Tino Kamal’s ‘Switch’ Is Style, Struggle, and Survival in Six Tracks

Tino Kamal isn’t experimenting—he’s living out loud. On Switch, the London-born shape-shifter throws six tracks into the fire and watches what survives. What comes out is a record that feels like a moodboard of his life: unpredictable, raw, and completely his own.

This isn’t music made for clean playlists or genre tags. Switch is an instinctual response to living in a world that demands clarity from someone who finds power in chaos. It’s loud and layered—“Rodeo Ranger” sounds like a punk club and a warehouse rave had a baby. “24365” plays the other side of that coin, opening a window into the grind, the quiet collapse, the emotional static that’s harder to name.

But what makes this EP hit different is that every track feels lived-in. “Curry Goat Riddim” isn’t just a banger—it’s a reflection of heritage, swagger, and the tension between cultural pride and creative freedom. Tino Kamal doesn’t spell it out, but you can feel the weight behind it. “Girl Better Know” carries that same duality—part love song, part confession booth.

What he’s doing here isn’t genre-blending for the aesthetic. It’s survival. It’s a document of someone making space for all versions of themselves—loud, soft, defiant, vulnerable.

Switch just dares to be honest.