Rich Homie Quan has passed away. Tributes have come in from across the hip-hop community, and the reaction online has been swift. One statement in particular has drawn more attention than most.
DJ Akademiks posted a message from Quan’s brother on Instagram Friday. According to Akademiks, the brother said Quan always knew he would receive a lot of love after his death. The brother also implied that Young Thug and others had the chance to reconcile with Quan. Quan was still alive then. That window is now closed.
The message is direct. Quan apparently had a clear view of how things would unfold. His brother made that point clear once the tributes started rolling in.
Quan, born Dequantes Lamar, grew up in Atlanta and became one of the more influential voices in Southern rap during the 2010s. His melodic, hook-driven approach helped define a sound. That sound would later become standard across Atlanta rap and well beyond. He and Young Thug, born Jeffery Lamar Williams, rose together during the early part of the decade. The two were closely linked in both style and friendship. Their 2014 collaborative project “Rich Gang: Tha Tour Pt. 1” was a significant release for Atlanta rap and for both artists.
Their friendship deteriorated over time. The specific reasons were never aired publicly in any detail. Their public interactions became infrequent. The gap between them became obvious over several years. By the time of Quan’s death, there had been no public reconciliation.
His brother’s statement is landing in that context. According to the Akademiks post, Quan had a realistic view of his own situation. He expected the recognition. He expected the outpouring. He just didn’t expect to receive much of it in person. His brother is making sure that’s on the record, and the implication toward Young Thug is pointed.
The broader conversation around artists receiving recognition only after death is a recurring one in hip-hop. Quan’s situation is being cited as a specific, named example of that dynamic. The statement doesn’t speak in generalities. Names are referenced. A relationship and a missed chance are on record.
Young Thug spent a significant stretch of recent years dealing with a high-profile legal case in Atlanta. That kept him largely out of public view. He had not publicly responded to the statement as of Friday.
Quan’s body of work documents his contributions clearly. “Type of Way” from 2013 introduced him to a wide audience. The track was among Atlanta rap’s more distinctive releases of that year, built around a melodic approach that wasn’t yet standard. “Lifestyle,” from the 2014 Rich Gang project, featured both Quan and Young Thug. It became one of the defining tracks from that Atlanta era. He remained a consistent and prolific artist throughout his career, working with a wide range of peers across the industry.
The posthumous attention around Quan’s name is significant. His brother’s statement ensures it doesn’t land without context. Quan saw this coming. He knew the love would come late. His brother made sure that fact is part of the record.
