
East London rapper Armor cut straight through urban mythmaking with Hood Anxiety, taken from his LP Excuse My Mess, which dropped on January 8th alongside an official music video that refuses polish in favour of truth. Built around a cascade of bravado-stripping questions, the track pulls listeners into reflection while rejecting the glamourisation of a lifestyle that often reads as a bitter necessity rather than a sweet victory.
The video sharpens that intent. It visualises the raw reality Armor waxes lyrical on, turning Hood Anxiety into one of the most bruising expositions UK rap has delivered in recent years. The darker realities of trap life sit in full in an era of austerity, when postcode disparity and institutional pressure remain impossible to ignore. Armor places those forces under a harsh light, fixing attention on the systems that decide who gets breathing room and who stays boxed in.
Even under that lyrical gravity, charisma still hums through the track. Armor’s witty, cerebral wordplay carries a natural ease, giving the listener space to reflect without draining momentum. His smooth, impassioned cadence anchors the song, landing with the same contemplative weight found in voices like George the Poet and Kae Tempest, yet filtered entirely through his own lived perspective.
Instrumentally mellow and restrained, the track carries weight through intention rather than volume. Where pride often surfaces as a coping mechanism, Armor captures resignation to a broken system and reframes it through honesty. Hood Anxiety fixes that moment in time, giving listeners something solid to sit with and a sense that articulation itself becomes a quiet form of release.
Hood Anxiety is now available on all major streaming platforms. For the full experience, stream the official music video on YouTube.
Review by Amelia Vandergast