Biography
Veeze occupies an elusive yet indispensable role in Michigan’s rap ecosystem, functioning as a cryptic talent who assembled one of the genre’s most fervent audiences without issuing frequent solo work. His distinctive drowsy approach crystallized across the 2019 mixtape Navy Wavy and a limited series of early-2020s tracks, even while his influence stretched beyond recordings through regular appearances in the social orbits and videos of the area’s leading figures. The 2023 album Ganger delivered substantial critical notice along with placements on Billboard charts.
Arriving in 2019, Veeze stood out immediately through restrained vocals and wispy ad-libs, issuing the opening singles “Big Draco” and “Itself” before securing local traction with the singular “Rusty.” That momentum produced an especially active stretch encompassing fourteen singles and joint efforts, among them multiple collaborations with fellow Michigan fixture Babyface Ray on “Half & Half,” “Red Key,” and “Exotics.” His fluid, unforced version of the regional style appeared on the eleven-track Navy Wavy, which featured turns from local standouts Beno, Babyface Ray, and Peezy.
During the first years of the 2020s, Veeze remained visible in music videos and on social platforms while releasing intermittent features and solo cuts. He opened 2020 with scattered experiments—the sluggish “Them One Guys,” the Kanye West-reworked “Flamie Foxx,” and the Big Pun-sampling “Fat Albert”—before sharpening his area sound on the standalone releases “Veeze Glo,” “Yoa Twin,” and “Friend of Mine.” This measured pace extended through 2021 and 2022 with the gradual unveiling of tracks such as “A&W,” “Kurt Angle,” “Choppas in Hawaii,” and “Let It Fly.” The reduced output cultivated a more dedicated following, prompting several online outlets devoted to the rapper to attract their own audiences by assembling unreleased material first teased on social media.
In 2023 Veeze dropped one of his most prominent singles, “GOMD,” together with a Lil Uzi Vert remix. Both versions landed on the second Veeze album, Ganger, which also included appearances by Lucki and Lil Yachty and reached the Billboard 200.
Arriving in 2019, Veeze stood out immediately through restrained vocals and wispy ad-libs, issuing the opening singles “Big Draco” and “Itself” before securing local traction with the singular “Rusty.” That momentum produced an especially active stretch encompassing fourteen singles and joint efforts, among them multiple collaborations with fellow Michigan fixture Babyface Ray on “Half & Half,” “Red Key,” and “Exotics.” His fluid, unforced version of the regional style appeared on the eleven-track Navy Wavy, which featured turns from local standouts Beno, Babyface Ray, and Peezy.
During the first years of the 2020s, Veeze remained visible in music videos and on social platforms while releasing intermittent features and solo cuts. He opened 2020 with scattered experiments—the sluggish “Them One Guys,” the Kanye West-reworked “Flamie Foxx,” and the Big Pun-sampling “Fat Albert”—before sharpening his area sound on the standalone releases “Veeze Glo,” “Yoa Twin,” and “Friend of Mine.” This measured pace extended through 2021 and 2022 with the gradual unveiling of tracks such as “A&W,” “Kurt Angle,” “Choppas in Hawaii,” and “Let It Fly.” The reduced output cultivated a more dedicated following, prompting several online outlets devoted to the rapper to attract their own audiences by assembling unreleased material first teased on social media.
In 2023 Veeze dropped one of his most prominent singles, “GOMD,” together with a Lil Uzi Vert remix. Both versions landed on the second Veeze album, Ganger, which also included appearances by Lucki and Lil Yachty and reached the Billboard 200.
Albums
Singles
















