(Columbia Records)The young
Las Vegas rapper, a protege of Kendrick Lamar, has a gift for vocal melody that promises so much to come

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Like a pre-costume superhero learning to control the lightning that pours from his hands, this electric display of youthful mic prowess from the 21-year-old Las Vegas
Rapper makes for arguably the genre’s best album this year. The lyricism is about what’s newly and immediately in front of him, whether it’s
Women, money or his own skill. Complicating the spunk and braggadocio, the dominant theme is his desire for trust in a romantic partner, or indeed anyone; the naive tenor of a line like “I feel like everyone I meet confuse my heart” reveals one foot still in childhood.
The mentor figure in his coming-of-age tale is Kendrick Lamar, and their track Family Ties has been nominated for two
Grammys (Keem is also up for best new artist), but their other collaboration Range Brothers is even better: “Every day, the hate restored and the faith get short,” Lamar warns in a lofty treatise on fame. Keem bats him away: “Fuck that, let me get some too!”