Mozzy
Timothy Patterson (born June 24, 1987), known professionally as Mozzy, is an American rapper from Sacramento, California, renowned for his unfiltered depictions of street life, gang dynamics, and personal trauma in West Coast hip-hop.[1][2] Raised in the Oak Park neighborhood by his grandmother, a former Black Panther activist, Patterson emerged in the mid-2010s with a prolific output of mixtapes and albums that captured the harsh realities of Sacramento's urban underclass, earning endorsements from established artists like Kendrick Lamar.[2] His breakthrough works include the 2017 album 1 Up Top Ahk and 2018's Gangland Landlord, which showcased his distinctive "nervous music" style blending rapid flows with raw storytelling.[3] Mozzy has collaborated with high-profile figures such as YG on the 2021 joint album Kommunity Service and Eminem on the 2021 track "Last One Standing" from the Venom: Let There Be Carnage soundtrack, solidifying his influence beyond regional scenes.[4][5] In 2021, he signed with Yo Gotti's CMG Entertainment, leading to projects like Survivor's Guilt (2022).[6] His career has been punctuated by legal challenges, including a 2014 stint in San Quentin State Prison for drug and firearm possession, and a 2022-2023 federal sentence for illegal gun ownership, reflecting the volatile environment he chronicles in his music.[7][8] Despite criticisms that his lyrics may incentivize violence, Mozzy maintains they serve as unvarnished testimony to lived experiences rather than glorification.[9]Early life
Upbringing and family background
Timothy Cornell Patterson was born on June 24, 1987, in Sacramento, California, and raised in the Oak Park neighborhood, a community marked by persistent poverty, elevated crime rates, and entrenched gang presence that contributed to a challenging formative environment.[10][11] At age two, he relocated to live with his grandmother, Brenda Patterson-Usher, following his father's imprisonment, which underscored early familial disruptions including absent parents and reliance on extended family for stability.[7][12] This upbringing exposed Patterson to routine street violence and socioeconomic hardships prevalent in Oak Park, factors that, alongside individual circumstances, influenced his early worldview amid limited protective structures.[13] Patterson's grandmother, an activist figure, enrolled him in Sacramento High School to provide educational access despite the surrounding instability.[2][12] However, facing economic pressures and scant formal opportunities in a neighborhood dominated by survival imperatives over academic pursuits, he dropped out around age 18 and subsequently earned a GED.[14][13] These experiences highlighted the interplay of environmental constraints and personal decisions in shaping pathways away from conventional structures.Initial criminal involvement and influences
Timothy Patterson, professionally known as Mozzy, entered criminal activity in his late teens amid Sacramento's street culture, with his first documented arrests occurring between 2005 and 2008 by the Sacramento Police Department for offenses including illegal possession of a firearm, evading police, and marijuana possession with intent to sell.[15][16] These charges stemmed from drug sales and related possession, as evidenced by an arrest at age 18 for selling drugs to an undercover officer, reflecting immediate engagement in low-level trafficking and weapons violations that carried direct risks of incarceration.[7] Patterson's involvement extended to associations with Blood-affiliated factions in Sacramento's Oak Park neighborhood, such as 4th Avenue and Ridezilla sets, where participation was normalized from childhood but escalated post-adolescence into active roles perpetuating cycles of retaliation and violence against rivals like the Starz gang.[7][13] While framed by some as survival imperatives in a high-crime environment, these affiliations involved deliberate choices—such as territorial disputes and retaliatory actions—that yielded swift consequences, including jail time and heightened personal danger, rather than sustainable escapes from poverty.[17] Hip-hop icons like Tupac Shakur exerted influence by embedding gang narratives into cultural consciousness, which Patterson has cited as a formative factor in emulating street personas from an early age, though this normalization preceded his music career and reinforced patterns of risky behavior over deterrence.[18][7] Such artistic portrayals, while providing an eventual outlet for expression, did little to avert the tangible fallout of his initial crimes, underscoring decisions that prioritized immediate street validation amid evident alternatives.[11]Musical career
Independent beginnings and mixtape era
