If you know Staten Island, you know it doesn't make things easy for you. The borough has always had a complicated relationship with recognition. Wu-Tang Clan had to practically build their own mythology from scratch just to get people to listen, turning Staten Island into Shaolin because the real name wasn't enough on its own. That was the early nineties. The hunger hasn't changed much since.
Zy Smoke is 22, from Mariners Harbor, and he's working with that same hunger.
On an island where nothing comes easy, that kind of loyalty means something. "Staten Island raised me with that underdog mentality," Zy Smoke said.
"We're part of New York City, but are always overlooked. That hunger is in my sound, the pain, the pride, the grind. It taught me you have to create your own light when the world doesn't give it to you." He's been creating it since he started taking music seriously a few years back, after linking with his producer Giovanni Gambino. Before that, the path wasn't straight.
Zy Smoke was a choirboy growing up, singing in church every Sunday. Then, at seven years old, a car hit him and kept driving, leaving him on the pavement with a story that would take years to understand. By fifteen, he was in the kind of trouble that closes doors for good. He came through it. "It was a really bad situation," he said about the accident. "And that makes me go extra hard."
What makes Smoke worth watching is the absence of noise. No overstatement. No chase for trends. No features carry the weight for him. He builds from real life and lets the record do the talking. In a borough that's always had to prove itself to the rest of the city, that approach fits. Staten Island artists don't get the benefit of the doubt. You earn it, or you don't get it.
Smoke's been earning it one release at a time. "Vibey Nights" was a late-night anthem with moody production and melodic hooks that stuck around long after the song ended. "From Staten Island Blocks to Lagos Waves" opened with that familiar New York tension before pivoting into something warmer, the kind of move that could easily fall apart and instead landed fluidly. "Liquid Fire" dropped as a solid record connecting with people who needed it.
Most recently, he dropped "Night Shift Halo." The video was shot in the rain in New York at night, which is pretty much exactly how this music sounds in your head when you close your eyes. There's a moment in it where Jesus reaches for his hand before he falls. He didn't put that in for effect. That's just what the song called for. "The night shift is the grind, the darkness, the lonely hours when nobody sees you working," Zy said. "The halo is God's light still shining on you even in the middle of it all."
A kid from Mariners Harbor, church choir to the streets to the studio, building a catalogue that's reaching France, Latin America, and everywhere in between without a single hand to him. The vision feels organic, driven by creative ambition rather than trend-chasing. Wu-Tang made the world respect Staten Island once.
Zy Smoke is reminding them it was never just one borough, one sound, or one generation.
Listen to the track below now on all major streaming platforms.
Connect with Zy Smoke: Instagram