If you know Zio (ZEE-YO), you know he’s not here to play the game by anyone else’s rules. The Pittsburgh veteran has been a force in hip-hop since the MySpace era, the first from his city to hit a million streams at just 18, and a nominee alongside Wiz Khalifa for “Best Male Hip Hop Artist.” Mitchel K. Malizio is resilient but if the past year has proved anything, it’s that Zio’s career is a story of complete ownership.
After a messy chapter with Warner Music Group that saw his catalog stripped, Zio could have stayed bitter. Instead? He flipped the page.
“I’ve got love for Warner now,” he says with a shrug. “Would I work with them again? Yeah — hell, I’d even take an acting deal from them. People don’t even know yet how deep my acting chops go. Still undiscovered in that world, but it’s coming.”
That balance between seasoned poise and relentless ambition is all over Sabbatical, his new album dropping in an unconventional rollout. It kicked off with the surprise drop of “The Truth” on Thursday, August 7 no teasers, no countdowns, just impact. From there, the plan is simple: a new single every Friday starting August 15, building the album track by track as part of the global #NewMusicFriday wave.
The strategy is surgical. Each Friday drop feeds the algorithms, giving every song its own spotlight instead of letting it get buried in a bulk release. Zio’s not chasing virality he’s positioning his work to be undeniable.
“This isn’t about proving I’m the best,” he says flatly. “I already know I am. I’ve been doing this longer than some of these kids have been alive. I’m a vet. I’ve dealt with the politics, the race inequalities in my own city, the industry sleeping on me and at some point I said, ‘F### it.’ I built my own businesses. They pay me more than music ever has. I release when I want, how I want.”
And that freedom? It’s priceless.
“Man, I’m 36 pushing 37. I can party and rage, blow money to keep up with the Joneses, chase women… or I can just create music that matters to me. I choose the second. I’ve already won.”
Now running multiple ventures outside of music, Zio’s “Entrepreneurial Lone Wolf” persona is more than just a brand, it’s his reality. He’s independent not because he has to be, but because he wants to be. And with Sabbatical, he’s showing the world that stepping outside the rap machine doesn’t mean stepping away from greatness.
“I love Warner. I love the industry. But my catalog is already fire as hell. If you don’t know, you better catch up. This time, I’m not here to ask for a seat at the table. I built my own.” Follow him at @lonewolfdta on Instagram or find his music videos on YouTube the @Fam1stent412 subscribe and follow!