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Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
Entertainment
Gerrick D. Kennedy

At Coachella, the future of rap is female

At the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival, hip-hop has most certainly reigned supreme.

But two weeks of catching sets in the desert confirmed one thing: The future of rap is female.

Femcees by and large one-upped the boys during the first weekend, and on the second weekend it too seemed like the fest would be led by women.

Take the jazz- and funk-soaked hip-hop of Tank and the Bangas, which moved the intimate Gobi tent in ways main stage acts could only dream of.

The New Orleans collective, led by frontwoman Tarriona "Tank" Ball, shined with a rapturous fusion of spoken word, soul, funk and storytelling.

Ball is as nimble a lyricist as she is a vocalist, with a malleable voice that's powerful in its command. One moment she's unpacking sinewy couplets and rhymes with fury and the next she's wailing like she's at a church revival.

As the band navigated through the classic soul grooves, hard hip-hop and stacked jazz arrangements of its debut "Think Tank," Ball's vocals provided the compass, even when she stepped aside to ad lib lines as backing vocalists Anjelika "Jelly" Joseph and Kayla Buggage dialed up the sweet harmonies.

Princess Nokia, like Tank and the Bangas, resides on the fringe of what's getting major mainstream attention at the moment.

Fresh off the release of her stellar mixtape "A Girl Cried Red," the New York rapper was one of the more interesting emcees on this year's bill.

She's a versatile, imaginative talent with a knack for shape shifting. At Coachella, she delivered a set that was steeped in East Coast rap, bounce, emo, noise-rap and house that offered a strong counter to the more traditional showmanship from ladies like Kamaiyah and Dej Loaf.

Kamaiyah continues to be a scene stealer with her eclectic and energetic mix of wistful '90s-inspired hip-hop and R&B. The Oakland rapper's charismatic presence makes her a captivating watch, and she's a far more commanding emcee than a lot of the other club rappers punctuating the bill (watching her over Migos was a wise decision).

However, the weekend's biggest draw on the rap front was newly minted superstar Cardi B.

Her Coachella showing was the second leg of her ongoing victory lap. She just made history as the first female rapper to have a No.1 album since Nicki Minaj did so in 2014 with her catchy, smartly produced debut "Invasion of Privacy."

She came dressed like the late Left Eye from TLC _ a nod to a sadly bygone era where scores of female emcees were getting mainstream attention _ and tore through a set that paid homage to her stripping days while showing exactly why she's the year's star to watch (being heavily pregnant didn't stop her from twerking during much of her spirited show).

There's a reason Chance the Rapper, G-Eazy, YG and Kehlani all came to play with Cardi during Week 1, and that's because there was far more buzz about her than anyone not named Beyonce. And that's quite a feat, given Eminem is closing the festival.

It's unsurprising that hip-hop dominated this year's bill, given the genre's prominence and cultural influence that's seen institutions like Broadway, the Grammys and the Pulitzer Prizes be disrupted. But with women in the genre having a creative renaissance, it only made sense that a festival bill would reflect that.

Thankfully, Coachella did, and the ladies have more than delivered.

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