] This period highlights his resilience in leveraging personal branding and direct fan engagement via platforms like Instagram to navigate evolving revenue models beyond traditional sales.Artistry
Musical Style and Production Techniques
Capital Bra's music fuses pop rap, trap, and gangsta rap elements, emphasizing melodic delivery over aggressive lyricism. His tracks typically feature auto-tune-processed vocals that create a sing-song flow with catchy hooks, facilitating commercial appeal while maintaining street-oriented themes. This approach draws from U.S. trap conventions, adapted to German contexts through mid-tempo rhythms and synthesized beats.[27][28][29] Production techniques center on heavy 808 bass drums for booming low-end impact, a hallmark of trap subgenres, as highlighted in his 2020 album 808 which debuted at number one on German charts. Capital Bra collaborates with producers like Beatzarre, Djorkaeff, and Brabuz Productionz, who layer these bass elements with hi-hats, snares, and occasional dancehall-inspired percussion for dynamic energy. Early mixtapes from 2014–2016 showcased rawer, minimalistic beats suited to underground dissemination, transitioning to polished, multi-layered arrangements by 2018 that incorporated vocal effects and instrumental variety for broader radio play.[27][30][31] His delivery integrates Berlin rap slang, blending standard German with immigrant-influenced vernacular for regional authenticity, often punctuated by ad-libs like "bra" to mimic conversational cadence. This stylistic evolution reflects a shift from gritty, DIY production in his formative years to studio-refined outputs, enabling chart dominance without diluting core trap aesthetics.[28][32]Themes and Lyrical Content
Capital Bra's lyrics recurrently depict the gritty realities of street life in Berlin's multicultural enclaves, such as Kreuzberg and Wedding, emphasizing survival through criminal hustles like drug dealing and robberies amid urban poverty. These portrayals stem from his firsthand immigrant experiences, using causal linkages to show how socioeconomic pressures drive illicit activities as pathways to escape hardship, rather than romanticized tropes. For example, in "Fluchtwagen glänzen," he references high-rise blocks ("Hochhausblocks") and diverse ethnic interactions among Arabs, Kurds, and Turks, boasting earnings of "Para" (Turkish slang for money) to authenticate his narrative.[33][34] Wealth accumulation emerges as a core motif, framed realistically as the fruit of persistent immigrant ambition and risk-taking, often contrasting material gains against personal costs like family strain or legal perils. Tracks avoid sanitized success stories by integrating vice and setbacks; "Tilidin," co-performed with Samra in 2018, rawly chronicles opioid addiction's toll, drawing from Capital Bra's admitted struggles with the painkiller, portraying dependency as a maladaptive response to fame's pressures rather than mere bravado.[35] In "Deutlich genug" (2016), linguistic barriers in non-native German symbolize broader integration hurdles, with boasts of fame ("What, my German isn’t clear?") underscoring triumph over adversity.[36] Post-2018 commercial breakthrough, lyrical content shifts toward motivational undertones, reflecting on hustle's rewards while cautioning against pitfalls, such as in disses highlighting no formal education ("Nein, ich hab' kein Abitur") yet affording luxury like Jordans—causally tying grit to upward mobility without endorsing unchecked glorification.[33] Relationships feature as strained bonds forged in shared struggle, with family loyalty invoked aggressively, as in retaliatory themes tied to personal vendettas. Multilingual translanguaging reinforces immigrant identity, incorporating Russian "Bratan" (brother) and Ukrainian "R"-rolling, with later works showing heightened East Slavonic elements (91% Russian usage by late 2010s) to evoke cultural duality over assimilation myths.[36] This evolution privileges empirical self-narration, debunking idealized rap clichés by grounding vice and victory in verifiable causal chains from his Siberian-Ukrainian roots to Berlin's underbelly.[23]Business Ventures
Establishment of Bra Music
In March 2019, following his departure from Bushido's ersguterjunge label on January 22, Capital Bra founded Bra Music as a vehicle for self-management and greater autonomy in his musical output.[4] This move came shortly after signing a broader agreement with Universal Music Germany in January, under which Bra Music retained operational control while leveraging Universal Urban for distribution.[20] The label's debut release was Capital Bra's sixth studio album CB6 on April 12, 2019, marking a transition from prior major-label dependencies to a hybrid model that preserved access to established infrastructure.[3] Bra Music's operations emphasized rapid digital releases tailored to streaming platforms, capitalizing on Capital Bra's established fanbase for high-volume output without traditional label oversight on creative decisions. The business approach integrated merchandise sales alongside music, though specific revenue breakdowns remain undisclosed; this structure enabled direct profit retention from ownership stakes, contrasting with earlier splits where advances and royalties were shared more extensively with external labels. Independence facilitated quicker project turnarounds, as evidenced by the label's role in co-producing collaborative efforts like Berlin Lebt 2 with Samra, released under Bra Music in November 2019, which promoted affiliated acts through shared promotion and cross-artist features.[21] By internalizing management, Bra Music provided Capital Bra with causal leverage for enhanced creative control—allowing unilateral signings, beat selections, and release timings—while mitigating risks via Universal's distribution network, which handled global digital dissemination and physical logistics. This setup arguably boosted profitability by reducing intermediary cuts, aligning incentives with long-term artist development over short-term major-label priorities, though it required Capital Bra to assume operational burdens like talent scouting and marketing. Affiliated promotions extended to acts like Samra for joint ventures, fostering a network effect that amplified visibility without full roster expansion.[3]Commercial Partnerships and Financial Milestones
In January 2019, Capital Bra signed a recording deal with Universal Music Group, marking a pivotal commercial partnership following his status as Germany's top-streaming artist of 2018.[20] This agreement facilitated the distribution and promotion of subsequent releases through his independent label Bra Music, enabling broader market reach without fully relinquishing creative control. The deal underscored his rapid ascent, driven by empirical streaming metrics rather than traditional industry gatekeeping. In June 2020, Capital Bra entered a publishing administration agreement with Warner Chappell Music, expanding his commercial footprint into songwriting and rights management.[22] This partnership complemented his Universal arrangement, optimizing revenue from compositions amid sustained chart dominance, with multiple albums achieving number-one positions in Germany. Such deals reflect a strategic layering of alliances, prioritizing financial leverage over singular label dependency—a contrast to peers reliant on prolonged major-label exclusivity, which often entails higher overhead and diluted royalties. Beyond music, Capital Bra launched the "Bling by Capital Bra" sneaker care product line in collaboration with Cleangang, a consumer goods brand, leveraging his personal brand for merchandise diversification.[37] Supported by targeted PR and marketing, this venture tapped into his audience's affinity for streetwear maintenance, generating ancillary income streams independent of recording cycles. These initiatives highlight a self-directed approach to monetization, grounded in direct fan engagement and low-barrier product extensions rather than speculative endorsements.Controversies and Feuds
Disputes with Industry Peers
The feud between Capital Bra and Bushido originated from alleged business betrayals, including disputes over collaborations and label dealings, which surfaced publicly through diss tracks starting in 2020. Bushido initiated the escalation by releasing "Dark Knight" in June 2020, a track implicitly targeting Capital Bra (also known as Arafat Abou-Chaker in some contexts) with references to betrayal and industry opportunism, though not naming him directly.[38][39] Capital Bra countered with "Arkham Asylum" featuring Joker Bra shortly thereafter, directly addressing Bushido's accusations and retaliating with claims of hypocrisy in Bushido's career tactics and personal conduct. The track gained traction in the German rap scene, amplifying the rivalry through lyrical jabs at Bushido's past feuds and business practices.