For years, Hot Boy Turk carried the weight of addiction, incarceration and a complicated place in Hip-Hop history. Now, with his new single ‘Joseph,’ he is done carrying it quietly.
The New Orleans rapper, a foundational member of the Hot Boys collective, sat down with Hip-Hop Wired to talk about the record and what led him to make it. The conversation moved quickly from music into something deeper. He described an internal war between who he was and who he knew he could be. Getting older, he said, forced a reckoning. He decided it was time for people to see a different version of him, not the version defined by what went wrong, but the one that came out on the other side.
‘Joseph’ is that version given a title and a beat.
The addiction nobody talks about openly
Turk did not soften the edges when discussing what he went through. He battled heroin and cocaine addiction for eight years. He was candid about how misunderstood addiction is, particularly from the outside. People assume quitting is a decision you make on a Tuesday morning. He made clear it is not that simple. The physical and psychological grip of substance dependence does not loosen because someone wills it to.
He got sober while incarcerated. Prison, for all its brutality, became the environment where he finally broke the cycle. He prayed, and the terms of that prayer were specific. He told God the only way he would touch drugs again was if his life depended on it.
Then his life actually did.
A shootout that changed everything
What followed that prayer was a confrontation with a SWAT team that ended in a shootout with police. By any measure, it was a near-catastrophic event. Turk did not frame it as trauma alone. He called it a blessing in disguise. The moment he survived it, the prayer he had made felt answered in the most violent and clarifying way possible. He walked away from that situation and from the drugs.
That sequence, the prayer, the shootout, the survival, forms the emotional spine of where Turk is today. ‘Joseph,’ a name rooted in biblical suffering and eventual redemption, is not an accident as a title.
Reconciliation and what it takes
The conversation also moved toward his peers. Turk acknowledged the tension that exists between him and fellow Hot Boys Juvenile and Mannie Fresh. The friction has been public enough that fans have taken sides for years. His position now is straightforward. He is open to a conversation. He has been reaching out. He believes a lot of the conflict comes from misreading how he communicates, not from anything irreparable at the core.
Juvenile and Mannie Fresh have a podcast. Turk confirmed he would be willing to sit down and work through their differences on it. That willingness alone signals something. It is not easy for someone who speaks as directly as Turk does to extend that kind of olive branch publicly. He did it anyway.
Where ‘Joseph’ fits
The single lands at a moment when Hip-Hop is increasingly making room for vulnerability. Artists are no longer penalized in the same way for talking about struggle or therapy or spiritual conflict. Turk was doing this before it was a talking point. ‘Joseph’ is not trend-chasing. It is documentation.
He is older now. He has survived things that many do not. And he is finally letting that show.