Timothy Cornell Patterson, performing as Lil Tim, initiated his recording career in the mid-2000s, culminating in the release of his debut single "U Ain't Ready Like Dat" on February 16, 2010, distributed independently through his nascent Mozzy Records imprint.[19] By 2011, still under the Lil Tim moniker, he issued the 18-track Mozzy Mobbalotto Mixtape, featuring raw, unpolished tracks centered on Sacramento street experiences, which circulated primarily via local networks and early digital platforms without backing from established labels.[20] This period marked his shift toward self-reliant production and promotion, leveraging personal resources to bypass traditional industry gatekeepers amid ongoing probation constraints from prior convictions.[1] Adopting the stage name Mozzy around 2011, Patterson accelerated his output with a series of mixtapes that solidified his presence in the Bay Area's underground rap scene, including projects like The Tonite Show between 2011 and 2014, emphasizing gritty narratives of neighborhood survival and loyalty without external financial support.[13] His February 14, 2014, release Goonbody Embodiment, a 16-track effort self-distributed digitally, exemplified this phase with its focus on unvarnished depictions of violence and resilience, amassing streams through grassroots sharing in Sacramento's hip-hop circles.[21] By this point, having dropped over a dozen independent projects since 2010, Mozzy cultivated a dedicated local following via platforms like DatPiff and live freestyles, prioritizing authenticity over polished production.[22] Legal interruptions, including brief incarcerations, underscored his persistence; for instance, he remotely coordinated the drop of Free Mozzy in 2014 while jailed, channeling proceeds back into his independent operations and framing music as a viable pivot from escalating criminal risks.[23] This era's DIY ethos—handling beats, recording, and marketing solo or with minimal collaborators—highlighted an entrepreneurial resolve, fostering loyalty among fans who valued the unfiltered portrayal of Oak Park's realities over mainstream accessibility.[1] Such efforts laid the groundwork for broader recognition, though confined to regional mixtape circuits until later developments.Breakthrough and major releases (2014–2017)
Mozzy's 2015 release Bladadah, distributed independently through Mozzy Records, featured 18 tracks emphasizing unfiltered accounts of Oakland and Sacramento street dynamics, contributing to his initial expansion beyond local audiences via digital platforms.[24] The project, issued on July 11, built on prior mixtapes by incorporating denser production from collaborators like JuneOnnaBeat, which helped sustain momentum in West Coast rap circuits.[25] In 2016, after aligning with Empire Distribution, Mozzy issued Mandatory Check on June 10, his debut under the partnership, which broadened distribution and listener access while maintaining themes of survival and retaliation rooted in personal experiences.[26] This album's 20 tracks, including singles that circulated on streaming services, marked a step toward national visibility through independent chart placements and endorsements from regional peers, reflecting organic growth driven by demographic alignment rather than mainstream promotion.[27] The 2017 album 1 Up Top Ahk, released August 17 via Mozzy Records and Empire, further amplified recognition with collaborations including Celly Ru and JuneOnnaBeat, enhancing production polish and cross-regional appeal without diluting core narratives of violence and loyalty.[28] Its tracks, such as "Take It Up With God," resonated enough to influence broader hip-hop discourse, as evidenced by Kendrick Lamar's January 28, 2018, Grammy acceptance speech quoting Mozzy's phrase "God up top all the time" from the project, signaling peer validation amid rising streams.[29][30] This endorsement underscored the albums' authentic draw, prioritizing lived authenticity over polished commercialism.[31]Commercial peak and label affiliations (2018–2021)
Mozzy's affiliation with Empire Distribution, established through his Mozzy Records imprint since 2017, facilitated a string of independent releases that defined his commercial ascent during this period.[16] His second studio album, Gangland Landlord, arrived on October 5, 2018, comprising 18 tracks centered on Sacramento street life, and marked his deepening ties to the distributor for wider reach within underground rap circuits.[16] The project achieved modest mainstream visibility, peaking at number 27 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart.[32] In 2019, Mozzy followed with Internal Affairs on May 31, a 13-track effort produced by collaborators like Dave-O and Fonzie, which reinforced his prolific output without major label intervention.[33] The album's introspective cuts, such as "Winning" featuring Lil Poppa, sustained momentum among core West Coast audiences but did not secure prominent chart placements.[34] This independent model under Empire allowed creative autonomy, though it constrained access to large-scale marketing typically afforded by major labels. The year 2020 saw Beyond Bulletproof released on May 1, featuring high-profile guest spots including King Von and G Herbo on "Body Count," which broadened exposure through associations with emerging drill and Midwest talents.