[39] Tensions reignited in 2024 when Capital Bra released "Werder Bremen," a diss track explicitly naming Bushido and critiquing his relevance and collaborations, while Bushido responded indirectly through live performances and social media allusions. Additional tracks like "Fick 31er" featuring Samra further targeted Bushido, focusing on perceived inauthenticity in his persona and output.[40][41] In a separate clash, Capital Bra accused Kosovo-Albanian rapper Fero of owing him 80,000 euros from prior business dealings in May 2021, framing it as an unpaid debt from joint projects. Fero retaliated by alleging Capital Bra artificially inflated his streaming numbers through click-buying schemes, dismissing the debt claim as a distraction from Capital Bra's own promotional tactics amid Fero's underperforming releases.[42][43] These disputes highlighted competitive tensions in the German and European rap markets, with diss tracks serving as public battlegrounds rather than leading to formal resolutions, though Capital Bra's responses often outperformed in streaming metrics within niche audiences.[39]Legal Challenges and Public Backlash
In his youth, Capital Bra, born Vladislav Balovatsky, accumulated multiple juvenile convictions for petty offenses, including theft, drug dealing, and physical altercations, resulting in periods of incarceration.[44] [45] These early associations with criminal milieus, common in Berlin's gangsta rap scene, were resolved through youth sentences, after which he transitioned to music without documented adult convictions for violent or drug-related crimes.[46] Adult legal matters have been predominantly administrative. In October 2020, Berlin police initiated a minor administrative proceeding against him for exceeding the speed limit on Goertsallee, where the posted limit is 50 km/h, potentially incurring fines per the penalty catalog but no criminal charges.[47] More significantly, in September 2024, local tax authorities auctioned his possessions, including gold records, due to unpaid tax debts, highlighting fiscal non-compliance amid his commercial success.[48] In August 2025, he faced scrutiny for promoting a fraudulent sports betting scheme via social media, alongside other influencers like Haftbefehl; while no charges have been filed, legal experts question potential criminal liability for endorsing manipulated wagers that ensnared thousands.[49] Public backlash has centered on perceptions of inauthenticity tied to his rapid wealth accumulation and ostentatious lifestyle, with critics in media outlets accusing him of fabricating gang credentials for artistic appeal despite resolved youth offenses.[50] Defenses from industry observers, including a youth judge's assessment, dismiss such claims as unsubstantiated, noting his past crimes were typical juvenile infractions without ongoing organized crime links.[50] Coverage in outlets like Bild amplified extortion threats from rival clans in 2019 and 2024, demanding up to five million euros, which fueled speculation about lingering underworld ties but positioned him as a victim rather than perpetrator, with Berlin prosecutors investigating the threats without implicating him in illegality.[51] [46] These episodes, while generating tabloid headlines, have not derailed his career, as empirical sales data shows sustained popularity post-incidents.Political and Social Positions
Critiques of German Political Parties
Capital Bra initially voiced sharp criticism of the Alternative for Germany (AfD) party, portraying its opposition to mass immigration as xenophobic and incompatible with Germany's multicultural fabric. In a February 2024 social media post and associated rap lines, he declared "F*ck die AfD," aligning with broader hip-hop community sentiments against the party's restrictive policies amid revelations of AfD members discussing mass deportations.[52] [53] This stance reflected his background as a Ukrainian-born immigrant who arrived in Germany in the early 2000s and built a successful career there, emphasizing personal integration success over systemic restrictions on inflows. By October 2025, however, Capital Bra indicated a shift, acknowledging validity in AfD positions during an Instagram discussion. He stated, "I have criticized the AfD very, very, very, very, very much... Meanwhile, I think to myself, they are right there," suggesting reevaluation based on observed migration dynamics rather than ideological rejection.[54] This nuance from an immigrant perspective underscores debates on controlled versus uncontrolled entry, as AfD advocates asylum caps, expedited deportations for rejected claims, and prioritization of skilled workers—policies rooted in Germany's intake of 2.6 million first-time asylum applications from 2015 to 2024, including peaks exceeding 1 million annually during the 2015-2016 crisis.