Nesby Phips's sound draws from the
jazz,
rhythm and blues, and
rap traditions of New Orleans as well as global musical traditions, including Ethiopian jazz. Phips's ongoing association with
Curren$y and the
Jet Life movement resulted in some of his top-selling works of the late 2000s, including the tracks "Prioritize" and "Hold On" off the
Pilot Talk 1 &
2 albums. In 2011, he issued the recording
The Catch Up, which included previously released Phips hits like the Wiz Khalifa track "Supply" off of Khalifa's mixtape
Kush and Orange Juice, which garnered critical attention from
New York Magazine, as well as "Word to these Bo Jacksons."
GQ Magazine picked Phips's "Passive Cassanova" as one of the top 25 records of the summer in 2014. As co-owner of and producer for the Hollygrove-based music group 0017th, Phips released the 2012 mixtape, ''Hollygrove Ain't Enough'', featuring
Mack Maine and
Juvenile. In February 2015, Phips co-headlined a sold-out show at New Orleans's jazz venue,
Preservation Hall, along with
No Limit recording star, Fiend. The show was one of the first local New Orleans rap shows at Preservation Hall and featured Pres Hall Brass as the backing acoustic brass band. Phips released an all-instrumental album,
Phipstrumentals, in December, 2015, showing off a new side of his production skill set. In 2016, Nesby Phips composed the music for Lil Wayne's android videogame, available via Apple and Google Play. While much of Nesby Phips's writing is based in allegory and metaphor, the year 2017 brought some of Phips's most literal writing to date with the release of the critically acclaimed album,
[https://open.spotify.com/album/4Zp6FXiHyLbLon3fepf8Xl Black Man 4 Sale, produced by DJ Fu. The album's lead single, "Bang Bang," and its accompanying video found wide rotation, and his nuanced approach to writing on race opened up new avenues of music-based discussion. On November 16, 2018, Nesby Phips released his album
Therapy, co-created by the producer Prospek with additional production from Able Chris and contributions from Chicago's MC Tree. “Technically, it has nothing to do with therapy, specifically,” Phips told
Offbeat Magazine. “This project was mostly done some years ago, and I wrapped it up this year. At the time, the process that me and the producer, Prospek, did was therapeutic to us as musicians. We needed a reset as musicians. We said, ‘Forget trying to play the game. Let’s just create for the sake of creating.’ We did it with all live instruments." ==New Orleans culture==