A new voice in hip-hop is born in Hollow Profit, the creative moniker of Brody Lee Burke, whose latest track, “MORTAL MEN,” is nothing short of fierce commentary. In three or four minutes, Burke transforms pain into poetry, reflection into resistance, and memory into motivation. This is a reckoning. Executive produced by Be Franky and Katsuro (Alberto Salinas), “MORTAL MEN” feels like the type of track that doesn’t request to be played but demands it.
Running on a musical loop that feels equally haunted and restless, Hollow Profit aims at the tragedy of lives and stories that ended early, most tragically, within hip-hop’s blood-soaked history. From the ghosts of 2Pac and Biggie to the fresh wounds of Pop Smoke and King Von, the track celebrates, remembers, rebuilds, and dares to hope. “This is for the people who never got to grow old,” Hollow Profit says, his voice reverent. “We are present today and tomorrow, gone. Let’s form a better future with the time we want to have.” That call to arms has rarely seemed more pressing at a time when stories too often erase faces from the headlines. But “MORTAL MEN” rises with determination.
Burke taps into personal loss and weaves global grief with hometown heartbreak, resulting in something both intimate and universal. Listeners of Kendrick Lamar, Wu-Tang Clan, and MF DOOM will find familiar resonance in Hollow Profit’s flow, a combination of gritty truths, razor-sharp mind, and unwavering nerve. But Burke is finding his own lane. His storytelling is all about the now, and “MORTAL MEN” confirms he’s not just of but also for his generation. The video, directed by RoeKanuu (Nicholas Anderson), is out and looks likely to be just as powerful. Based on the song, it sounds like we are in for something unforgettable.