[55] AfD's critiques of open-border approaches draw on empirical pressures, such as public surveys showing a majority of Germans favoring fewer refugees amid strains on housing, welfare, and crime rates correlated with irregular arrivals—irregular entries dropped over 100,000 in recent years but remain a flashpoint.[56] [57] The party's electoral surge, doubling its national vote share to second place in the February 2025 federal elections, stems from these demographic realities rather than mere xenophobia, with immigration ranking as a top voter concern in eastern states hit hardest by integration challenges.[58] [59] Capital Bra's progression from outright dismissal to partial concurrence highlights how firsthand immigrant experiences can intersect with data-driven policy demands, contrasting with mainstream narratives that often dismiss AfD gains as extremist without addressing underlying causal factors like sustained high asylum volumes (213,499 in 2024 alone, down from prior peaks but cumulative).[60] [61]Responses to Social Issues and Public Repercussions
Capital Bra has articulated a perspective on immigrant integration centered on personal initiative and economic self-sufficiency, informed by his migration from Ukraine to Germany at age eight in 2002 and subsequent rise through independent music production. In a 2017 episode of the funk series Germania, he portrayed Germany as his adopted "Heimat," emphasizing its role as a land of opportunities where adaptation yields belonging and success, rather than entitlement.[62] This view underscores causal pathways from effortful engagement—such as learning the language and navigating urban challenges—to tangible outcomes, mirroring empirical patterns in migrant socioeconomic mobility data where proactive labor market entry correlates with reduced dependency. On welfare systems, Bra has critiqued reliance on benefits like Hartz IV as an undesirable default, advocating alternatives rooted in individual agency. In a 2016 Juice interview, he described neighborhood dynamics: "Entweder du machst hier Sport, Musik oder bekommst Hartz IV," positioning creative or physical pursuits as preferable to state support, with failure in those leading back to informal street economies rather than subsidized idleness.[63] Such rhetoric promotes self-reliance as key to avoiding cycles of poverty and crime, aligning with his biography of forgoing prolonged assistance in favor of entrepreneurial risks in rap, which empirically propelled him from obscurity to multimillion-streaming artist status by 2017. These positions have elicited mixed public responses, with strong endorsement from segments of his audience—largely urban youth sharing migrant or working-class backgrounds—who cite his trajectory as evidence against narratives overemphasizing barriers over agency. Support manifests in sustained streaming loyalty and social media affirmations of his "real talk" on integration realism. Conversely, coverage in mainstream outlets, prone to left-leaning interpretive frames that prioritize systemic inequities, has occasionally dismissed his emphasis on accountability as overly individualistic, potentially overlooking how his success validates bottom-up causal mechanisms over top-down interventions; no large-scale cancellations occurred, but debates amplified scrutiny of welfare models amid Germany's persistent integration gaps in employment and recidivism stats.[63]Reception and Impact
Critical Evaluations
Critics have praised Capital Bra for his knack in crafting infectious hooks and blending trap elements with pop sensibilities, enabling broad accessibility in German rap. For instance, user aggregates on platforms compiling reviews highlight his production as "unfassbar gut" and capable of delivering "krasse Hits" that innovate within mainstream constraints.[64] This approach has been credited with revitalizing collaborative dynamics, as seen in the synergy with Samra on Berlin lebt 2, where their contrasting styles create varied emotional and aggressive tracks deemed a "Meisterwerk" by some evaluators.[65] Conversely, detractors frequently criticize his work for formulaic lyrics and overreliance on autotune, resulting in perceived shallowness and repetition. A review of Berlin lebt 2 in Laut.de rated it 2 out of 5 stars, labeling it a "seelenloses Rapalbum" marred by lacking innovative ideas and a repetitive structure that prioritizes hooks over depth.