Rapsody
Marlanna Evans (born January 21, 1983), known professionally as Rapsody, is an American rapper from Snow Hill, North Carolina.[1] She developed an early interest in hip-hop during her college years and rose to prominence through mixtapes and collaborations, particularly after aligning with producer 9th Wonder's Jamla Records imprint.[2] Rapsody has earned acclaim for her intricate lyricism, storytelling, and avoidance of mainstream hip-hop tropes emphasizing sexuality, instead focusing on substantive themes in albums such as Laila's Wisdom (2017), which garnered Grammy nominations for Best Rap Album and Best Rap Song, and Eve (2019).[3] In 2025, she secured her first Grammy Award for Best Melodic Rap Performance at the 67th Annual Grammy Awards.[4] Her work often addresses social issues like racism and sexism in hip-hop, challenging gendered expectations for female emcees.[5]Early life and education
Upbringing and family influences
Marlanna Evans, known professionally as Rapsody, was born on January 21, 1983, in Snow Hill, North Carolina, a small rural town of approximately 2,000 residents in the Coastal Plains region, characterized by tobacco farms, churches, and limited cultural outlets.[6][7] She grew up in a large extended family, including four siblings—older sister Kenyatta, younger brother Mark, and two others—as well as numerous aunts, uncles, and cousins who functioned as close-knit support networks.[6] Her father, Roy Evans, worked as a mechanic at the DuPont plant in nearby Kinston, providing a model of steady blue-collar labor, while her mother, Margaret, held multiple industrial jobs at facilities like Snow Hill Tape and Lenox China, balancing practicality with an underlying artistic sensibility.[6] The family adhered to Jehovah's Witness beliefs, which instilled a framework of discipline and community orientation during Evans' formative years.[6] Parents and elders emphasized self-reliance through encouragement of independent decision-making, alongside core values of resilience, self-love, and honesty, fostering an environment where personal accountability superseded external dependencies.[6] Evans was active in school, earning popularity as homecoming queen and excelling as a star guard in basketball, traits that reflected her observant and determined nature amid a setting with sparse early exposure to urban cultural elements like hip-hop.[6][8] A pivotal family influence was her maternal grandmother, Laila Ray, a wise figure whose teachings on timely appreciation—"give me my flowers while I can still smell them"—shaped Evans' worldview and later artistic tributes, underscoring intergenerational transmission of pragmatic wisdom over abstract ideals.[6][9] Her maternal grandfather, Nathaniel "Nay Ray" Ray, complemented this with storytelling and entrepreneurial examples, reinforcing family narratives of perseverance in a modest, agrarian context.[6] These dynamics prioritized intrinsic strengths and familial bonds, distinguishing Evans' pre-college foundation from broader socioeconomic narratives often projected onto similar rural upbringings.[6]College years and initial musical exposure
Rapsody, born Marlanna Evans, enrolled at North Carolina State University in the early 2000s, where she pursued studies amid emerging musical interests. During this period, she joined the campus hip-hop collective H2O, a student organization comprising around 20 members dedicated to fostering hip-hop culture through freestyles, battles, and collaborative sessions.[10][11] This involvement marked her initial organized exposure to rap, as she had not rapped prior to college but quickly honed skills via on-campus cyphers and performances, prioritizing technical proficiency in rhyme schemes and delivery over thematic or ideological framing.[12] From H2O's core group of four to five active participants, Evans contributed to the spinoff ensemble Kooley High, formed around 2004 to channel group energies into structured recording and live shows.[11][9] These early endeavors included producing demo tracks and performing at local Raleigh events, which facilitated merit-driven connections, such as encountering producer 9th Wonder through shared networks in North Carolina's burgeoning hip-hop scene.[13][14] Kooley High's activities helped cultivate a grassroots rap presence at NC State, emphasizing consistent practice and group synergy as foundational to skill development.[13] Throughout her university tenure, Evans balanced academic coursework—initially leaning toward fields like finance—with music pursuits, demonstrating disciplined time management that sustained her persistence amid competing demands.[6] This dual focus underscored a pragmatic approach, where musical growth emerged from iterative refinement in campus settings rather than immediate professional pivots, laying empirical groundwork for later transitions.[8]Musical career
Group beginnings and early collaborations
