Despite Grammy Snubs, Black Women Dominated Rap in 2019

Our hot girl cup runneth over with an abundance of music that shows off Black female rappers’ prowess and power

Treva B Lindsey
ZORA

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Cardi B. Photo: Gary Miller/Getty Images

IIDGAF about what the Grammys say: 2019 was an epic year for Black women in rap music. This year felt like a throwback to an oft-cited golden era, in which quite a few Black women thrived in the rap game. Despite the Grammys foolishly and unsurprisingly overlooking the creativity, skill, and inventiveness of Black women in rap music, a rapidly growing audience is paying attention to the range of Black women rocking the mic.

Black women made their presence felt on magazine covers, highly anticipated mixtapes, and critically acclaimed albums. Newcomers and veterans alike cultivated new fans and reinvigorated a passion from some older ones. My hot girl cup runneth over.

FFor most of the first two decades of the 21st century, the dearth of women achieving widespread recognition in the rap game soured me on the culture. A “boys’ club” mentality anchored the coverage of women rapping. With the exception of Nicki Minaj, media outlets and mainstream audiences seemed to only pay attention to the boys. It felt like most blogs, websites, magazines, award shows, and radio and music channels only had the bandwidth to celebrate the…

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Treva B Lindsey
ZORA
Writer for

Professor, cultural critic, Black feminist, author of Colored No More: Reinventing Black Womanhood in Washington, D.C.