Lil Dee arrives with the Bloody Noses EP as part of an orbit that connects to Black Soprano Family without being formally labeled as such. The project title and the aesthetic context place it in familiar territory — gritty, street-centered rap aligned with the BSF and Griselda adjacent sound that has defined a broad swath of the current underground. As an EP without a detailed promotional rollout, Bloody Noses functions as a direct document: whatever is in the grooves is the argument. For listeners already inside the BSF ecosystem, Lil Dee's output has been consistent enough to warrant attention. For those encountering him here for the first time, the short format is a low-commitment entry point.
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