Words by Walter Robert
There’s a moment, just before the beat drops, just before the hook rises, silence holds its breath. That’s where Bushy B lives. In the space between struggle and joy, memory and momentum. He is now, in a season where his sound has stretched from Miami streets to international timelines, he’s back with Lifestyle, an album that marks a resurrection.
“Man, it’s a fresh start,” he tells me, voice calm, cadence steady. “Like, I’m back with my feet.”
He isn’t just talking about music. He’s talking about life.
Bushy’s story is etched with motion, the kind that transforms. “Heart of Tribe”, one of the album’s most emotionally vulnerable records that was told in a studio session but born from survival. That tension of fear and faith lives in the music. It’s also the pulse behind tracks like I Got Faith, a spiritual standstill where doubt meets devotion.
“It’s one of those songs where you don’t know where it’s gonna come from, but you just know it’s gonna work. That’s the story.”
And Bushy is a storyteller through and through. “My duty,” he says, “is to put on for the family. For the crib.” He doesn’t say that lightly. There’s weight behind it, the kind that comes when a stranger walks up and tells you, “We need you.”
That responsibility shows up in every track, not just in the lyrics, but in the energy. The sound is Miami, but not the watered-down version. “For too long, they tried to say Miami was just about booty-shaking music,” he says. “But for us, it’s always been about feel-good music. Soulful music. Real instruments. Church in it. Pain in it. Party in it.”
This is the new Miami sound — and Bushy is defining it with his own sound. “Yeah, it’s still uptempo. Yeah, you’re gonna have fun. But I’m saying something. That’s the difference.”
That “something” includes calculated collaborations. Dej Loaf. Flo Rida. Not just name-drops, but purposefully chosen voices.
“People don’t know, Miami has been loving Dej,” he says. “I’ve been following her since she had 8,000 followers. I was a fan. And Flo? That’s family. He gave me game before I even dropped music.”
“The success came back, but the song stayed true. People actually liked the record. That’s what I appreciate most.”
And while much of the world met Bushy through the viral track Scared, which re-emerged years later in its sped-up, Florida-style remix, that moment was only a ripple.
The album is titled Lifestyle, but it’s not about excess. It’s about presence. “Man, where am I now? I’m just enjoying life,” he says. “Back then, we were in survival mode. Always grinding. But now? Now it’s about getting better every day, socially, spiritually, personally. That’s the lifestyle.”
What’s dope is that none of this is manufactured. Bushy’s energy is magnetic because it’s grounded. You see it in how he speaks about legacy. About consistency. About refusing to chase trends. Just being him.
“There was a time everybody wanted to do drill. A time everybody wanted to scam. I stayed on me,” he says. “I’m Bushy. I’m not trying to be anybody else.”
Still, Bushy isn’t looking to stop at music. “We've been writing scripts,” he says casually, like it’s no big deal, though it absolutely is. “I want to do some movies. Turn the Lifestyle into something bigger.”
So when the world hears Lifestyle, what does he want them to say?
“That it’s great music. And that they can’t wait to hear more.”