[35] The 13-track set peaked at number 25 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart, reflecting steady niche growth amid pandemic disruptions to live performances.[32] Collaborations like these expanded Mozzy's network, yet his unfiltered depictions of gang affiliations and violence anchored appeal within regional and subgenre loyalists rather than facilitating pop-rap crossover. Untreated Trauma, dropped September 17, 2021, represented the period's zenith, debuting at number 10 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart—his first top-10 entry there—and number 40 on the Billboard 200 with 19,500 equivalent album units in its opening week, driven primarily by streaming.[32] Features with EST Gee and Babyface Ray on tracks like "Beat the Case" underscored evolving partnerships with Southern trap voices, enhancing playlist traction.[36] Despite these markers of resilience in a competitive streaming landscape dominated by Sacramento's raw aesthetic, the album's performance highlighted inherent limits: modest unit sales and genre-specific charting underscored how Mozzy's fidelity to authentic, localized trauma narratives precluded wider mainstream penetration.[37]Challenges and recent projects (2022–present)
In April 2022, Mozzy was sentenced to 12 months in federal prison for possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, following a guilty plea in January of that year.[38] This incarceration disrupted his promotional activities for the Kollect Kall EP, released on April 7, 2023, while he remained imprisoned, marking his first project since beginning the sentence.[39] Despite the constraints, the EP featured collaborations with artists such as YFN Lucci and Baby Money, demonstrating sustained output through pre-recorded material.[40] Mozzy was released early from prison on May 4, 2023, after serving approximately 10 months, allowing him to resume full creative control.[41] Post-release, he issued Children of the Slums in 2024, a deeply personal album reflecting Sacramento street experiences, followed by the collaborative project Lucky Her with Kalan.FrFr in late 2024 via EMPIRE.[42] In 2025, he released Intrusive Thoughts on April 18 and its sequel Intrusive Thoughts 2 in August, expanding on themes of trauma and resilience.[43] [44] Singles like "Under Oath," dropped on March 13, 2025, with an accompanying video, underscored his return to consistent releases, produced under Mozzy Records in partnership with distributors.[45] Mozzy maintained independent momentum through his label, Mozzy Records, handling production and artist features without major label dependency post-CMG affiliation.[46] In a May 2025 Billboard interview, he discussed channeling personal challenges into music, highlighting career evolution since earlier successes.[47] By mid-2025, discussions of upcoming tours and collaborations indicated ongoing adaptability in live performances and project development.[48]Musical style and themes
Lyrical content and authenticity claims
Mozzy's lyrics recurrently explore motifs of gang loyalty and retaliation, often framed within the context of survival in Sacramento's impoverished neighborhoods such as Oak Park. Tracks like "Pass The Rifle" depict interpersonal conflicts escalating to violence as a response to perceived betrayals, with lines emphasizing enforcement of street codes: "So we enforce the violence."[49] Similarly, in "Overcame," he references specific incidents of robbery and loss in public spaces like light rail stations, underscoring untreated trauma from slum conditions: "When they just caught him at the lightrail, stripped him for his jewels."[50] These themes draw from the rapper's self-reported experiences in environments marked by poverty and intra-community strife, positioning violence not as aspirational but as an entrenched outcome of systemic deprivation.[51] Authenticity claims in Mozzy's work hinge on his assertion of "1 Up Top Ahk," a phrase denoting street-level genuineness derived from personal involvement in the events described, as elaborated in his 2017 album of the same name.[52] He maintains that his narratives stem from direct observation and participation in Sacramento's gang dynamics, including feuds tied to Bloods affiliations in Oak Park, rather than fabrication for artistic effect.[2] Lyrics databases reveal consistent allusions to localized rivalries, such as retaliatory acts mirroring real-world incidents in South Sacramento and Oak Park, lending empirical weight to these claims through verifiable parallels to documented events.[53] A central debate surrounds whether such depictions constitute mere reportage or implicit endorsement, with supporters arguing they serve as unvarnished documentation of inevitability in dehumanizing cycles.[54] Mozzy himself has stated that his content owns the promotion of violence inherent in rising murder rates without romanticization, prioritizing realism over moralizing.[55] Critics, however, contend that the repetition of retaliation narratives contributes causally to escalation, citing correlations in police assessments of gang violence spikes linked to rapper allegiances, including those involving Mozzy's circle, as seen in Sacramento's 2022 mass shooting tied to ongoing feuds.[56] [57] While no direct causation from lyrics to specific acts is empirically proven in peer-reviewed studies, local law enforcement reports highlight how feud-referencing music reinforces divisions, prompting scrutiny of its societal impact beyond artistic expression.[58]Production and influences
