Childish Gambino – “Bando Stone & the New World” review

California actor, writer, rapper, comedian, singer, DJ, director, producer & former FX hit series Atlanta creator Donald Glover or Childish Gambino finally following up Atavista with his 5th & final full-length LP. In only 2 decades, he’s also put out a couple EPs & 7 mixtapes in addition to all his other albums. The 2 that stand out the most are the sophomore effort Because the Internet released on my 17th birthday & the 2016 follow-up “Awaken, My Love” pulling heavy influence from the Parliament-Funkadelic collective. 3.15.20 was randomly released during the beginning of the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic in an unfinished state only to be finalized & reissued as Atavista recently, which most people including myself decided they’d rather wait for Bando Stone & the New World.

“H3@RT$ W3RE M3@NT T0 F7¥” featuring Amaarae is a self-produced industrial hip hop opener dissing those who did him greasy & still being on whereas the lead single “Lithonia” works in elements of alternative rock, pop rock, post-grunge, art rock & glam rock telling the story of Cody LeRae. “Survive” featuring Chlöe is a beautiful hip hop/neo-soul crossover tryna save their lives since summer’s always coming leading into “Steps Beach” singing over a stripped back instrumental from Steve Lacy talking about wanting to walk the beach on a Saturday.

Amaarae & Flo Milli join Gambino to the trap joint “Talk My Shit” so all 3 of them can boast on the lyrical side of things just before “Got to Be” turns the industrial influences all the way back up talking about 2020 being his time. “Real Love” takes a electropop/dance-pop route to the beat hoping that everyone listening gets to feel genuine love at some point in their lives, but then “In the Night” featuring Amaarae & Jorja Smith fuses alternative R&B with alté as well as gqom & alt-pop singing about needing each other at night.

“Yoshinoya” concludes the first half of Bando Stone & the New World with a 2-parter showing a bit of a Ye formerly known as Kanye West influence sticking around similarly to the titular Japanese multinational fast food chain while “Can You Feel Me?” featuring Legend Glover is a heartwarming moment on the album where father & son singing together referencing the alphabet in every verse. The 8-minute rollercoaster ride “No Excuses” goes neo-soul singing about receiving cold love while “Cruisin’” featuring Yeat produced by DJ Dahi, Ludwig Göransson, Michael Uzowuru & Donald himself brings a synth-trap vibe to the table living their dreams since this dreamin’ ain’t enough.

Meanwhile on the atmospheric “We Are God”, we have Gambino singing about being inseparable flying through the dark while “Running Around” featuring Fousheé blends soul & rock going crazy during the weekend. The track “Dadvocate” goes for another stripped back approach tackling fatherhood & after the “Happy Survival” interlude, “A Place Where Love Goes” concludes the Childish Gambino chapter of Donald’s life with 1 more EDM joint going wherever love does.

In contrast to a lot of artists saying they’re gonna retire from music & later coming back, it really does feel like the end of Childish Gambino since it’s not fun for him anymore & what a way for him to go out. We get a concept album revolving around a singer named Bando Stone stumbling into a post-apocalyptic world before teaming up with a woman & her son to fight prehistoric creatures & try to escape from an unexplained phenomenon that seems to delete “chunks” of the world blending experimental hip hop, neo-soul, psychedelic soul, neo-psychedelia, rock music, electronic dance music, alternative R&B, alté, gqom & alt-pop.

Score: 4.5/5

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Ouija Macc – “Darcc Planet” review

Las Vegas emcee Ouija Macc has returned a year after Detritus for his 4th LP. Breaking out in the fall of 2017 after the Insane Clown Posse signed him to Psychopathic Records shortly after putting out his debut EP Trashfire independently, Ouija has since proven himself as the hatchet’s biggest solo act dropping his last 3 full-lengths, 2 greatest hits compilations, 8 mixtapes & 4 EPs all in the span of nearly 7 years. He even started his own label Chapter 17 Records & made the big homie HEXXX the first signee to putting out his first 2 classic west coast wicked shit albums Demon Season & Tales of a Cursed G before amicably fulfilling all contractual obligations with the Psychopathic subsidiary last fall. Darby O’Trill is now the only C17 artist other than Ouija, teaming up with each other back in April for the excellent collab effort Anemoia few months ago. Now that he near-perfectly completed the Elements series on Stalewind during the Gathering of Dreams, it’s finally time for the Darcc Planet to ascend 6 months following Corruptus & performing at a JCW Lunacy taping a couple months ago.