Rapsody began her hip-hop career in the mid-2000s as a founding member of Kooley High, a Raleigh, North Carolina-based collective that evolved from the earlier group H2O after its members connected with producer 9th Wonder in 2004. This partnership introduced soul-infused beats and collaborative songwriting, allowing Rapsody to develop her lyrical delivery within a group dynamic focused on regional storytelling and technical precision rather than solo spotlight. Kooley High's early output included the 2007 mixtape Kooley High Presents... Raleigh's Finest, where Rapsody contributed verses emphasizing intricate rhyme schemes and group chemistry.[15] The collective followed with The Summer Sessions EP in 2008, featuring tracks like "The Flow" produced by 9th Wonder, which highlighted Rapsody's role in blending aggressive flows with melodic hooks amid ensemble performances. These releases, distributed through independent channels and local North Carolina circuits, underscored grassroots efforts without reliance on major label support, prioritizing skill-building through repeated live sets and tape trades in the regional scene. Rapsody remained active with Kooley High until approximately 2008, using the platform to refine her craft via shared production sessions and features.[16][17] Parallel to group work, Rapsody's early collaborations with 9th Wonder extended to her feature debut on his 2007 compilation The Dream Merchant Vol. 2, marking an initial bridge from collective projects to broader producer-artist alliances. This synergy foreshadowed ties to 9th Wonder's independent framework, which coalesced into Jamla Records by early 2009, emphasizing organic artist development over corporate mechanisms. Such partnerships honed her technical prowess through iterative recording and local venue appearances in North Carolina, establishing a foundation distinct from mainstream hip-hop trajectories.[18]Solo mixtape era and Jamla Records affiliation
Rapsody launched her solo career in 2010 after prior group work with Kooley High, signing to Jamla Records, a boutique imprint founded by producer 9th Wonder under his It's a Wonderful World Music Group, which emphasized soulful, lyric-driven hip-hop production in contrast to prevailing mainstream trends favoring trap and commercial hooks.[19][20] Her debut solo mixtape, Return of the B-Girl, was released on December 7, 2010, featuring 19 tracks primarily produced by 9th Wonder and Ka$h of The Soul Council, with guest appearances including Rah Digga on "Win."[21][22] The project, distributed digitally via platforms like Bandcamp, showcased dense rhyme schemes over sampled beats but achieved limited commercial reach, typical of independent mixtapes reliant on underground downloads rather than physical sales or chart tracking, as streaming metrics were nascent and SoundScan did not yet equate streams to album equivalents until 2014.[23] In 2011, Rapsody continued her output with additional Jamla-backed projects, including For Everything, which reinforced her affiliation with the label's "Culture Over Everything" ethos and collaborative ecosystem involving in-house producers.[20] These releases built incremental buzz through niche circuits like regional shows and online hip-hop communities, where her technical prowess garnered respect among purists, though broader exposure remained constrained by the era's dominance of radio-friendly acts and the absence of algorithmic promotion on emerging platforms. Jamla's small-scale operations, prioritizing artistic control over mass marketing, positioned Rapsody as a fixture in lyrical rap's independent sphere, with early works amassing modest digital plays—far below mainstream thresholds—but fostering a dedicated following via word-of-mouth and features in outlets like INDY Week.[24][20] The mixtape era highlighted challenges of niche appeal in a commercializing genre, where empirical data from the time shows underground rap projects like Rapsody's generating under 100,000 initial streams or downloads without major label backing, underscoring reliance on live performances and producer networks for sustainability rather than scalable revenue models.[25] This phase laid groundwork for her evolution, emphasizing self-produced experimentation and Jamla's role in nurturing talent outside pop-rap's orbit, without overlapping into later major-label ventures.[19]Roc Nation signing and breakthrough albums
In July 2016, Rapsody entered into a joint venture with Jay-Z's Roc Nation, announced onstage at the Brooklyn Hip-Hop Festival on July 16, positioning her as the first female rapper signed to the label while retaining her Jamla Records ties.[26][27] This deal expanded her reach beyond independent circuits, enabling collaborations with elite lyricists and amplifying production resources grounded in her established technical foundation rather than preferential initiatives. The partnership yielded Laila's Wisdom, released September 22, 2017, via Jamla and Roc Nation, as her inaugural major-label effort. Featuring Kendrick Lamar on "Power"—a track born from prior mutual respect for intricate bars—the album showcased alliances forged on shared mastery of hip-hop fundamentals.