
The ache in Ray Vaughn’s voice cuts by way of the beat when he raps, particularly on songs like “Bastard” and “FLAT Shasta” from his newest Prime Dawg Leisure launch, The Good The Unhealthy The Greenback Menu, releasing right now.
A local of Lengthy Seashore, California, Vaughn was raised by a mom who struggled with substance abuse and psychological well being points. His father, though current in his life, didn’t reside in the identical family and, with seven kids, his mom had a troublesome time making ends meet. It was extra widespread to come back house to empty kitchen cupboards than to have a bounty of meals.
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Regardless of his circumstances, Vaughn managed to tug himself off the darkish path he was heading down and use his survival expertise to manifest a rap profession—and his lyrics mirror that. Largely autobiographical and, at instances, uncomfortable, every phrase he spits reveals a younger man affected by his previous however decided to have a greater future.
On this specific day, Vaughn is in New York, absorbing the chaos of town and reveling within the activity at hand—selling the EP. It’s a far cry from the place he was 5 years in the past, when he was dwelling in his automobile with nothing however expertise and a dream. In 2020, his life modified after touchdown a gathering with Prime Dawg Leisure CEO Anthony “Prime Dawg” Tiffith, who had found a number of the music Vaughn had been importing on-line. Impressed by what he heard, Tiffith signed him on the spot. Two weeks later, he had his personal home.

“It made me really feel like something is feasible,” he says. “After I bought signed, I used to be sleeping in a automobile with my daughter within the again. It didn’t change in a single day. It took like two weeks for me to get my first signing examine, however yeah, it simply made me be like, ‘OK, do you wish to work onerous sufficient so that you by no means have to return to that? As a result of you may simply return to sleeping in your automobile.”
It additionally gave him a wholesome quantity of worry. As he explains, “I at all times maintain my work mode turned on. It’s a blessing and a curse although. I’ll sacrifice time for my daughter as a result of I’ll be like, ‘Yeah I’m scared as fuck of going again to that automobile.’”
Armed with an iron-clad work ethic, Vaughn bought busy and pumped out his inaugural TDE undertaking, the three-track, eight-minute Peer Stress EP, in 2021 because the COVID-19 pandemic was nonetheless wreaking havoc on the globe. Acquainted themes of perseverance permeate every tune with lyrics like “I’m wealthy in spirit/Not gonna die broke” and “’Member days after I was on the bus cease/Now I’m ballin’, I ain’t bought a soar shot.”
It’s that vulnerability that makes him stand out although. Whereas a few of his friends are rapping about “bitches, baggage, and Bentleys,” he’s purging his trauma. On “FLAT shasta,” for instance, Vaughn divulges the excruciating reality about what it was like rising up with a mom who refused to get assist.

“Momma, I used to look at you rip-off and promote dope,” he raps on the tune. “However as of now I don’t know what to inform people once they ask me ’bout you/Realizing it’s been a pair months since we finished spoke/So I attempt to break the stress with a joke/Reality is…Momma you want meds for schizo however you received’t take it/In case you lose all of your marbles, you ain’t gone have none to play with.”
With every line, he will get increasingly more private to the purpose it’s unimaginable to not empathize with what he’s skilled.
“It’s like remedy for me nearly,” he says. “I don’t write for different individuals, I write for myself and individuals who resonate with it. They resonate with it as a result of if it’s actual, it’s actual. I’ve checked out each scenario I went by way of, like, ‘You ain’t the primary person who went by way of it, so determine it out.’”
However that doesn’t imply Vaughn doesn’t often present his age. At 29, he admits he will be “poisonous” at instances. There are many events the place he spits a couple of bars about his sexual conquests or boasts about being within the streets. Nonetheless, he agrees there’s an excessive amount of “gangster” and a necessity for therapeutic as of late.
“I’m sufficiently old to know higher however younger sufficient to not give a fuck,” he says. “Generally I don’t give a fuck and I’d make a silly remark. I’m youthful. I’m very humorous often after I’m not being critical. Ninety-nine p.c of the time, I’m humorous except it’s time to be about enterprise. However I do suppose we want that therapeutic within the music. I agree with all that completely. I’m sick of us speaking about, like, “Yo, let’s kill one another.”

Vaughn had a few individuals in his life who impressed him to pursue music as a substitute of varied nefarious actions. Like his stepfather, who would wake him up at 4 within the morning to rap for his pals to, as he places it, “flex” on them. His stepfather finally purchased him an outdated “massive booty” Mac laptop to begin recording. Whereas he stays grateful for many who inspired him alongside the best way, Vaughn is satisfied he would have wound up precisely the place he’s right now with out them.
“I used to be going to do it regardless, to be trustworthy with you,” Vaughn says. “I used to be like, ‘Something that may get me out of this home, out of this shit gap.’ If it wasn’t these individuals, it was going to be someone else. I’m a agency believer that that’s what God had for me. I figured if I don’t do that, I’m going to finish up a no one. I do know I’m gifted and good, however I didn’t know what else to do however rap. If I simply rap my manner by way of the whole lot, it’ll change the whole lot and that’s type of what I did.”
Concurrently, there’s a way he thinks he might be additional alongside in his profession contemplating it’s been 5 years since he signed the dotted line with TDE, the identical label that launched Kendrick Lamar into the stratosphere.
“I really feel like all people thinks they might be additional, however I used to be altered by COVID, so I give myself grace, as a result of if it wasn’t COVID, I’d be pulling my fucking hair out,” he confesses. “Everyone at all times says they might be additional, however if you happen to consider in God and divine timing, you’re like, “OK, I’m precisely the place I should be.’”
And thus far, that divine timing is proving to be fruitful. In June 2024, he was a part of Lamar’s “The Pop Out: Ken & Associates” live performance on the Kia Discussion board in Los Angeles, a defining second in his profession.
“It felt good,” he says of the present. “I used to be performing with Kendrick, ScHoolboy Q, Tyler, the Creator, those that I look as much as, so being on that scale was like, ‘Oh rattling.’ It simply solidified that I’m right here. It made it actual.”
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