Ankith Woods Drops Acid-Tongued, Irony-Laced Chaos on New Album 'Ankith Always Trippin'
- Alice Smith
- Jul 1
- 1 min read

Ankith Woods isn’t interested in fitting in—he’s here to fracture expectations, and his latest album Ankith Always Trippin is the sound of a chaotic Gen Z antihero sprinting full-tilt through heartbreak, hyperpop, and humor with a mic in one hand and a Mountain Dew Baja Blast in the other.
The 14-track project, produced in collaboration with Detroit DJ/producer RJ Lamont, cements Woods’ status as one of the most audacious, hilarious, and emotionally raw voices coming out of Michigan’s underground rap scene. It’s an album built on contradiction—equal parts Bladee-pilled sorrow and BabyTron-esque punchlines, stitched together with the glitchy, bass-heavy bounce of Detroit trap.
RJ Lamont’s production throughout the album is razor-sharp—stripped-down but slamming, letting Woods’ rapid-fire lyricism do the heavy lifting. It’s a playground of hi-hats, twitchy synths, and the occasional ambient curveball. The album feels just as inspired by TikTok core irony as it does by the gritty lineage of Michigan rap, creating a world where memes, pain, and flexes all occupy the same surreal plane.
With co-signs from On The Radar, 1900 Rugrat, Kid L, Caedan Wallace, Rayshawn Jenkins, and Jameson Williams, Woods isn’t just building buzz—he’s building a community of listeners who know the pain of being ghosted and the thrill of an RJ Lamont beat drop.
No label. No filter. Just unfiltered emotion in 808s and punchlines. Ankith Always Trippin is a wild, whip-smart ride through the brain of an artist who's laughing through the tears—and daring you to feel something too.



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