Feed The Streets

Album: yet to be titled (2025)
Charted: 86
Play Video

Songfacts®:

  • On "Feed The Streets" Rod Wave frames himself as someone who still "feeds" the world he came from even after making it out.
  • Derek "Uncle Dee" Lane, Rod Wave's uncle, was both family and business mentor, helping move Rod to Atlanta and get him signed to Alamo. He also guided, managed, and provided stability during some of the most turbulent times in Rod's life, especially when his father was incarcerated. Rod Wave confirmed Uncle Dee's passing on July 3, 2024; he paid tribute on his track "Last Lap."

    "Feed The Streets" opens with Wave processing his uncle's death in the same breath as "the Glock lost Dolph," a reference to Key Glock's grief after his cousin and mentor Young Dolph was murdered in 2021. The reference establishes the song's mood of survivor's guilt, a recurring theme throughout his catalogue and one that also shadows reflective tracks like "Tombstone," where success feels less like a celebration and more like a nervous glance over the shoulder.
  • The chorus pivots around the phrase "feed the streets," which functions simultaneously as a reference to Wave's hustling past, his present-day financial support for family and community, and his role as an artist transforming trauma into something his audience can consume.
  • Throughout the verses, Wave leans into themes of loyalty, paranoia, and responsibility. Fame, in his telling, isn't a golden exit door but a reinforced glass ceiling; it raises him up while increasing the pressure from every direction. He also casts himself as an accidental spokesperson for younger listeners, rapping about attempts to guide his generation while older figures bristle at the scale of his influence. It's the familiar Rod Wave paradox: a reluctant mentor who sounds like he'd much rather still be the student.
  • The track rests on a piano-led, 808-heavy backdrop crafted by:

    Southern trap producer Klutchfrenchie, whose résumé includes street rap releases for artists like Dee Mula and YTB Fatt.

    Atlanta-based producer Chi Chi, a frequent collaborator with Lil Baby, including the hits "On Me" and "Hats Off."

    Longtime Wave engineer Travis Harrington. Raised in Atlanta, Georgia, Harrington began engineering for Rod Wave in 2018 when they first met at 11th Street Studios in Atlanta during the period leading up to Wave's 2019 mixtape PTSD.
  • The music video, directed by Cam Grey, mirrors the song's thematic tug-of-war. It alternates between glossy scenes of Wave boarding private jets and commanding stages, and grounded imagery that roots him in the environments he continues to reference lyrically. The visual contrast reinforces the song's central message: for Rod Wave, success doesn't replace the streets; it simply gives him a larger, louder way to keep answering them.

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