Mozzy's music predominantly features West Coast production characterized by bouncy rhythms, heavy 808 basslines, and trap-influenced percussion patterns that emphasize a gritty, street-level energy.[59] These beats often incorporate slower tempos and hyphy-derived drum patterns, distinguishing them from faster-paced Southern trap while maintaining booming low-end suitable for car systems prevalent in California rap.[60] Producers crafting for Mozzy typically draw from this hybrid style, as seen in tutorials replicating his sound with layered snares and minimal melodic flourishes to underscore raw vocal delivery.[61] Key influences on Mozzy's production stem from Tupac Shakur's narrative-driven tracks, which informed a focus on storytelling over flashy instrumentation, and the broader Bay Area sound including artists like E-40 and Mac Dre, whose uptempo, bass-heavy aesthetics shaped Sacramento's local rap ecosystem.[18][13] Early mixtapes from the 2010s, released independently, relied on straightforward, self-contained beats that prioritized lyrical clarity amid sparse synths and hard-hitting kicks, reflecting a DIY ethos common in regional underground scenes.[54] Technically, Mozzy's vocal processing favored a gritty, unpolished delivery with restrained Auto-Tune application, avoiding heavy pitch correction to retain natural timbre and emotional weight, as evidenced in mixing guides tailored to his West Coast rap style.[62] This approach contrasted with more melodic trap contemporaries, emphasizing authenticity through ad-libs and layered harmonies only when enhancing thematic depth. Post-2020 releases marked an evolution toward production supporting introspective themes, with subdued beats featuring atmospheric pads and restrained percussion on albums like Untreated Trauma (2021), allowing space for reflective flows amid ongoing street narratives.[63] This shift built on earlier foundations but incorporated subtler dynamics, as in Beyond Bulletproof (2020), where beats balanced aggression with vulnerability to mirror personal growth.Controversies
Gang affiliations and real-world violence links
Mozzy, born Timothy Patterson, has long been associated with the Oak Park Bloods, a Bloods-affiliated street gang in Sacramento's Oak Park neighborhood, where he grew up amid ongoing rivalries with groups like South Sacramento crews.[17][14] Despite his public claims of dissociation from active gang involvement, lyrics in tracks such as "The Truth" (released April 2013) explicitly name and target members of rival sets like the Starz (formerly Bad Ass Yankees), fueling documented feuds that police and local reports linked to retaliatory violence.[14][17] The 2014 diss track "I'm Just Being Honest," aimed at rivals including CML Lavish D and associated South Sacramento groups, preceded a surge in gang-related shootings, with Sacramento police submitting the song alongside others as evidence in investigations into heightened violence.[17] Local news reported that such online and musical beefs correlated with spikes in incidents, including a 2017 Meadowview shooting tied to rapper-supported gangs and subsequent arrests in a park brawl linked to similar feuds involving Mozzy's circle.[64][65] Associates from his Mozzy Records label, such as Uzzy Marcus (an Oak Park Bloods member), have been implicated in ongoing neighborhood conflicts, though direct charges against Mozzy remain absent from these events. While Mozzy has denied orchestrating violence, framing his content as authentic storytelling from personal experience rather than incitement, critics including community activists and law enforcement point to diss tracks as evidence of reckless escalation, with feuds contributing to at least a dozen retaliatory acts in the mid-2010s per police-correlated reports.[17][58] Proponents of his work defend it as reflective of Sacramento's entrenched gang dynamics—where allegiances to artists like Mozzy underpin real-world rivalries—arguing censorship ignores root causes like poverty and limited opportunities, though anti-violence advocates counter that such glorification endangers youth without promoting resolution.[14][67][65]Criticisms of glorifying criminality