[28][29] It secured Grammy nominations for Best Rap Album and Best Rap Song ("Sassy") at the 2018 awards, metrics of substantive peer endorsement amid a field dominated by commercial heavyweights.[3] Building on this momentum, Eve followed on August 23, 2019, a conceptually driven project framing 16 tracks as odes to pivotal Black women like Sojourner Truth and Michelle Obama, with guest spots from D'Angelo, J. Cole, and GZA underscoring narrative cohesion over sporadic features.[30] The Roc Nation infrastructure facilitated such targeted pairings, elevating Rapsody's profile through verifiable artistic output rather than market-driven optics, though commercial peaks remained modest compared to genre mainstreams. This era marked her transition to broader validation via sustained lyrical rigor and strategic affiliations.Recent albums and ongoing projects
Rapsody released her fourth studio album, Please Don't Cry, on May 17, 2024, marking her first full-length project in nearly five years since Eve in 2019. Issued through Jamla Records and Roc Nation, the 22-track album features guest appearances from Erykah Badu, Lil Wayne, PJ Morton, and Phylicia Rashad, among others, and emphasizes introspective themes of emotional vulnerability, self-examination, and resilience amid personal hardships.[31][32][33] In 2025, she partnered with producer Madlib for the collaborative EP MadRaps, issued as a single on June 19 via Jamla and Roc Nation, with a vinyl edition following on August 11. The two-track release, comprising "Daddy's Girl" and "Avon Thru The Wire," incorporates boom bap production with soul and jazz elements, highlighting Rapsody's lyrical introspection over Madlib's signature beats.[34][35][36] Accompanying promotions noted her ongoing development of a subsequent full-length album.[37] Tracks from Please Don't Cry garnered recognition at the 67th Annual Grammy Awards on February 2, 2025, where "3:AM" featuring Erykah Badu secured Rapsody's first Grammy win for Best Melodic Rap Performance, alongside a nomination for Best Rap Song for "Asteroids" produced by Hit-Boy.[38][39] These accolades underscore her sustained critical traction in a streaming-dominated landscape, where she maintains output through Roc Nation affiliations while prioritizing lyrical depth over viral metrics. She continued live engagements, including a performance tributing Queen Latifah at the 2023 Kennedy Center Honors.[40]Artistry and influences
Lyrical style and production approach
Rapsody's lyrical style emphasizes dense, intricate rhyme schemes, including internal and multisyllabic patterns that prioritize technical precision over simplistic end-rhymes. Her verses often feature layered wordplay and storytelling, drawing from golden-era influences such as Nas, whose narrative depth and complex flows inform her approach to crafting vivid, character-driven sequences without relying on filler.[41] This results in annotations on platforms like Genius highlighting her elevated lyricism, with tracks exhibiting higher complexity in rhyme density compared to many mainstream contemporaries, as evidenced by critical dissections of albums like Eve (2019).[42] In delivery, Rapsody demonstrates versatility, shifting from aggressive, rapid pacing in freestyles—such as her 2012 Return of the B-Girl cypher appearances—to more contemplative cadences on album cuts, allowing emphasis on phonetic interplay and breath control.[43] This adaptability stems from her emphasis on writing as a deliberate craft, where she revises for rhythmic efficacy, akin to poetic revision processes rather than impromptu bravado.[43] Her production approach historically centers on collaborations with 9th Wonder, whose beats rely on soul-sampled loops flipped with originality, sourcing obscure records from artists like Al Green and Curtis Mayfield to create warm, bass-heavy backdrops that complement her dense flows.[10][44] Tracks like "Ibtihaj" (2019) exemplify this, interpolating vintage soul elements while clearing samples meticulously to avoid legal pitfalls common in sample-heavy production.[45] Though she has diversified producers post-Jamla Records, the foundational soul-infused aesthetic persists, prioritizing instrumental restraint to foreground lyrical content over bombastic effects.[46]Thematic content and philosophical outlook
