Home STAY IN CLIP Bazbaz and Osirus Jack 667 are orbiting — in satellite mode!

Bazbaz and Osirus Jack 667 are orbiting — in satellite mode!

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Bazbaz is carving out a truly unique path. He made his debut with a freestyle on Générations FM that immediately put him on the radar of rap enthusiasts. What followed was only natural: the artist dropped a series of Agaccu freestyles before releasing his very first EP, Synopsis.

As Kaaris once said about Bosh after their collaboration: “The word dirty is too clean for him.” Bazbaz dives fearlessly into the depths of the streets, reviving a raw street rap and gangsta rap sound that the industry has often watered down under commercial pressures. His EP features collaborations with Mister You, Rémy, and Alkpote — a powerful lineup of artists, each bringing their own unapologetic, distinctive vision of rap.

Now making a strong return, Bazbaz teams up for a standout collaboration with Osirus Jack 667, a member of Freeze Corleone’s esoteric collective. Both musically and aesthetically, the connection is clear: dark, unfiltered, and raw.

Bazbaz and Osirus Jack 667 are orbiting — in satellite mode!

The production is handled by Adel Tagmi, a mysterious beatmaker still relatively unknown on Genius. Driven by an haunting sample and sharp, rapid basslines, the track embraces a minimalist structure, giving Bazbaz the perfect space to unleash a raw, stripped-down flow.

Bazbaz drops some hard-hitting references:

“In my life, I’ve lived through season 47, I’m on episode 6 (Wow)
I’ve already seen tapes drop and a brother end up at trial
They’re traitors, they wanna know the price of the cuenta (gotta sink the Honda)
I’m on the frontline like Jean-Philippe Mateta

And continues by throwing punches at the industry:

“Fuck rap, bro, it’s crashing down (it’s crashing down), too many Barbies and Pocahontas (fuck, fuck)
End of the cycle, son, we’re deep in it (we’re deep in it), yellow book, puffing a dodu (shit)”

The visual accompaniment moves between luxury cars and a dark, film-noir vibe. Staying true to the raw essence of drill — originally rooted in gang culture — the clip captures that energy with precision. Directed by Moctar à la Réal and produced by TDLR Music and 667, the project sees Moctar further refine his visual signature, following Bazbaz since his Agaccu 4 and 5 freestyles.

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