In “Texture,” Buddha explores what it really means to feel life—the roughness of struggle, the smoothness of resilience, and the layers of emotions that come with surviving your environment. He speaks on growing up in single-mom households, the daily decisions made just to get by, and the pressure to conform versus the freedom in being unapologetically real.
Visually, it’s powerful. You see different walks of life connected through shared pain, hustle, and heart. It’s street poetry mixed with raw visuals that paint the picture of a generation learning to embrace their flaws and scars as part of their texture. Brick Citi Buddha isn’t out here chasing clout—he’s documenting real life and giving voice to the unseen and unheard.
This one’s for the folks who live it, breathe it, and are finally ready to own every part of their story. Press play and let “Texture” remind you what truth in hip-hop really looks like.
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