Rapsody's lyrics frequently emphasize empowerment for women in hip-hop, positioning personal agency and skill as antidotes to industry gatekeeping by established male figures. In addressing Jermaine Dupri's 2019 comments that equated contemporary female rappers with "strippers rapping" and questioned their lyrical depth, Rapsody countered by defending stylistic variety among women artists, arguing that diverse expressions—from conscious lyricism to other forms—should not be dismissed under monolithic expectations.[47][48] This stance reflects a broader motif in her work, as explored in the 2019 album Eve, where tracks honor historical Black female figures to underscore self-determination over external validation.[49] Central to her philosophical outlook is a commitment to individual accountability and self-examination, often prioritizing causal introspection over undifferentiated collective narratives. On the 2024 album Please Don't Cry, Rapsody discloses a regretted abortion, framing it as a pivotal regret that demands ongoing personal reckoning and evolution, rather than deflection to societal pressures alone. This approach extends to themes of healing from relational and health challenges, such as her diagnosis with Graves' disease, where lyrics stress internal resilience and ethical self-confrontation amid life's complexities.[50][51] Her engagement with systemic injustices, including police brutality, integrates hip-hop's activist roots without succumbing to trend-driven recency. The 2020 single "12 Problems" dissects intertwined issues like the War on Drugs, the prison industrial complex, and law enforcement violence against Black Americans, with proceeds directed to civil rights organizations, yet this builds on pre-2020 works like Laila's Wisdom (2017), which wove social critique into narratives of self-confidence and legacy from her upbringing.[52][53][54] Underpinning these motifs is a philosophy valuing lyrical authenticity and craftsmanship over ephemeral viral appeal, rooted in hip-hop's core tenets. Rapsody's mantra of "Culture Over Everything" advocates fidelity to the genre's foundational elements—storytelling, dexterity, and sincerity—eschewing market-driven conformity for substantive expression that sustains long-term impact.[49][55] This contrasts with broader hip-hop trends favoring spectacle, as her consistent focus on race, womanhood, and personal ethics demonstrates a deliberate prioritization of enduring truth over transient popularity.[56]Reception and impact
Critical acclaim and awards
Rapsody's work has been consistently praised by critics for its lyrical precision, thematic maturity, and cohesive production. Her 2017 album Laila's Wisdom received acclaim for its narrative depth and smooth execution, with XXL Magazine describing it as a "smooth, cohesive and powerfully insightful effort" that demonstrates her commitment to craft over commercial trends.[57] Similarly, Eve (2019) earned an 8.0 from Pitchfork, where Sheldon Pearce commended its structural unity and Rapsody's assured delivery across tracks honoring Black women's legacies.[30] The 2024 release Please Don't Cry drew further recognition for emotional candor, as the Associated Press noted its role in liberating Rapsody from personal constraints through raw vulnerability and strength.[33] Peer endorsements have reinforced her reputation, particularly through high-profile collaborations with Kendrick Lamar, including the track "Power" from Laila's Wisdom, where Pitchfork highlighted her unflinching examination of power dynamics alongside Lamar's verse.[58] Lamar's repeated features with her, dating back to To Pimp a Butterfly (2015), signal merit-based respect in hip-hop circles, positioning Rapsody as a rapper's rapper despite limited mainstream visibility.[3] In awards, Rapsody secured her first Grammy win at the 67th Annual Grammy Awards on February 2, 2025, for Best Melodic Rap Performance with "3:AM" featuring Erykah Badu.[59] She has earned multiple prior nominations, including Best Rap Album and Best Rap Song for Laila's Wisdom at the 60th Grammys (2018), where she was the sole female nominee in the album category;[3][60] Best Rap Album and Best Rap Song ("Oprah" featuring Leikeli47) for Eve at the 62nd Grammys (2020);[60] and Best Rap Song for "Asteroids" at the 67th Grammys.[60] At the BET Hip Hop Awards, she won Lyricist of the Year in 2020 and received a nomination for Best Female Hip-Hop Artist in 2025.[61][62]Commercial performance and market challenges
Rapsody's major releases have posted modest chart performances, underscoring her position as a critically respected but commercially niche artist in hip-hop. Her 2017 album Laila's Wisdom marked a relative breakthrough for her independent trajectory, peaking at number 18 on the Billboard Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart. Similarly, Eve (2019) reached number 76 on the Billboard 200 and number 42 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart, with subsequent projects like Please Don't Cry (2024) failing to crack the upper echelons amid broader industry shifts toward streaming over physical sales. These peaks contrast with blockbuster hip-hop releases, where top artists routinely debut in the top 10, highlighting Rapsody's reliance on dedicated fanbases rather than mass-market virality.[63] Streaming metrics show post-2020 growth aligning with genre-wide trends, as Rapsody has amassed over 362 million total plays across platforms by mid-2025, driven by playlist inclusions and collaborative features. However, this has not translated to equivalent album equivalent units, with female-led rap projects often underperforming in first-week sales compared to male counterparts—exemplified by debuts as low as 10,000 units for prominent releases despite high streaming volume. In hip-hop's commercial landscape, where algorithms prioritize hook-heavy, short-form content for viral spread on platforms like Spotify and TikTok, Rapsody's dense, narrative-driven style faces inherent discoverability hurdles, favoring sustainability through cult appeal over explosive mainstream penetration.