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BLXST Carries The Weight Of What He’s Built On ‘Labor Of Love’
Desjah Altvater · 2026-06-23 · via Forbes - Business
BLXST sits in the driver’s seat of a car in Los Angeles, looking directly into the camera with a calm, focused expression.

BLXST in the driver’s seat in Los Angeles, locking eyes with the camera in a quiet moment of reflection.

(Photo Credit: Joshua Gonzalez)

Love is often written about as a destination—a thing to find, win, or lose. But on Labor of Love, released June 12th, BLXST is more interested in what comes after the chase. The Los Angeles native spends much of the album sitting with a quieter question: what does it take to keep the things you've prayed for?

The answer unfolds across stories of devotion, fatherhood, self-reflection, and the growing pains that arrive long after the moment you've been waiting for. There’s no grand performance here, no larger-than-life character—just a man returning to his roots and taking stock of the life he’s built, listening for the echoes of where he started in the life he’s living now.

For years, BLXST’s music has lived in the emotional gray areas of relationships, soundtracking late-night drives, unanswered texts, and the uncertainty that comes with wanting something you can’t quite hold onto. But his latest album finds him standing on different ground. He’s no longer writing about the pursuit of love—he’s reflecting on the responsibility that comes with it.

BLXST reflects on where it all began, sitting on a car hood in front of his childhood home with flowers in hand—a quiet moment between roots and growth.

(Photo Credit: Joshua Gonzalez)

BLXST Moves With Voices From His Circle

Across the album, BLXST offers a meditation on commitment in all its forms—romantic, personal, familial, and creative—revealing that sometimes the hardest part isn’t getting what you want, but nurturing it, protecting it, and showing up for it long after it arrives.

From there, the project unfolds like a series of conversations—with love, with success, with home, and ultimately with himself. That sense of intention is present from the very first track.

Before diving into Labor of Love, fellow California native, collaborator, rapper, and songwriter Jayson Cash—who previously teamed up with BLXST on the 2021 favorite “Priority”—sent a voice note posing a question: after keeping his 2020 album No Love Lost completely feature-free, what made him open the door to collaborators this time around?

His answer sits at the heart of the album. The guests on this project weren’t selected through strategy meetings or industry matchmaking. They arrived organically—artists, friends, and creatives who were already part of BLXST’s orbit. In many ways, their presence reflects the project’s broader message: staying grounded, honoring genuine connection, and keeping what matters close.

Big Sad 1900, featured on “Day After Day,” was already on his radar. Sasha Keable, who appears on “Ruin,” was an artist he had long admired before later discovering she had once attended one of his Amsterdam shows. Background vocalist Cheyenne Wright, who appears on “Work,” was already part of his touring family. Nothing was forced. Nothing was manufactured. “It just kind of flowed perfectly,” BLXST says. “I didn’t really have to outsource or feel like, ‘Who could fit on here?’”

BLXST Sets The Tone In His Own Words

That same philosophy extends to the way he approaches the music itself.

In an era where albums are often optimized for playlists and algorithm-friendly moments, Labor of Love slows the pace. It opens not with a song, but with BLXST speaking directly to listeners—a creative choice that immediately signals this project is more personal than performative.

“I wanted to start with my voice,” he says. “No filters, no characters—just me going through everything in real time.”

For an artist known for letting the music do most of the talking, that level of transparency feels intentional—and so does the album’s title. Throughout the conversation, BLXST repeatedly returns to the same idea: growth isn’t about arrival, it’s about maintenance.

Why BLXST Keeps His Hands On Every Bar

In an industry where success often creates distance between artists and the creative process, BLXST has remained unusually hands-on. On Labor of Love, he’s credited as a writer, producer, and recording engineer across the project—a level of involvement that has become increasingly rare as artists scale.

For him, the reason is simple: “I like to protect my art.”

The approach traces back to the artists who first inspired him. Growing up, he watched figures like Pharrell, Kanye West, and Ryan Leslie blur the lines between performer and creator. Before he understood how the music industry actually worked, he assumed every artist made their music from the ground up.

So that’s exactly what he did. Years later, that instinct remains intact.

BLXST stands in front of his childhood home in Los Angeles, meeting the camera with a steady, reflective gaze.

(Photo Credit: Joshua Gonzalez)

Much of the album was recorded at home—not in a luxury studio tucked behind a gate, but inside a space filled with the beautiful chaos of everyday life. Inspiration arrives between family responsibilities, and ideas are captured in real time. Some days produce songs; other days produce fragments.

