Pouya rose from Miami's DIY rap wave, turning early SoundCloud drops into a road-tested catalog. Post-Buffet Boys, his All But 6 chapter puts him in charge with a tight Miami crew.
Miami roots, Everglades mindset
He leans on rapid, melodic double-time over dark, bass-forward beats that sit low and mean. Expect anchor cuts like
Suicidal Thoughts in the Back of the Cadillac,
Void,
Florida Thang, and the collab
1000 Rounds.
What might make the cut
Crowds skew mixed in age, with skaters, hip-hop heads, and punk-rap fans sharing space and watching out for one another. One neat note: the album
Five Five nods to his height, and his 2019 tape
The South Got Something to Say borrowed its title from
OutKast. He and
Fat Nick first built momentum on YouTube before taking
Underground Underdog on the road for day-ones. Quick heads-up: details about the exact songs and stage look here are thoughtful guesses based on past shows, not promises.
Everglades Energy, City by City
How it looks and sounds around you
The scene blends Miami flavor with DIY grit: vintage Marlins caps, jorts, beat-up skate shoes, and thrifted tees next to a few gold fronts. People trade lines from
Suicidal Thoughts in the Back of the Cadillac between sets, then save lungs for the big hooks. You will hear a quick Pou-ya chant before he walks out, then tighter call-and-response on each drop.
Rituals that stick
Merch leans Everglades: gators, palms, airboats, and blocky fonts that nod to old Miami sports gear. Pits open and close fast, with folks up front keeping an eye on one another and passing water when the room gets dense. OGs nod to the
Five Five era while newer heads rep All But 6 designs without fuss about eras. Between songs,
Pouya keeps banter short and dry, often setting up the next track with a city shout and a grin.
Flow Mechanics and Bass That Bites
Flow first, flash second
Live,
Pouya's voice stays crisp at high speed, with syllables hitting like drums rather than a blur. He favors tight two-verse structures, then stretches a hook so the room carries it while the DJ rides the 808 tail. Arrangements stay minimal on purpose, leaving space for ad-libs and crowd shouts, and the beat will sometimes drop out so a short a cappella ramp can punch the return.
Little choices, big impact
Tempo pivots pop up often, with half-time flips turning a bounce into a heavy lurch that resets the pit. The DJ stitches older
Underground Underdog cuts to newer All But 6 joints, using eerie keys and Memphis-style snare rolls as glue. A small habit to watch: he cues breath spots by tossing the mic to the risers, then re-enters early, which keeps verses locked in even without stacked backing vocals. Lighting tracks the low end with swampy greens and quick strobes, but the music stays in front.
Why Pouya Fans Click With These Acts
Kindred energy
Fans of
Denzel Curry, another Miami force with bite and clarity, will recognize the same balance of rage and craft.
$uicideboy$ bring the bleak, 808-sunk mood and a community that grew up online into packed rooms.
Fat Nick overlaps through humor, South Florida slang, and the All But 6 family tree.
Ghostemane adds the industrial grime and snap-turn tempos that spark hard pits.
Shared crowds
If you like the live band edge from one and the cathartic chants from the other, this show lands squarely between those energies. All four prize crowd dialogue, with stark drops and stop-start beats that keep hands up and eyes front.