“Ratatouille” exemplifies this shift toward unmitigated optimism. Vashi speeds up a 1980s Bollywood-esque melody—think lovers dancing in a field in springtime—till it warps into something darker. Midway through the song, Heems rhymes “Ay yo I’m on antidepressants” with “I’m feeling good man, I’m eating lettuce.” A few bars later, he raps, “Life is beautiful, I’m looking at flowers/I’m feeling like I got superpowers.” A pre-2024 Heems might have drenched these lines in irony (or avoided them altogether). But here any incipient corniness is burned away by the sheer intensity of his joy at still being alive.
Yet Heems’ signature mix of ironic, smart-dumb humor isn’t entirely absent. He’s just deploying it more judiciously—one of many tools in his arsenal, rather than an all-encompassing security blanket. On “Bourdain,” over a cheeky handclap-and-campana beat, he alternates between transnational flexes (moving from Maine to Spain and Bahrain in a single bar) and insouciant wit (“I’m with 11 killers, that’s my cricket team ya philistines”). “Dame” sends up the hip-hop playboy trope; Heems follows up the sexual undertones of “Now you all wet, [it’s] a mess, and I’m moppin’” with the record-scratch punchline “I can clean your house.” But even the jokes sound like they come from a less cynical, more grown-up version of the former Das Racist rapper—one who’s aiming at something deeper than bratty provocation.
Another of the album’s central themes is the healing power of family, human connection, and his community, both in the New York rap scene and the global South Asian diaspora. Heems spells this out with frequent name-drops of his creative peers and in the voice notes that stitch the tracks together. His mother reads out a critique of Heems’ “provincial” poetry, while an eclectic group of South Asian musicians and creatives—including Hasan Minhaj, Arooj Aftab, Riz Ahmed, No Doubt’s Tony Kanal, Bollywood director Zoya Akhtar, actor Danny Pudi, and more—offer messages of love and affirmation.
The pleasure of community—of connecting with people who have inspired him, and been inspired themselves in turn—is also evident in the dynamic he shares with his collaborators. On the UK drill-inspired “Rakhi,” all frenetic tumbi riffs and brooding synths, he does a little grime turn—adopting a lower, more menacing vocal register and upping the tempo—before the Punjabi folk melodies and reggae-tinted rap of fellow Queens natives Pavvan and Ajji arrive. On “Flowers,” he drops to a nearly conversational tempo as he lays out his heart, playing the grounded foil to Tamil-Canadian singer-rapper Navz-47’s airy, melismatic arias.
On closer “Banshee,” chopped-up samples stutter and strike a pose over a long-legged groove. Heems lists out his close calls—overdoses, jail cells, car crashes, and pumped stomachs—before shouting his defiance at the hand fate dealt him. “I’m done retiring,” he declares, “I’m back!” Then, at this triumphant moment of personal redemption, he hands the mic over to frequent collaborator Cool Calm Pete. It lands as a powerful acknowledgement of the fact that he didn’t make it here alone. It’s a lesson that we could all learn, but especially us Punjabis. Maybe I’ll even play VEENA for my mom the next time I’m home.