What to know about Doechii, Tampa’s Grammy winner and Swamp Princess

Doechii performs “Catfish” at Sunday’s Grammy Awards. The Tampa native later won best rap album for “Alligator Bites Never Heal.” Photo: Johnny Nunez/Getty Images for The Recording Academy

If you hadn’t heard of Doechii, you probably have now.

Why it matters: The Tampa-born rapper’s rising star went meteoric at Sunday’s Grammy Awards, when she became the third woman ever to win best rap album — and every Tampeño should know her story.

State of play: “Labels: Go to Tampa. There’s talent there,” the self-proclaimed Swamp Princess said in her acceptance speech, and soon the love was flowing both ways.

Catch up quick: Doechii, 26, broke through on TikTok with her 2020 single “Yucky Blucky Fruitcake,” which helped land her record deals with Top Dawg Entertainment and later, Capitol Records.

Flashback: Born Jaylah Hickmon, she grew up in a family of “country Southern people,” she told the Times. “Like, typical boiled peanuts, frozen cups, candy lady, pickled eggs.”

  • She changed her name in sixth grade after years of bullying, writing “I am Doechii” in her diary, she told Vulture in 2022. “Jaylah might’ve been getting bullied, but I decided Doechii wouldn’t stand for that s–t.”
  • She went to the arts magnet at Howard W. Blake High for choral singing and dabbled in choreography, jazz and guitar.

Between the lines: Her Floridian upbringing inspires her music — just look at the album that won her last night’s Grammy, “Alligator Bites Never Heal,” featuring Doechii on the cover with an albino alligator in her lap.

  • Gators, like Florida, are misunderstood, she told the Times. “Gators have become my favorite animal because people hate them so much. … They’re very intelligent animals and people don’t realize it.”
  • Another source of inspiration is the LGBTQ+ community and her own queerness, she wrote in Billboard last year for Pride month.

What she’s saying: “As a bisexual woman living in Tampa, Florida, during the early 2000s, I stood out from the perceived norm,” she wrote.

  • “My creative work is heavily influenced by both my Florida roots and the vibrant LGBTQ+ community … I draw inspiration from my memories of resilience and artistry of drag queens in Ybor City and the energy of ballroom culture in NYC.”

Fun fact: The albino alligator from her album cover is real, and her name is Coconut, the rapper told Variety in December.

What’s next: She’s working on an official debut solo album that’s set to release this year, she told Variety in December.

  • Hopefully, that means a tour with a stop in her hometown. Until then, give her new single “Nosebleeds” a listen.
  • “Stepped out the swamp to the motherf–kin’ stage,” she raps in the post-Grammy Awards surprise release. “Cut my mic off ’cause I’m ’bout to misbehave. ‘Will she ever lose?’ Man, I guess we’ll never know.”

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