Arts·Q with Tom Power

Baby Gravy on the evolution of their friendship — from a SoundCloud DM to viral success

Rappers Yung Gravy and bbno$ (collectively known as Baby Gravy) sit down with Q's Tom Power to talk about their new album, Baby Gravy 3, and how they've been supporting each other from day one.

Rappers Yung Gravy and bbno$ are back with a new album, Baby Gravy 3

Two men, rappers Yung Gravy and bbno$, wearing headphones and sitting in front of studio microphones.
Yung Gravy and bbno$ in the Q studio in Toronto. (Vivian Rashotte/CBC)

Siegfried and Roy, Mario and Luigi, Penn and Teller — those are a few of the most iconic duos of all time, but we're here to put you on to another one.

American rapper Yung Gravy and Canadian rapper bbno$ (pronounced "baby no money"), collectively known as Baby Gravy, are two huge artists in their own right who've just released their third album as a duo, Baby Gravy 3.

In an interview with Q's Tom Power, Baby Gravy talk about their music, friendship, and why TikTok and SoundCloud aren't just a new frontier for hip-hop, but the primary way artists meet their collaborators.

Baby Gravy's story starts way before either of them had money, success or a following. They first linked up about seven years ago through SoundCloud.

"He slid into my SoundCloud DMs and I had not been rapping for very long," says Yung Gravy, whose real name is Matt Hauri.

"I really liked his music and I knew it would blow up," adds bbno$, also known as Alex Gumuchian. "I just heard it and I was like, 'This is the most original nonsense I've ever heard in my life — it's great.' And we just became friends. He knew how to say my name before anyone else."

In May 2017, Yung Gravy's song Mr. Clean became a viral hit on social media. "They were putting it on sports videos and meme compilations and stuff, and it just randomly went up a lot," he says. "I was getting like 1,000 followers a day and at that point that was so crazy to us. I was calling [bbno$] and I was mind-blown."

WATCH | Baby Gravy's interview with Tom Power:

At that time, bbno$ had a day job as a busser at Steamworks in Vancouver. 

"I just remember [Yung Gravy] texting me being like, 'Dude, every time I open up Instagram, I'm getting 1,000 followers,'" he says. "I just remember looking at that text being like, 'Dude, he's blowing up. That's crazy!' And after that, I had a bunch of music ready with him and I was like, 'OK, well now's my shot. Like I need to stop partying and going out.' So I just went apesh-t for two years.

"He brought me on a bunch of tours and it was more like a slow, organic, just normal slope. And then Lalala — I dropped it on June 7, [2019] — and it immediately went gangbusters viral, and that was like a real parabolic slope for my career."

But compared to the artists that blow up on TikTok these days, Yung Gravy says they both had a "slow, normal slope" to the top. Their partnership has always been based on a genuine connection, rather than money. 

"There was no business even to be had, so it was just friendship," says Yung Gravy.

The full interview with Yung Gravy and bbno$ is available on our podcast, Q with Tom Power. Listen and subscribe wherever you get your podcasts.


Interview with Yung Gravy and bbno$ produced by Vanessa Nigro.

For more stories about the 50th anniversary of hip-hop — including Tom Power's conversations with some of the artists who witnessed and shaped the genre — check out Hip-Hop at 50 here.

A banner featuring Saweetie, Wyclef Jean, Michie Mee, Charmaine, Yung Gravy, bbno$ and Maestro Fresh Wes, with the words "Hip-Hop at 50" included on top.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Vivian Rashotte is a digital producer, writer and photographer for Q with Tom Power. She's also a visual artist. You can reach her at vivian.rashotte@cbc.ca.