Sanford, Florida’s heat, a mix of high humidity and higher stakes, breeds a very particular type of resilience. Booz has been marinating in that environment since he was thirteen, cutting his teeth under the wing of his cousin Nate Da Great and recording his first tracks with his uncle. After years of building a catalog at HTE Studios and charting the friction of the streets and the law, his latest drop, “I Do What I Want,” is surely a hard-earned victory lap.
The track, featuring Lil Polo Da Don, immediately sets a tone of unfiltered autonomy. Right from the jump, the “Sak Pase” tag from Umbrella Group Music announces a professional shift in Booz’s career. The production doesn’t lean on the flashy, over-processed synths common in mainstream radio. Instead, it uses a heavy, grounded bassline that forces you to pay attention to the words. Engineering keeps the vocals bare and front-facing, portraying the natural grit in Booz’s voice that makes his stories about the “bricks” and the “mob” convey realism.
Booz didn’t try to reinvent the wheel, but owned it. The hook is built around a simple, blunt truth. “I spent seven on these diamonds, homie“. It’s a classic flex, but delivered with the weight of someone who has seen the inside of a cell and the outside of a struggle. His verses talks about Florida life, rolling in an AMG, dealing with “night crawlers” out the window, and the bittersweet reality of staying connected to friends behind bars through three-way calls. It’s localized, specific, and authentic to his Sanford roots.
Lil Polo Da Don slides onto the track with a technical precision. He brings an aggressive, high-energy cadence, rapping about jewelry and jumping out “bouncing like a pogo.” The two artists trade energy, creating a dynamic that’s a natural conversation between two people who have traversed the same obstacles.
The visual accompaniment mirrors this “no-frills” approach. There are no green screens or over-the-top special effects. It’s Booz and his circle in the element. This visual honesty is key to Booz’s brand. He’s an artist who isn’t interested in wasting the talent God gave him, aiming instead to take his story international to provide for his kids and family.
This release follows a heavy momentum from late 2025, where tracks like “What About Booz?” and “Feds” started picking up steam with various hip-hop outlets. By the time “I Do What I Want” hit the platforms, the buzz was already loud enough. It’s clear that the “sky’s the limit” mentality isn’t just a catchphrase for him, it’s the itinerary.
At the end of the day, “I Do What I Want” is a proof to the fact that you can’t fake the grind. Booz is a man who has finally stopped asking for permission and started taking what’s his. He has survived the fire and is now just enjoying the warmth. He’s telling his story on his own terms, and for a kid from Sanford who started with nothing but a microphone and a dream, that’s the ultimate win.




























