
This is the 5th full length studio LP from Detroit rapper & singer/songwriter Tee Grizzley. Originally a member of the quartet ASBH, it wouldn’t be until 2016 where he would blow up off his first solo single “First Day Out” & earned a contract with 300 Entertainment. His profile would continue to grow by dropping projects like his debut mixtape My Moment, the debut album Activated, his 2nd tape, Still My Moment, the Timbaland exec-produced sophomore effort Scriptures or my personal favorite: his 3rd mixtape The Smartest. Built for Whatever & Chapters of the Trenches would both later be received moderately and responses towards Half Tee, Half Beast & Tee’s Coney Island were generally mixed, but some of the singles ahead of Post Traumatic made it seem promising.
The intro fuses Mobb music with Detroit trap talking about having post traumatic stress due to his father dying recently & barely knowing his own mother whereas “We Dem” produced by Wheezy works in a symphonic trap instrumental flexing that he’s still him. “Blow for Blow” featuring J. Cole finds the 2 over a signature Pi’erre Bourne beat which is fine except for the “I’m really him, Bruce Jenner, boy just ain’t” line feeling reminiscent to the 1 bar he had on “Pi” off Might Delete Later, but then “All I Wanna Do” goes for a soulful Detroit trap vibe thanks to FNZ looking to get money.
“More Than Half” hooks up some horns & bells from Helluva to talk about half these muhfuckas out here folding eventually leading into “Ride or Die” featuring Tink heading towards more of a synth-based direction for a duet about having only each other on their minds. “Diana” switches gears in favor of a futuristic trap flare courtesy of BNYX from Working on Dying comparing her bitch to the late Princess Diana herself just before the bassy “I Ain’t Sorry” featuring Hunxho that Chopsquad DJ laced sees both of them at their most remorseless.
Meanwhile on “10pm in Detroit”, we have Tee Grizzley on top of these pianos & 808s boasting that he got money flowin’ all night like “Drunk in Love” by The Carters prior to “Swerv” featuring G Herbo putting a minimal emphasis on the drums so they can trade verses with one another without a hook for 3 minutes detailing their gang ties. “WTF I Want” mixes these synth-horns with 808s talking about doing whatever he feels like while the pop rap/trap hybrid “I Know” discusses knowing how to turn dreams into reality.
“Dream Youngin’” starts the 2nd leg of Post Traumatic on some atmospherically chill trap shit thanking everyone who’s ever supported him throughout his career while “Situationship” featuring Mariah the Scientist gives a shot at fusing trap soul & pop rap finding both of them wishing each other the best in the end. “Trench Baby” gets back on the Detroit trap tip talking about being born in the trenches of the Murder Mitten while “You Hear Me” featuring YTB Fatt comes through with this underwhelming team up looking to get their bags up.
Future makes up for some of the mediocrity joining Tee on “Swear to God” boasting that your album doesn’t even slap like Mixtape Pluto does which is valid since he took it back to his roots on there while “Pop Shit” featuring Baby Grizzley finds both Grizzlies shooting for a piano-driven direction instrumentally going from playing GameCubes to VS Cubes. “Deposits Crazy” gives thanks to God for somehow helping him through the pain in his life & “Detroit” featuring 42 Dugg serves as this bangin’ tribute to their hometown.
“Blueprint” pushes towards the final moments of the LP challenging everybody to step up & give back to the city in some type of way while “Suffer in Silence” talks about going off by loyalty & the way you treat him without anyone telling him that shit’s gonna change. As for an official closer, we get treated to the 7th AND the 8th installments of Tee Grizzley’s famous “Robbery” series with Helluva hopping behind the boards for both tracks that Segway into one another perfectly.
The Smartest still stands as my favorite tape in the Detroit trap star’s discography but when it comes to his full-lengths, I came away impressed with Post Traumatic as much as I was with the mixtape that I previously mentioned coming out during the COVID lockdowns. It’s more sonically diverse than what someone might expect being used to the Detroit trap style, showing comfortably yet resolute with these homegrown Michigan beats backing him while thriving across styles from rugged trap to even poppier territory.
Score: 4/5
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