The Toronto-based artist, born Ebhoni Jade Cato-O'Garro, is coming off a big first half of 2026. As we begin to talk through her upbringing, career, and personal life, she tells me matter-of-factly that she wants to be the biggest. I believe her. Who wouldn’t? Her intensity and poise demand my confidence. She's a versatile cross-over artist capable of both singing and rapping at a high clip. An international model, her strong cheekbones and name-appropriate tear-shaped eyeliner have graced stages like the JUNO Awards, where she recently won the Best Rap Album/EP of the Year trophy. Today she’s sporting all black, her favorite color, with a sleek leather jacket matching her black bangs. With her mother by her side, who doubles as her manager, she speaks to me fondly about how she got to this moment, and who propelled her forward. “The majority of my family is women, and I feel like that’s why I’m so strong… we're all so independent, but we're all very close.” That familial self-sufficiency carries into her relationships, and by extension, her art.
A discography as eclectic as SadBoi’s could only be the product of a wide array of musical interests. Growing up, her father played hip-hop a ton, and SadBoi would rap along to artists like Big L and Biggie. When her mom ferried her to dance class and school, they would listen to rap, pop, R&B, and everything in between. The first time she ever got drunk, she danced to Death Grips, which makes a strange kind of sense. Fittingly, she shares a similar tendency to reveal beauty within chaos as the experimental rap group, making a point to bring them up, and even saying, “I would love to do a song with Death Grips.” Her music is definitively more pop-leaning, though, one of many complexities in her persona. The SadBoi discography is littered with songs made for the hedonism of the club, yet she is constantly clad in a cross necklace, a contrast she revels in. Despite identifying as straight, her community and fanbase are mostly queer. She's Sagittarius, with a Scorpio Rising, and a Scorpio Moon. “When people meet me, they’re usually intimidated by me. They say I have black swan energy. Which makes sense.”
She makes sure I’m not intimidated, but I can tell it’s a choice. SadBoi’s music is confrontational and unapologetic, balancing introspection with takedowns of opps and exes. The lyrical content is often brash, as she scorns past lovers, expresses regrets at decisions she’s made, and flaunts her beauty and worth, like an embittered outcast cursed with a bewitching vessel and dealing with the consequences of the attention it receives. There’s an undercurrent of contempt in her anthems. Songs that are club-ready bangers are also extremely vulnerable and true to life, with the subject matter of a lovelorn singer-songwriter. They’re often written in her washroom, with a glass of wine in hand. Evidently obscured by the blaring, upbeat context they’re made to be heard in, these are, at their core, love songs. With a laugh, she remarks, “I'm a hopeless romantic.”