[64][65] Her affiliation with Jamla Records in a joint venture with Roc Nation enables a hybrid revenue model emphasizing direct artist control and long-term viability over dependence on label advances or chart-driven hits. This approach, including initiatives like the "Proud 2 Pay" campaign for Please Don't Cry offering tiered fan-supported pricing, prioritizes loyal revenue streams from merchandise, tours, and digital ownership, mirroring strategies of self-sustained artists in a market where traditional sales have declined industry-wide. While female rappers collectively dominate streaming and cultural discourse, their lower conversion to blockbuster sales reflects structural dynamics in hip-hop, where male-dominated trap and pop-rap subgenres capture broader commercial dollars without invoking unsubstantiated claims of exclusionary bias.[66][67][68]Criticisms and debates in hip-hop discourse
In hip-hop discourse, Rapsody's prioritization of intricate lyricism and introspective themes has fueled debates over its mass-market limitations, with some participants attributing her subdued commercial footprint to a stylistic mismatch against dominant trap and party rap paradigms that emphasize hooks and immediacy over density. Online discussions, such as those on Reddit's r/hiphop101, highlight skepticism about her "overhyped" status relative to output, citing albums like Laila's Wisdom (2017) as solid but not transcendent, and features lacking the viral punch of peers.[69] A notable flashpoint emerged in July 2019 when producer Jermaine Dupri remarked that leading female rappers, including Cardi B and Nicki Minaj, deliver content resembling "strippers rapping" due to repetitive themes of sensuality over technical prowess, implicitly sidelining artists like Rapsody who favor substantive narratives. Rapsody countered in interviews, underscoring the need to elevate "real spitters" capable of profound bars amid industry biases toward spectacle, a stance echoed by peers like Snow Tha Product in rebuttals framing Dupri's view as misguided for overlooking lyrical diversity in women's rap.[70][71][72] Broader tensions in hip-hop pit "conscious" exponents like Rapsody—evident in tracks such as "12 Problems" (2020), which enumerates systemic barriers facing Black communities—against escapist party rap, with critics arguing the former's didactic edge can polarize by demanding engagement over entertainment, potentially capping crossover appeal in a genre increasingly stratified by algorithmic preferences for brevity and vibe. Rapsody has navigated this by positioning her work as culturally preservative rather than prescriptive, though discourse persists on whether such advocacy sustains elite regard without dominating charts.[73][74]Personal life
Relationships and self-reflection
Rapsody has maintained a high degree of privacy regarding her romantic relationships, with no confirmed long-term partners or children publicly documented as of 2024.[75] In her 2024 single "Stand Tall," she addresses longstanding speculation about her sexuality, confirming experiences including a past relationship with a woman while emphasizing personal authenticity over external labels.[76] [77] The track also explores mental health struggles, framing self-acceptance as a deliberate process amid public scrutiny.[78] Her fourth studio album, Please Don't Cry (released June 2024), marks a pivotal shift toward introspective vulnerability, serving as a "diary of healing" where Rapsody chronicles her journey toward self-love independent of romantic validation.[79] Tracks like "That One Time" delve into relational complexities, including an admitted affair with a married person and sexual experimentation, presented as lessons in emotional growth rather than sensational details.[50] She has expressed intent to increasingly embrace her birth name, Marlanna Evans, signaling a reclamation of personal identity beyond her stage persona.[79] This album contrasts earlier works by prioritizing individual agency and inner reconciliation over external narratives.[80] Family influences appear in her music as sources of wisdom and tribute, notably her grandmother "Laila," whose life lessons inspired the 2017 album Laila's Wisdom.[81] Rapsody has described this project as drawing from familial oral traditions, fostering self-examination without public disclosure of private dynamics.[49] Recent lyrics also reference family challenges, such as members facing dementia, integrated into broader themes of resilience and legacy.[82] Throughout her career, Rapsody has advocated for boundaries in sharing personal matters, using music selectively for catharsis while resisting invasive discourse, a stance that underscores her emphasis on agency in self-reflection.[82] This approach aligns with her lyrical evolution, where introspection serves personal evolution rather than public consumption.[80]Privacy and public persona
