Lil Tjay Fires Shots at Real Boston Richey With New Diss “Go Tati”

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - JUNE 23: Lil Tjay attends the 2019 BET Awards at Microsoft Theater on June 23, 2019 in Los Angeles, California.
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – JUNE 23: Lil Tjay attends the 2019 BET Awards at Microsoft Theater on June 23, 2019 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Paras Griffin/Getty Images)

Lil Tjay returned to the spotlight last week with They Just Ain’t You, a project that leans into reflection while maintaining his melodic edge. Days later, he expanded the release with a deluxe version, the Big One Edition, anchored by a single new track titled “Go Tati.” That addition quickly drew attention, not for its sound alone but for its target. The record arrives amid allegations leveled by Tatiana Chanell against Real Boston Richey, claims that include abuse, kidnapping, and grooming, all of which he has publicly denied. Into that volatile backdrop, Tjay inserts himself with a song that leaves little room for ambiguity.

Across the track, his lyrics move with intent, weaving references to Chanell while directing pointed criticism at Richey. “She said she don’t want no rat no more, shawty want a goon / On the ‘Gram tellin’ your business like he tellin’ in that room,” he raps, setting the tone early. He follows with, “What you say? Go Tati, do your big one / Know you want a Richie, he keep playin’, you gon’ get one,” sharpening the message. The delivery is measured but unmistakable, framing the song as both commentary and confrontation. Online, the response has been swift, with listeners parsing each bar as the dispute gains visibility.

Tjay Turns Up the Pressure, Shaping the Narrative Amid Backlash

Additional lines extend the critique, questioning credibility and posturing within the scene. “None these goofies gettin’ saved, who allowed these boys to rap? / I could tell how he stay postin’ 20s, he got baby racks,” Tjay adds, continuing the thread. The track’s circulation has coincided with broader conversation about the allegations, amplifying its reach beyond typical release cycles. For some, it reads as a calculated intervention; for others, an escalation.

The rollout follows a separate wave of criticism directed at Tjay earlier in the week. His outreach to streamers, including DDG, PlaqueBoyMax, and N3on, drew mixed reactions, with detractors questioning the approach. Even so, his response has been to press forward rather than retreat. With the deluxe now circulating, Tjay appears intent on shaping the narrative as much as participating in it.


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