Marcel Winatschek

Reezy’s Feueremoji

Reezy’s Feueremoji with Bausa has been running in the background for a while. The whole thing sits in this chillhop-and-trap zone—production that’s deliberate about not trying too hard. The songs are about expensive clothes and food, success and future anxiety, all delivered with the same flat confidence. Zombies, John Schnee, High Class Street Fashion—they follow the same blueprint, and it works because nothing is reaching.

I used to dismiss German rap without really listening to it. Something about the accent or the cultural context made it easy to check out. But that’s lazy. Reezy and Bausa clearly stopped caring about proving anything to anyone a long time ago. The mixtape doesn’t announce itself or try to convince you—it just sits there and stays in your head, which is harder than it sounds.

There’s nothing flashy about it. It’s just solid.