Rapsody has cultivated a public persona centered on artistic integrity and professional discipline, deliberately avoiding the sensationalism and overt self-promotion common in hip-hop culture. In interviews, she consistently redirects attention from personal anecdotes to her creative process and lyrical craftsmanship, positioning herself as a dedicated wordsmith rather than a figure reliant on controversy or extravagance for visibility. For instance, during a 2024 discussion with XXL Magazine, she emphasized her internal growth and commitment to authentic storytelling over external validations, stating that her focus remains on evolving as an artist amid industry pressures.[83] This restraint extends to minimal personal disclosures, with Rapsody historically shielding aspects of her private life from public scrutiny to prioritize her work ethic and output. Unlike many contemporaries who leverage tabloid-style revelations for relevance, she has maintained a low profile on romantic relationships and family matters, only selectively addressing them when tied to thematic explorations in her music. Her approach aligns with a "lyricist's lyricist" identity, reinforced through conversations where she highlights rigorous studio habits and influences like Nas and Common, rather than lifestyle flaunting.[84] On social media platforms like X (formerly Twitter), Rapsody's activity is predominantly promotional, sharing updates on releases such as her 2024 single "DND (It's Not Personal)" and tour announcements, while eschewing excessive personal narratives or activism-driven posts that could dilute her brand. This measured engagement contrasts with hip-hop's often extroverted digital norms, where artists amplify drama or political stances for algorithmic traction. She engages followers on music-centric content, fostering a community around her discography without inviting speculative intrusion.[85] Rapsody balances selective advocacy with this privacy, participating in targeted events that align with her values without overcommitting to public activism. In March 2025, she served as a guest speaker at Winston-Salem State University's Women's History Month celebration, titled "Ladies First: Women on the Rise," delivering insights on empowerment and resilience in hip-hop during the March 20 event at Dillard Auditorium. Such appearances underscore her restraint, focusing on inspirational discourse rather than performative or exhaustive campaigning, thereby preserving a persona defined by substance over spectacle.[2]Discography
Studio albums
Rapsody's debut studio album, The Idea of Beautiful, was released on August 28, 2012, via Jamla Records in collaboration with It's a Wonderful World Music Group. The project established her as an independent artist emphasizing intricate lyricism and collaborations with producers like 9th Wonder, marking an early conceptual exploration of beauty and motivation through hip-hop narratives.[86] It did not achieve notable positions on major Billboard charts, reflecting its grassroots distribution.[87] Her second studio album, Laila's Wisdom, arrived on September 22, 2017, distributed through Jamla Records and Roc Nation. Named in tribute to her grandmother, the album traces familial influences and life lessons, incorporating guest features to underscore themes of heritage and resilience without venturing into commercial pop structures.[3] It experienced limited commercial traction, with first-week sales under 1,000 units and no significant Billboard 200 entry, though it garnered industry recognition.[88] The third studio album, Eve, was issued on August 23, 2019, under Jamla Records.[89] Structured as a concept piece with tracks titled after influential Black women—such as Nina Simone, Aaliyah, and Serena Williams—it charts a progression in Rapsody's artistry toward celebratory archetypes of femininity and achievement, produced primarily by in-house collaborators.[90] The release peaked at number 76 on the Billboard 200 and number 42 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart.[63] Rapsody's fourth studio album, Please Don't Cry, debuted on May 17, 2024, via Jamla Records and Roc Nation.[63] This installment reflects personal evolution amid uncertainty, blending raw introspection with production from artists like S1 and Elmo, to document emotional unburdening in a post-tour phase of her career.[91] Like prior works, it lacked major certifications or top-tier chart dominance, aligning with her niche appeal in conscious rap.[92]| Album | Release date | Label(s) | Billboard 200 peak |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Idea of Beautiful | August 28, 2012 | Jamla / It's a Wonderful World | — |
| Laila's Wisdom | September 22, 2017 | Jamla / Roc Nation | — |
| Eve | August 23, 2019 | Jamla | 76 |
| Please Don't Cry | May 17, 2024 | Jamla / Roc Nation | — |