The point is access. “I can just go in the room and let it out,” he says. “Maybe it’s not a full song, maybe it’s just an idea.” That intimacy seeps into the music.

Jayson Cash reflects on BLXST’s LA influence, noting he’s opened doors for artists like himself and inspired many since his MySpace days through consistency and vision.

“BLXST opened up a pipeline for the LA music scene. There are a lot of people, myself included, whose careers benefited or gained momentum as a byproduct of his success. Beyond the music, he’s been a source of inspiration,” he says. “A lot of us know him from the MySpace days, before the ‘X’ in his name, so watching someone build it from the ground up and become a household name is a reminder of what’s possible when you stay committed to your vision and put the work in.”

Shades Of Blues Run Through BLXST’s Record

Throughout the album, warm R&B textures are layered with blues-inspired undertones, creating moments that feel less concerned with perfection than emotional honesty. When I mention hearing traces of blues throughout the project, BLXST lights up. “That’s actually what I was trying to attack,” he says.

Not necessarily the technical side of blues music, but its emotional palette—the melancholy, vulnerability, and depth that live within those shades of blue.

It’s perhaps no surprise that one of his biggest inspirations is Jill Scott. Upon seeing her perform at the Hollywood Bowl, BLXST speaks about her less like a fan and more like a student of presence. He adds that his mother has been a longtime admirer of hers for as long as he can remember, making the moment feel even more full circle. “She’s just so powerful,” he says. “I try to channel that energy as my inner confidence.”

Confidence, however, isn’t the same as certainty.

One of the album’s most compelling moments arrives on “Is That Too Much,” where BLXST incorporates a conversation between James Baldwin and Nikki Giovanni. The sample introduces a nuanced discussion about truth, protection, and the complicated ways people care for one another.

What drew him to the exchange wasn’t controversy, but honesty. “Sometimes we do lie to the ones we love,” he says. “The intent behind it is because you care.” It’s a perspective that feels increasingly reflective of where he is in life today.

BLXST Leans Into What It Takes To Stay

Years ago, songs like “Overrated” captured the confusion and contradictions of modern dating—especially the blur of situationships. The BLXST on Labor of Love sounds different. More grounded. Less interested in questioning love than understanding how to sustain it.

“A lot of people talk about finding love,” he says. “This album is more about maintaining it.” In the track “Just My Type,” he strips away surface-level expectations, revealing that what he values most is patience, grace, and softness—an attraction rooted less in appearance and more in calm emotional presence. The distinction surfaces repeatedly throughout our conversation.

On “He Can,” the artist explores patience; on “Right Back,” accountability; elsewhere, he reflects on the emotional labor required to stay present for the people and opportunities he’s asked for.

For BLXST, true love shouldn’t feel like a constant battle. “It should be effortless,” he says. “We should be flowing like water.”

BLXST stands in front of his childhood home as his two sons play in the front yard, grounding past and present in one frame.

(Photo Credit: Joshua Gonzalez)

Perhaps nowhere is that mindset more evident than in his role as a father.

One of his sons, True, has become an unlikely but trusted source of feedback, spending months listening to early versions of the album during school drop-offs and car rides. “He was like, 'You still ain’t dropped the album?’” BLXST laughs while telling the story. "That's my personal A&R."

Fatherhood also helped shape the album’s broader perspective. During the two years since his last full-length release, he spent more time at home, away from the pace of touring and promotion. The space created room for reflection—and, occasionally, discomfort. "A lot of times it's just being honest with yourself," he says.

BLXST Knows Arrival Is Where Real Work Begins

Living in his truth ultimately guided him back to the place featured on the album’s cover—his childhood home on Los Angeles’ Eastside, a house his grandfather built from the ground up. For many artists, success creates distance from where they started. For BLXST, revisiting his lineage, as reflected in “Home,” became a way of closing that gap. “My whole mission was just to ground myself,” he says.

The process reminded him of something easy to forget amid growth and ambition: knowing where you're headed requires staying connected to where you came from.

That lesson echoes throughout Labor of Love. Beneath the conversations about romance and relationships lies a deeper theme—stewardship. Of family. Of creativity. Of self. Because if there’s one thing BLXST seems to understand now, it’s that arrival is rarely the end of the story. The real work begins afterward.