Shake Your Ass

Tino Kamal Unlocks a New Groove With “Beef N Stuff”

Every few months, an artist drops something that makes us pause, not because it’s the loudest release of the week, but because it sounds like someone fully trusting their instincts. Tino Kamal has been that artist for a minute now. Whether you discovered him through the high-voltage chant of “Yagga Yo” or through his fashion-world side quests with brands like Dolce & Gabbana, you already know he doesn’t follow predictable patterns. His newest track, “Beef N Stuff,” only reinforces that.

Instead of building a polished, radio-ready single, Tino Kamal leans into immediacy. The beat thumps with a low-end heaviness that feels purposely messy around the edges, and he jumps into the pocket with a cadence that lands somewhere between slick sarcasm and calculated confidence. The track isn’t trying to be serious—even though there’s real craft hiding underneath the jokes and jabs. It’s the kind of song that grows on you because it refuses to behave.

What stands out most is how much of Tino’s universe cracks open in these small moments. He’s been steadily building a persona that balances grit with high fashion, humor with intensity, and instinct with intention. Few artists can shift between underground energy and luxury editorial aesthetics without losing themselves. Tino somehow makes it look natural.

And while the music is gaining traction, so is the narrative around him. Tino Kamal recently taped a new interview with Power106, a rare chance to hear him speak openly about how these ideas come together. For an artist who usually lets visuals and sound drive the conversation, this upcoming sit-down is a sign of the broader attention he’s pulling in.

Back to “Beef N Stuff.” The song lands like a release valve—quick, clever, a little unhinged in the best way. If “Yagga Yo” was designed to shock listeners awake, “Beef N Stuff” feels more like a wink. It shows an artist comfortable enough in their identity to play, experiment, and not overthink the outcome. That’s what makes it groovy; its looseness is intentional.

Tino Kamal’s evolution isn’t happening in a straight line, and that’s exactly what makes him compelling. He’s building a world piece by piece, sometimes chaotic, sometimes sharp, always unmistakably his. “Beef N Stuff” might be a playful release on the surface, but it tells us something important: Tino knows exactly what he’s doing, even when he pretends not to.

And trust us, this is hardly the last twist he’s got planned.