[66] Similarly, Süddeutsche Zeitung observed in the same album an underlying "spätkapitalistische Verzweiflung" and emotional void in the lyrics, despite outward displays of success, suggesting a detachment from substantive content.[67] User sentiments echoed this, with complaints of excessive autotune diminishing lyrical authenticity and collaborations potentially weakening individual strengths, such as Samra's pre-partnership output.[65] Overall assessments reflect this duality, with Laut.de profiling Capital Bra as uniquely "so gut und so schlecht" simultaneously—excelling in mass appeal yet faltering in artistic rigor.[68] Aggregate user scores, such as 42 out of 100 on Album of the Year, underscore a divide between fan enthusiasm for hit-driven innovation and critic skepticism toward formulaic tendencies, where mainstream dismissals may stem partly from purist biases favoring niche complexity over empirically validated audience resonance.[69][64]Commercial Achievements and Cultural Influence
Capital Bra's commercial breakthroughs in the German charts established him as a dominant force in Deutschrap, with eight number-one singles in 2018 marking the first time any artist achieved this in a single year on official German charts.[20] His rapid output of albums and singles led to multiple number-one debuts across Germany, Austria, and Switzerland, including CB6 in May 2019, which extended his streak of chart-topping releases.[5] By accumulating the highest number of number-one hits among German rappers, he surpassed historical benchmarks, including 12 such singles by 2019 on German charts.[70] Streaming metrics underscored his market penetration, as he emerged as Germany's most streamed artist in 2018 amid a national surge to 79.5 billion audio streams that year.[71] Specific tracks shattered records, with one single garnering 1.9 million streams in a day and 9.7 million in a week, while his overall catalog exceeded 1.4 billion streams by 2020.[3] This dominance remained concentrated in German-speaking regions, limiting broader global export but solidifying trap's viability in domestic markets through high-volume digital consumption over physical sales. His success propelled the mainstream integration of Berlin trap and gangsta rap elements, reshaping youth listening habits in Germany where he became a staple for young audiences by the late 2010s.[72] By demonstrating trap's commercial scalability, Capital Bra influenced the Deutschrap ecosystem, enabling migrant-background artists to blend street narratives with chart-friendly production and inspiring emulation in the Berlin scene's evolution toward polished, accessible sounds.[73] This shift amplified trap's presence in everyday youth culture across D-A-CH countries, though it prioritized broad appeal over niche underground experimentation.[74]Discography
Studio Albums
Capital Bra's debut studio album, Kuku Bra, was released digitally on 29 January 2016 and physically on 12 February 2016, debuting at number 32 on the German albums chart and number 61 in Austria.[75][15][4] His second album, Makarov Komplex, arrived on 3 February 2017 via Auf!Keinen!Fall! and peaked within the top five on the album charts in Germany, Austria, and Switzerland.[4][76][77] The follow-up Blyat, released on 29 September 2017, similarly entered the top five across German-speaking Europe, emphasizing trap and gangsta rap elements consistent with Bra's early style.[78][79][4] Allein, issued on 2 November 2018, debuted at number two in Germany and remained on the chart for 17 weeks, marking a shift toward more introspective themes amid Bra's rising prominence.[80][81] CB6 topped the German albums chart upon its 12 April 2019 release, becoming Bra's first number-one solo album and generating over 1.4 billion streams in Germany—a national record at the time—while selling more than 100,000 units.[5][82] CB7, released on 25 September 2020, also reached number one in Germany, accumulating over 534 million Spotify streams and reflecting continued commercial dominance with high-output production.[83][84]| Album | Release Date | Peak Position (Germany) | Key Metrics |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kuku Bra | 29 Jan 2016 | 32 | Debut entry |
| Makarov Komplex | 3 Feb 2017 | Top 5 | Regional top-five peaks |
| Blyat | 29 Sep 2017 | Top 5 | Trap-focused follow-up |
| Allein | 2 Nov 2018 | 2 | 17 chart weeks |
| CB6 | 12 Apr 2019 | 1 | 1.4B streams; >100k sales |
| CB7 | 25 Sep 2020 | 1 | >534M Spotify streams |