Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

Albums

LeoStayTrill Sets An Industry Trap With Debut EP “Home Alone”

 

South London prodigy LeoStayTrill releases his highly anticipated debut EP Home Alone, a self-sculpted collection that thrives in solitude and proves his place among UK rap’s most promising. Named after the iconic film, the EP echoes its themes of isolation, resourcefulness, and being underestimated. It’s an intro not just to who he is — but who he refuses to be boxed in as. Speaking on the EP’s inspiration, Leo shares:

Every time someone called me, I was literally just home alone — recording, writing, creating. That solitude became my success… This EP is me showing I can’t be pinned down. I can really do it all.

Drawing creative cues from the Home Alone film, Leo embraced themes of independence and adaptability, crafting a project that rebukes limitations. Across tracks like On Me and the viral Hands On Knees featuring K-Trap, Leo flexes not just his bars, but his ability to fuse melody, wit, and global flair into a cohesive sonic statement. Leo’s momentum is unstoppable and “Home Alone” marks a turning point for the 18-year-old genre-blender. Stream “Home Alone” now and follow LeoStayTrill on all platforms for more heat incoming. Follow LeoStayTrill on Instagram, Twitter, Tik Tok, and Youtube.


Discover more from OnTheSceneNY

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Written By

You May Also Like

Featured Video

GET THE LOOT marks the latest surge from Dallas rapper Yakiyn, a hypnotic trunk-rattler built on sharp turntable stabs, snapping drums, and thick Southern...

Featured Video

Neon lights and backroom tension lead to a strip club that doesn’t realize it’s about to get flipped. TiaCorine’s latest visual for Was Hannin...

Featured Video

Reinvention has always hovered around Swae Lee. With the announcement of his debut solo album SAME DIFFERENCE, the Rae Sremmurd architect signals a defining...

Featured Video

Two cities. Two dialects. One declaration. Made It On Our Own sounds like collision. Yeat’s otherworldly, bass-heavy rage aesthetic crashes into EsDeeKid’s sharp scouse...

Advertisement

Discover more from OnTheSceneNY

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading