
BigX backstage
Salihah Saadiq for Rolling Stone
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The third and final night of Rolling Stoneâs Future of Music event at this yearâs SXSW doubled as a showcase for Texas itself: Just about everyone who appeared onstage had roots in the Lone Star State, regional pride was everywhere, and âTexas Hold âEmâ even made an appearance.Â
In his recent Rolling Stone cover story, BigXthaPlug documented his rise from solitary confinement to rap fame and then the country charts. He hit it big with booming hits like âThe Largest,â before swerving and releasing a full-on country-rap album last year, I Hope Youâre Happy. And it wasnât just a half-measure: BigX has multiple country hits, including the Bailey Zimmerman-assisted âAll the Way,â which became the first song ever to top both Billboardâs Hot Country Songs and Hot Rap Songs charts.Â
But BigX has never forgotten where he came from, and heâs kept his mind on family â both blood relatives and the rappers who make up 600 Entertainment, the independent Texas-based collective he founded in 2023. The 600 crew â who are releasing a mixtape this Friday, 6WA â include fellow Texas rappers Ro$ama, Yung Hood, Murdagang PB, KevanGotBandz, and KaineMusic, all of whom made boisterous appearances on Saturday night at ACL Live at the Moody Theater. KevanGotBandz came out first, spitting intense triplet-inflected bars on the tracks âIâm Serious,â âAinât Never Slowing Down,â and âShine.â
Next, KaineMusic, 600âs lone female MC, appeared, sporting blonde hair and abundant swagger. Her brief set showed off brash, Lone Star attitude â âIâm a Texas bitch!â she proclaimed â and ended on âDo it,â a dark, sexy single on which she broadcasts a single-minded intent: âI ainât come here to love, I just came here to hit.â The 600 showcase closed with Murdagang PB and Yung Hood, who displayed dextrous flows on â24 Hoursâ and âToo Player,â respectively.Â

BigX backstage
Salihah Saadiq for Rolling Stone
The night took a turn with INK, the Atlanta-raised singer-songwriter with some deeply impressive songwriting credits: Sheâs all over Beyonceâs Renaissance and Cowboy Carter â co-writing âTexas Hold âEm,â âSixteen Carriages,â and âAmerican Requiemâ for the latter â and she co-wrote âLuther,â the Grammy-winning Kendrick Lamar/SZA duet. But despite brief performances of a couple of those songs, tonight was about INK the solo artist, as she barreled through songs from her 2025 album Big Buskin. The title is a reference to a past life â or, as she put it onstage, âabout my journey from being a street performer to some of the biggest studios around the world.â Dressed in a beige rhinestone suit, INK showed off her big pipes as she offered her take on country, with songs steeped in roots music that also seamlessly incorporated soul and hip-hop. âTurquoise Cowboyâ was a sweeping, twang-filled statement of purpose about her artistry: âIâm a turquoise mine in a wild wild West.âÂ
INK played to the moment and the place, reminiscing on playing SXSW 12 years ago and shouting out Texas: âThey told me yâall was a vibe, but I didnât know yâall was cominâ like this!â She closed with the soul-inflected country stomper âHoedown,â a party jam with big ears and an open spirit. âI am the future of music and my name is INK,â she noted. And then it was time for the biggest, largest headliner.

INK
Salihah Saadiq for Rolling Stone
BigX only started releasing songs in 2019, but heâs done a lot of swaggering in a short amount of time. His 20-plus song set on Saturday showed off some of the traits that allowed him to blow up â namely, his abundant bangers, charisma, and ambition. Tracks like 2023âs âBack On My BSâ leaned on his booming, ear-grabbing baritone, while he did a smooth, serpentine dance for the 2021 single âBig Stepper.â Â
Flanked by DJ Bubba, BigX stalked the stage dressed in black, with a giant 600 Entertainment pendant bouncing around his chest. He brought out some more 600 family â including Ro$ama, whom we hadnât seen earlier. (Ro$ama was a high school friend in Dallas, and BigX credits Ro$ama for encouraging him to rap.)Â The 600 friends performed tracks including 2024âs excellent posse cut âMeet the 6ixers.â
Halfway through the set, Bubba asked a question: âYou think they know some of your country music, BigX?â The crowd, of course, knew, responding enthusiastically to the Ella Langley collab âHell At Nightâ and âAll the Way.â For BigX, dipping into country music was about branching out (âYou canât be one of the best artists in the world and have only done one genre,â he told writer Eric Diep in his cover story) and about expressing heartache following a breakup. His country songs manage to combine forlorn roots vibes with the in-your-face presence of BigXâs voice â which is one reason that, while rap-country crossovers have become a big trend in recent years, BigX has had particular success with them.Â
To close out his set, though, BigX went back to his hip-hop roots. He barreled through slightly older songs like the burbling âWhip Itâ and âMmhmm.â The vibes were immaculate: Bubba pointed out, apropos not too much, âBigX, you rich as hell.â

DJ Bubba outfits Braxton with a loaner chain
Salihah Saadiq for Rolling Stone
Everyone in the building knew where things were headed â to âTexas,â BigXâs smash 2023 anthem. Only something unexpected happened with this version: BigX pulled up a boy named Braxton from San Antonio, a fan who appeared to be about 10. Bubba outfitted the wide-eyed kid with his chain, and BigX handed him a mic and invited him to rap along â only, in a nod to the kidâs youth, suggested he not perform every line. (âI am gonna curse and we donât condone that,â BigX told him.) The unlikely pair blasted through the song, with Braxton keeping up on the mic, to the delight of the crowd.Â
BigX closed with his theme song: âThe Largest.â As smoke flares popped off, BigX bellowed âSafe to say Iâm the biggest, the largest/Been steppinâ on shit since my mama stayed in them apartments, regardless.â (The apartments, we learned in BigXâs cover story, are a nod to the particular units he lived in as a kid, during a tumultuous youth.) The song felt like a statement of purpose that showed off both his appeal and how far heâs come. The one-time Austin resident ended with one more invocation of his home state and the moment: âAustin, Texas, I fuckinâ love yâall.âÂ
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