

She talked about guns, money and cocaine, and assaulting her enemies - or more exactly, turning them into some macaroni. On it, the frail and young lady had changed her attitude: she had become aggressive.

Released in 2014, its success had been amplified when Drake had mentioned it on Instagram. The sudden promotion of the rapper had a reason: "Try Me". Two or three years later, though, Dej Loaf – whose stage name came from her passion for loafers – had joined Columbia Records, she rapped alongside her city's superstar, Eminem, on his Shady XV compilation, she earned a place in the 2015 promotion of XXL's Freshmen, and she was touring with Nicki Minaj. As a result, she was fated to stay for a long time in the underground.

The young woman, who by then had a unisex style, was on the introspective side of hip-hop, and her beats had an undeniable boom bap flavor. Released in 2012 and titled Just Do It, Deja Trimble's first mixtape was loyal to the well-established backpacker tradition in Detroit.