Critics of Mozzy's work, particularly within Sacramento's hip-hop activism circles, have argued that his lyrics exacerbate local violence by portraying criminal acts without sufficient condemnation, thereby inciting rather than merely reflecting street realities. A 2017 discussion highlighted a specific track linked to a surge in gang-related incidents, noting Mozzy's claims of opposition to violence contrasted with his tendency to glorify it through vivid, unrepentant depictions, potentially fueling real-world escalations among impressionable listeners.[56] Such portrayals in gangsta rap, including Mozzy's emphasis on retribution and survival through illegality, face broader accusations of societal damage by normalizing criminality as aspirational, which detractors say overlooks the human cost to victims and entrenches intergenerational poverty. By framing outlaw success as attainable glamour without highlighting predominant failures or alternatives, this narrative is critiqued for discouraging legitimate paths out of hardship, instead perpetuating dependency on volatile street economies that yield few sustainable exits. Activists contend this cultural reinforcement ignores empirical patterns where communities saturated with such media exhibit stalled socioeconomic progress, prioritizing shock value over constructive commentary.[68][69] Defenders often invoke artistic catharsis, positing violent lyrics as harmless outlets for trauma, yet opponents counter with evidence of behavioral correlations, such as alignments between rising rap prominence and urban violent crime fluctuations, suggesting influence beyond passive expression. Informal analyses indicate gangster rap's thematic fixation on aggression correlates with heightened gang mentality adoption, challenging claims of neutrality by underscoring the lack of embedded deterrents that could mitigate emulation risks. While Mozzy's commercial ascent is touted as proof of rap-enabled mobility, critics observe that analogous artists frequently encounter recidivism or downfall, underscoring limited broader uplift amid entrenched criminal pulls rather than widespread emancipation.[70][68]Legal issues
Early arrests and convictions
Between 2005 and 2008, Mozzy, born Timothy Patterson, was arrested three times by the Sacramento Police Department for possession-related offenses, including illegal possession of a firearm, evading police, and possession of marijuana with intent to sell.[10][16] These incidents resulted in short-term incarcerations in Sacramento County Jail and established an early pattern of state-level charges under California laws targeting drug and weapon possession, particularly among individuals with prior records.[17] The arrests contributed to multiple probation violations, which Sacramento authorities enforced strictly due to local priorities on felon-in-possession statutes and controlled substances amid high urban crime rates in the region.[10] Outcomes included fines, community service requirements, and the accrual of felony convictions that restricted future legal firearm ownership and employment prospects under state prohibitions.[15] This early record reflected repeated engagement with escalating risks, from initial drug offenses to armed possession, without recorded successful interventions or diversions at the time.[16]Federal gun charge and 2022 imprisonment
On January 29, 2021, during a traffic stop in Culver City, California, for a vehicle code violation, authorities discovered a loaded Glock 26 handgun containing 16 rounds of 9mm ammunition, along with a small quantity of marijuana, in the possession of Timothy Cornell Patterson, professionally known as Mozzy.[71] As a convicted felon with prior disqualifying offenses, including a 2017 felony conviction for unlawful possession of a firearm, Patterson was federally prohibited from owning or possessing any firearms or ammunition under 18 U.S.C. § 922(g).[38][72] Patterson was indicted in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California on charges of felon in possession of a firearm and ammunition.[15] He entered a guilty plea to the charges, resulting in a sentence of 12 months' imprisonment, three years of supervised release, and a $55,000 fine imposed prior to his surrender.[15][38] Patterson voluntarily surrendered to the Bureau of Prisons on July 28, 2022, days after releasing his album Survivor's Guilt, and was designated to the United States Penitentiary in Atwater, California, a medium-security facility.[73][74] His projected release date was initially set for July 23, 2023, but he was discharged on May 4, 2023, after serving approximately 10 months, consistent with federal good conduct credits reducing the term by up to 15 percent without reported disputes or early release controversies.[75][71] The incarceration marked a significant pause in Patterson's professional activities amid his commercial ascent with CMG label affiliation, though he resumed music releases post-incarceration while adhering to supervised release conditions, including restrictions on firearm possession and travel approvals.[38] In a 2024 interview, Patterson reflected on the experience as prompting life adjustments, stating it reinforced the need for disciplined decision-making to sustain his career and family responsibilities.[76]Personal life
Family dynamics and relationships
