
Before diving into more serious questions about their career and music, hip-hop duo Joey Valence & Brae (which often goes by its initials, โJVBโ) took on a hard-hitting question about whether they had heard about Crocsโ new collaboration with Lego.
Brae jumped to respond, showcasing his elite fashion knowledge, telling Creative Loafing Tampa Bay, โDude, I actually sent that post to Joey and was like, โthese are pretty fucking cool.โโ
Valence admitted the post missed his attention, claiming heโs been a little busy. โThank you for notifying me,โ Valence added, intrigued by this new collaboration of wearable bricks, teasing that they may sport the shoes on stage.ย
The playful banter mimics JVBโs aura: Never fearful of darker topics, but still silly and expressive.ย
The duo launched in 2021 with โCrank It Up,โ a โ90s hip hop-inspired rhythm paired with goofy lyrics. The pair has since released three albums (Punk Tactics, No Hands, and its latest, Hyperyouth, stylized in all caps), all recorded in Valenceโs makeshift bedroom studio.ย
โI think itโs not because we donโt want to go to a studio. I think we just feel comfortable in our own house,โ Valence told CL. โYou donโt really need much. You just need your brain. Thereโs this stigma around needing a bunch of crazy equipment to make good music, and thatโs just simply not true. At all.โย

The bedroom hip-hop studio quickly cemented the boys’ respective identities as resourceful underdogs. Instead of writing numerous albums and workshopping their favorite record into a neatly polished project, JVB sticks to its process. As some artists shy away from their older deposits, the two embrace growth and their sonic evolution.ย
โI will say itโs kind of hard to write stuff that isnโt really on a topic anymore. It used to just come out so easily. Just like write a bunch of bullshit. Write about anything. But now, in a lot of the songs, we want there to be a theme or a purpose,โ Brae added. โYou have to tailor it a little bit, but itโs making us stronger writers.โ
Hyperyouth’s predecessors implemented purely punchline-based songs, which the duo shifted away from, but didnโt totally abandon. As they tackle penning message-driven lyrics, their third album maintains and reminisces on the central ideas that shaped JVB in the first place: Friendship and humor.ย
โWeโre just developing ourselves as different kinds of writers, but a lot of the time just trying to make shit to make each other laugh,โ Brae quipped.ย
At this point in a musical odyssey that stemmed from self-described โbullshitโ to real, thematic narratives, Hyperyouth explores what it means to age in a time where de-aging promotion occupies our screens, and movies like “The Substance” suggest aging is a concept of horror, not nature.ย
โAs you grow older, you shouldnโt lose that sense of your youth. Like, thatโs quite literally the whole purpose of the album. I mean, I think about it a lot of the time, too. I get very introspective in terms of like, โIโm already Unc in this stage of my life,โโ Valence explained, being met with a chortle from Brae. โIโm not, but like, itโs just a thing where life is life, dude. You just make the best of it. It doesnโt fucking matter. You just enjoy yourself.โ

โI think a lot of the time where everybody struggles with their age and how theyโre feeling is purely based on time, place, and just overall setting,โ Brae added. It is funny when people think theyโre super washed up, โcause you can feel that way. Itโs how you look at it. Itโs your perspective on everything. You can be washed up at 15 if you wanna be, or you can be washed up at 65. You probably are washed up at 65, for sure. I’m trying to call it quits by 78,โ Brae chuckled in a fairly standard, light-hearted manner.
Like a good chunk of its peers in the genre, JVB interpolates various genres into their unique sound through sampling โ70s funk and 2000s EDM, just to scratch the surface. Naturally, the guys also favor collaboration, leaning on female and queer icons in recent releases. On the deluxe version of 2024โs No Hands, they featured Ayesha Erotica on the โBadderโ remix of โThe Baddest,โ a testament to dancing. And on Hyperyouth, they feature Ms. โFridayโ herself, Rebecca Black, in the 120 bpm club hit โSee U Dance.โ And that openness extends beyond genre. It also shapes who they collaborate with.
โWe are so embracing of [the queer community] and personally just very welcoming of anybody expressing themself in any type of way. The whole point of JVB is that you can be whoever you want to be, and we just fucking love that,โ Valence declared.ย
โI think thereโs so much good queer art that comes from that community, and especially with a feature like Ayesha. I think we just naturally gravitate toward these more alternative personalities, and they just so happen to be part of the queer community. We love representing that, not only because we wanted to support that, but also itโs a nice contrast to our stupid voices.โ
Hyperyouthโs title track kicks off the album with prerecorded audio of fans chanting โJVB,โ highlighting their full-circle moment of evolving from kids with a dream to revered musicians playing sold-out shows on world tours. While the album pinpoints the guysโ success and growth, a deeper message reverberates.ย
Music is a universal art that extends to everyone, not an exclusionary practice.ย
โI think our music reaches everybody,โ Brae voices. โJoey and I say all the time how cool it is where itโs kind of a bonding experience with parents and kids.โ
Audience members include four-year-olds declaring JVB their favorite artists along with their like-minded, hip grandparents. Then you have the car lovers, hip-hop enthusiasts, pop aficionados, and just virtually anyone who likes music. Valence and Braeโs inability to conform to a single sound or genre translates well to their age-diverse fanbase.ย
โJVB really is for everybody,โ Valence reiterated.ย
When asked what a typical pre-show routine looks like, the guys giggled. JVB told CL they always try to conjure a funny answer to this question just to end up unloading the unbearable truth. They sit in silence, taking on a meditative state to prepare for the high-energy show.ย
While JVB may not stick to an elaborate pre-show routine, they do share a commonality in stage prep, formed during their early years. Valence and Brae ensure they connect physically in a quiet, low-stakes area prior to their typical powerhouse performances. In other words, they fist bump.
As the boys jump on stage, a message radiates to the audience: Encourage dancing, discourage caring. The best advice JVB can give to their crowds is to be themselves. When audiences turn off their egos and forget about fear, they settle into the comforting, carefree space, no matter what kind of Crocs theyโre rocking.
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This article appears in Feb. 05 – 11, 2026.
