Pyrex Whippa – “Sincerely, Rex” review

Pyrex Whippa is a 27 year old producer, rapper, singer/songwriter & audio engineer from Baltimore, Maryland notable for being a member of the seminal trap production team 808 Mafia. It should also be said that this isn’t even the first body of work that he’s put out, releasing a debut EP Separation Anxiety in the fall of 2019 & having his mentor Southside produce his 2nd one Blood on the Hills roughly 13 months later to more positive reception followed by Thanks for Holding On & Guns ‘N Romance. Sizzle gave us his full-length debut album Break the Silence under Epic Records last month & Rex is following suit.

“Burning Bridges” starts the album better than I thought it would singing over a groovy, drumless instrumental telling the homies he got them whereas “Screamin’” produced by Smatt Sertified takes the cavernous trap route calling out a hoe for playing with his love & couldn’t see it from the very beginning. “Met Gala” hooks up a reversed sample & hi-hats promising to get the ladder instead of the table & “Baby” further puts an emphasis on atmosphere going crazy for his new girl.

As for Unfair”, we have another pop rap/trap cut asking this woman how she gon’ do him the way she did since it was incredibly undeserving while “No Mercy” strips the drums again hopping over a bare guitar displaying the merciless side of himself. “Void” keeps it drumless dissing an ex because of the fact that her heart doesn’t make a sound & his shakes the ground, but then “DND” brings the hi-hats in again talking about the mode he’s in.

“Vacuum Sealer” goes for a spacious, bassy vibe to the beat discussing shit getting musty in the mansion & it’s so hard to miss this bitch the way he misses those racks leading into the plentiful trap banger “Wat I’m On” talking about making it out of the trenches & reaching the upper echelon. “All Wrong” despite the cloudily instrumental has some of the weaker subject matter throughout the LP that is until “Buddha Man” has a delicate trap tone generally shrugging off those treating him average.

The song “Skeletons” removes the drums from the equation encouraging the people in his life to do the right thing by grabbing his hand when he falls while the acoustic “All 4 U” sings about leaving it how it is after fucking around with his heart. “Exhale” finally closes Sincerely, Rex in the form of 1 last trap joint letting a homie with mob ties know that he’s refusing to let him leave on him tryna play it cool with ice in his veins.

Break the Silence as a commercial debut for Southside was disappointing compared to the Trap Ye mixtapes since his lyrical performances weren’t the best except I did appreciate the risk of departing from the signature sound that the 808 Mafia co-founder is known for. Pyrex’s debut here happens to be the better of the 2 surprisingly. The production here is more interesting bringing balance to drumless & trap displaying his life on wax.

Score: 3.5/5

Keep up with @legendswill_never_die on Instagram & @LegendsllLiveOn on Twitter for the best music reviews weekly!

Leave a comment