Mozzy, whose real name is Timothy Cornell Sanders, grew up without consistent parental involvement, a circumstance he has attributed to influencing his emphasis on fatherhood in adulthood during a 2016 interview.[77] He has fathered multiple children, including at least one daughter, and routinely cites them in lyrics and discussions as core motivations for perseverance amid professional demands like extensive touring and periodic relocations for safety or opportunities.[78] These elements have created logistical strains, such as limited daily presence, though Mozzy has described efforts to prioritize bonding, including documented wholesome interactions shared publicly in 2025. In reflections from 2024 interviews, Mozzy has portrayed his children as anchors for personal accountability, weaving references to generational continuity into tracks like those on his post-release projects.[79] He expressed aspirations for marital commitment and family expansion in a February 2024 discussion, signaling intent to formalize relational structures beyond prior informal partnerships, which remain largely undisclosed.[80] Post-incarceration in 2024, Mozzy has underscored family privacy while noting enhanced stability in dynamics, crediting paternal responsibilities for fostering discipline without detailing specific relational upheavals.[81] Verified public details remain sparse, reflecting a deliberate boundary against media intrusion into non-professional bonds.[82]Addiction and personal struggles
In early 2018, Mozzy publicly acknowledged his dependency on lean—a mixture of codeine cough syrup, soda, and candy—estimating he had spent approximately $100,000 on the substance, which impaired his songwriting output.[83] A prior incarceration period without access to lean demonstrated its detrimental effects, as he reported composing 15 to 20 songs per day while sober, far exceeding his lean-influenced productivity.[83] This realization prompted him to quit in January 2018, documented in a video where he poured out a bottle of lean and initiated the #KickTheCupChallenge to urge fans, particularly youth, to abandon the habit amid its risks in hip-hop culture.[84][85] Mozzy's decision aligned with heightened visibility, including praise from Kendrick Lamar in early 2018, which he credited alongside personal accountability for sustaining his recovery.[86] In subsequent interviews, he connected the addiction to unresolved trauma from Sacramento's street environment, yet emphasized individual agency in choices that exacerbated vulnerabilities rather than inevitability from circumstances.[78] He maintained sobriety thereafter, viewing the quit as a self-directed triumph that enhanced his artistic focus, though earlier lyrics depicting lean use drew scrutiny for potentially normalizing it before his pivot to advocacy.[87][88] Themes of these struggles persisted in his later work, with the posthumously released album Intrusive Thoughts (April 18, 2025) exploring introspective battles against self-destructive patterns, underscoring resilience forged through confronting personal demons without external excuses.[43] This output reflected a broader evolution from glorification to cautionary reflection, prioritizing evidence of behavioral change over lingering environmental justifications.[2]Discography
Studio albums
Mozzy's studio albums chronicle his evolution in West Coast gangsta rap, emphasizing raw street narratives distributed primarily through independent labels like Mozzy Records and Empire. These projects distinguish themselves from his extensive mixtape output by featuring polished production, guest features from established artists, and commercial pushes that achieved Billboard charting. Key releases include Gangland Landlord (October 5, 2018, Mozzy Records/Empire), which marked his major-label debut equivalent and peaked at No. 57 on the Billboard 200,[89] followed by Beyond Bulletproof (April 30, 2020, Mozzy Records/Empire), his highest-charting at the time in the Top 50.[90] Subsequent albums built on this momentum amid legal challenges. Occupational Hazard (February 2021, Mozzy Records/EMPIRE) addressed survival themes,[91] while Untreated Trauma (September 17, 2021, Mozzy Records/EMPIRE) debuted at No. 19 on the Billboard 200, reflecting introspective content on personal losses.[92] Survivor's Guilt (2022, Collective Music Group/Empire) shifted to Yo Gotti's CMG imprint post-signing, incorporating trap influences,[91] and Children of the Slums (April 19, 2024, Mozzy Records/Interscope) continued the catalog with slum-life motifs, becoming his seventh consecutive charting release.[93][94]| Title | Release date | Label(s) | Billboard 200 peak |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gangland Landlord | October 5, 2018 | Mozzy Records/Empire | 57 [89] |
| Beyond Bulletproof | April 30, 2020 | Mozzy Records/Empire | Top 50 [90] |
| Occupational Hazard | February 2021 | Mozzy Records/EMPIRE | — |
| Untreated Trauma | September 17, 2021 | Mozzy Records/EMPIRE | 19 |
| Survivor's Guilt | 2022 | Collective Music Group/Empire | — [91] |
| Children of the Slums | April 19, 2024 | Mozzy Records/Interscope | — [94] |