A year ago, MTV announced that Seattle native SolomonRaz” Simone was the first rapper signed (via a partnership with his Black Umbrella venture) to 300 Entertainment, the Atlantic-distributed “new content” company founded by three big-time hiphop CEOs: Lyor Cohen, Todd Moscowitz, and Kevin Liles. (Also, 300 has since added to its roster the hit-making ATL breakouts Young Thug, Rich Homie Quan, and Migos, among others.) Raz put out his Cognitive Dissonance: Part 1 for free download soon after; its opening track, “They’ll Speak,” is still one of the most gripping tracks I’ve heard from a Seattle artist of any genre.

Raz had for some time demonstrated a knack for forgoing talk in favor of walk, grinding steadily alongside his fellow Black Umbrellaโ€“holder Sam Lachow, touring the country and gaining momentum organically, and connecting with rapt fans via his trademark transparency, a scarred sincerity every bit as breathy and earnest (not to mention sober) as Capitol Hill native-done-good Macklemoreโ€”but bred five minutes east on the blocks of the CD. His man-of-the-people movesโ€”he typically prefers performing in the middle of his crowdโ€”feel calculated, maybe, but not contrived. June through August saw the MC embark on a 52-city tour, opening for Strange Music’s Rittz, deepening his impact among the indie-rap crowd thirsty for best-kept-secret stars on the rise.

Last summer, Raz started selling “golden tickets” onlineโ€”admission for his first hometown headlining gig, at that time presumably still unbooked. That show finally happens this weekโ€”at Neumos on Thursday, January 29โ€”much to the delight of his fervent followers, who are part of what Raz calls “The Village.” Fans who register at therealvillage.com receive an e-mail with Raz’s personal phone number and are encouraged to text him. While that sounds like hell on an AT&T bill, not to mention my own personal hell, it’s clearly working for himโ€”just another brick in the wall of Team Raz’s savvy “one fan a day” empire-building.

Back in September, Raz started premiering his latest album, Cognitive Dissonance: Part 2, a track per week, on his SoundCloud, culminating on January 28, when the whole release becomes available for download. Darker, wearier, and slicker than his first outing, Dissonance: Part 2 finds Raz sounding fed up and preacher-serious at all timesโ€””I got so many things to be angered ’bout.” It’s far from the turn-up, far more about the turn-inward and the unflinching kind of self-work they say that success requires. Raz’s literally poetic take on dark, emotive rap straddles the sanctified and the street in true bluesman/soul-singer style. His gravelly gravitas is, as usual, aided and abetted by live instrumentation, including taiko bombast and those ever-present strings, giving him his patented movie-score heft and making his monologues as discomfiting as the last stretch of Requiem for a Dream. Strings haven’t made a Seattle vocalist sound so isolated since Lori Goldston’s cello work on Nirvana‘s MTV Unplugged in New York.

Last word: Check out the Black Music Summit 2015 (“A Motown in Seattle?”) going down at the Langston Hughes Performing Arts Institute on Saturday, January 31, from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Presented by Umoja P.E.A.C.E. Center, the panels include “State of Black Music in Seattle,” “Making Money in Today’s Music Biz,” and “Using Music to Activate Neighborhoods.” recommended