BryTavious Chambers — Tay Keith — was found unresponsive in his Nashville apartment on June 18 and pronounced dead at 29. Police reported no foul play; cause of death is pending autopsy. The tributes were immediate and the catalog speaks for itself. What shouldn't get buried under the eulogies is the fight he was still in when he died.
The take: Tay Keith was a South Memphis kid who turned a tag — "Tay Keith, f— these n—s up" — into one of the most recognizable signatures in modern rap, and he spent his last months suing to be paid for the work that made other people rich. Honor the beats. Read the lawsuit too.
South Memphis to a Grammy nomination
Chambers was born and raised in South Memphis and earned his bachelor's from Middle Tennessee State University in December 2018 — already a hitmaker while finishing the degree. He drew a Grammy nomination for his work on Travis Scott's "Sicko Mode," a record he co-produced as a college student. Memphis bounce DNA in a No. 1 song.
The signature was the business
His booming, bass-forward sound carried records for Megan Thee Stallion, Future, Beyoncé, and more. "Pound Town" with Sexyy Red in early 2023 broke a new star wide open on the strength of his beat. When a producer's tag becomes a brand, the production credit stops being a footnote and becomes the franchise.
The royalty suit nobody should skip
In March 2026, Tay Keith sued Sexyy Red's label, claiming he produced 13 songs in 2024 — including "Pound Town" — that earned millions through streaming, performance, and licensing while he was cut out of the accounting entirely. He alleged the royalty paperwork was deliberately withheld. Per TMZ, the parties were in the final stages of resolving it when he died. The fight was about exactly what this brand always asks: who got paid.
The credit and the check
Nicki Minaj called him "clearly so beyond talented." The talent was never the question. The question — the one his own lawsuit was built around — is whether the people who shape the sound get to share in what the sound generates. Tay Keith was 29, and he was still litigating that question. Remember the answer he was fighting for.
Sources
- Tay Keith, Grammy-nominated record producer, found dead in Nashville at 29 - NBC News — 2026-06-19
- Tay Keith, Producer of Travis Scott's 'Sicko Mode,' Dies at 29 - Variety — 2026-06-19
- Music Producer Tay Keith Legal Fight With Sexyy Red Label Unresolved When He Died - TMZ — 2026-06-19
- Tay Keith - Wikipedia — 2026-06-19

