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Lil Keed, Up-and-Coming Atlanta Rapper, Dies at 24

Lil Keed UpandComing Atlanta Rapper Dies at 24
The musician, a protégé of Young Thug, died on Friday in Los Angeles, his label said.
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Lil Keed, Up-and-Coming Atlanta Rapper, Dies at 24

The musician, a protégé of Young Thug, died on Friday in Los Angeles, his label said.

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Lil Keed chronicled his turbulent upbringing in the three-part mixtape series “Trapped on Cleveland.”
Lil Keed chronicled his turbulent upbringing in the three-part mixtape series “Trapped on Cleveland.”Credit...Diwang Valdez for The New York Times
Joe Coscarelli
May 14, 2022, 12:51 p.m. ET

Lil Keed, a budding, melodic rapper from Atlanta with a delicate voice that he often stretched into a helium-high, Auto-Tuned falsetto, died on Friday in Los Angeles. He was 24.

The musician’s death was confirmed on Saturday by a representative for his record label, 300 Entertainment, who did not specify a cause. Keed had been scheduled to perform at a music festival in Charlotte, N.C., on Saturday night.

Born Raqhid Jevon Render on March 16, 1998, Keed hailed from the neighborhood known as Cleveland Avenue, for its main thoroughfare, where southwest Atlanta meets the suburb of East Point in Fulton County. He chronicled his turbulent upbringing there, surrounded by poverty, drugs and violence in the three-part mixtape series “Trapped on Cleveland.” Its final installment was released in 2020.

“I dig deep into my story and let everybody see what I went through, how I came up, and give them an insight on my life,” he said in an interview with Complex at the time.

In 2018, Keed signed to 300 and Young Stoner Life Records, or YSL, under the tutelage of his mentor and melodic rapper Young Thug. Earlier this week, Young Thug and 27 others, including numerous rappers from the label, were charged in a major RICO indictment handed down by a grand jury in Fulton County. The indictment alleged that YSL was a criminal street gang responsible for murders, robberies, drug dealing and more.

Keed, who was not charged, responded in a graphic posted to social media that read: “YSL is a family, YSL is a label, YSL is a way of life, YSL is a lifestyle, YSL is not a gang.”

In 2020, Keed was named to XXL’s annual Freshman Class issue, a prominent launchpad for rappers, appearing on the magazine’s cover alongside acts like Jack Harlow and Fivio Foreign. The year prior, his breakout single, “Nameless,” a raunchy number with a singsong stickiness that became a regional radio hit and streaming success, had been certified gold. Having released seven full-length projects in two years, Keed worked widely with artists from his city and beyond, including Lil Yachty, Gunna, Future, Lil Uzi Vert and Roddy Ricch.

Keed’s brother and frequent collaborator, the rapper Lil Gotit, reacted to his death Friday night on Instagram. “I did all my cries,” he wrote. “I know what u want me to do and that’s go hard for Mama Daddy Our Brothers.” Keed is also survived by his daughter, Naychur, and his girlfriend, known as Quana Bandz. “What am I supposed to tell Naychur? What am I gone tell our new baby?” she posted.

Confident and winning, with a wide smile and an open-minded eagerness, Keed was frank about his ambition to grow beyond the often grim Southern street rap tales that first got him noticed. “I wanna be a megastar,” he said to XXL. “I don’t wanna be no superstar. I wanna be a megastar.”

Through his unlikely friendship with the advertising executive and motivational guru Gary Vaynerchuk, whom Keed name-dropped in song, the rapper nearly appeared in a 2019 Super Bowl commercial for Planters with Mr. Peanut and Alex Rodriguez. However, the role fell through. At a studio summit later that year, Vaynerchuk encouraged Keed to expand his presence on TikTok to reach new audiences.

“I’mma do this,” Keed said, energized by the advice. “And I’ll be like, he told me.”

His new music was starting to reflect that, Keed said. “Back then, I was talking about stuff like typical rappers: shooting, killing,” he told Complex of his beginnings, “because that’s what everybody wanted to hear.”

He continued, “I was just talking about the stuff that happened in the streets and stuff around me. Now that I done grew from all that and I done moved myself out of that situation, I’m letting folks know why I was so trapped on Cleveland, as far as me going to the hood every day and all the shootouts. I just had to move myself out of the situation to better myself and my family.”

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