After the “Signal Interruption Event” intro, the first song “Psychocidal” starts off with a murky trap instrumental from Devereaux detailing the psycho sick mentality that Ouija posses whereas “Macc Mode” steals from the rich & kills a pig for them cuffs at the wrist further embracing a morbid atmosphere. “Labiaplasty” works in some bells & hi-hats explaining that all the killers know they ain’t coming back, but then the rubbery “Baton” produced by Shaggytheairhead talks about the type psycho shit that Chapter 17 & Psychopathic are on.

“Sin City” brings a misty trap flare to the beat reminding everyone exactly where he came from just before “Boomshaka” serves as a uniquely crafted sequel to “Chicken Huntin’” & that brings a huge smile to my face since the Slaughterhouse remix of which ranks amongst the greatest ICP songs of all-time. “Last Laugh” embraces a manic trap direction instrumentally wanting to know who they laughin’ at exactly while “Sun Don’t Shine” ends the first half on some emo rap shit talking about life getting dark.

To start Darcc Planet’s other leg, “Juggular Vein” gives the juggalos & the underground in general music to be buried by while the 5 & a half minute “For the Tombstone (When I Go)” serves as one of the most chilling moments here & one of the best Ouija songs ever sounding like he conceived it as a parting open letter for when day comes where he’s no longer with us. “Murder Dance” infernally admits that C17 ain’t for everyone & Psychopathic being the set while “Moonlit Dungeon” morbidly talks about the hatchet forever choppin’.

“Butternuts” hauntingly welcomes listeners to the dead side while “Tropicana Ave” mixes a guitar & hi-hats talking about being fucked up to the point where he ain’t looking down. “My Luv (Sometimes)” experiments with rage beats making the pack flip & running the bag up while the cloudy “Prophet Paint” declaring the wicked clown paint as prophetic. “Deincarnation” depressingly end the album with a guitar/trap fusion hoping this his last life.

Beginning the deluxe run, “Dead Bitches” murkily talks about runnin’ through 34 dead hoes while “Gotta Have It” goes for a bouncier trap approach keeping the hatchet on his hip for the static & being an addict. “Poltergas” turns the trap metal influences up again talking about something controlling him while the morbidly atmospheric “Meht kcuF” gives the middle finger to everyone who’s been hating on him since becoming the biggest solo artist ICP ever signed.

“Talk It Now” fuses a sample & hi-hats continuing to go at the throats of everyone dismissing C17 while the cloudier “Murder Everything” sets out to literally slaughter everyone & everything in his path. “What’s Up” is another bell/trap joint making sure the club is burnt down & shot up by the time he pulls up & the final bonus track “Losing My Mind” ahead of the “Forbidden Signal Event” outro tells the story of a naked man shot dead on a Saturday because he was gnawing off another man’s face.

Stalewind for the past couple years has quickly become my favorite LP of the 4 that Ouija has dropped & Darcc Planet sure enough reaches the same caliber that the final installment of the Elements series reached at the Gathering of Dreams. As the title suggests, it’s the darkest material that the C17 CEO has ever conceived on his own since branching out on solo in 2017 & you can hear how much he’s artistically grown since.

Score: 4.5/5

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Denzel Curry – “King of the Mischievous South 2: Ultraground” review

Floridian emcee Denzel Curry gearing up for his upcoming 6th album by releasing his 5th mixtape ahead of it. Coming up as a member of the SpaceGhostPurrp-founded Raider Klan a little over a decade ago. He then left in 2013 & has seen quite the success on his own off projects like Nostalgia 6432 Zel (Planet Shrooms), imperialTA13OOZuu & the Kenny Beats-produced UNLOCKEDMelt My Eyez, See Your Future went on to become his most mature & acclaimed body of work to date & I had no problem in him making Ultraground a sequel to his best mixtape King of the Mischievous South.

After the intro, the first song “Ultra Shxt” featuring Key Nyata is a Memphis inspired opener with both of them talking about never folding whereas “Set It” featuring Maxo Kream has an eerie trap direction that Oogie Mane of Working on Dying goes for telling everyone to run it right there. “Hot One” by The Scythe produced by FNZ mixes Memphis rap & trillwave together making money from the comfort of their sofas just before “Black Flag” featuring That Mexican O.T. continues to pull inspiration from the Memphis scene smoking on bitter motherfuckers & calling it sour.

After the “Headcrack” interlude, “G’z Up” featuring Mike Dimes & 2 Chainz has more of a symphonic trap flare to the beat refusing to hear shit until they get paid leading into the bombastic “Sked” featuring Kenny Mason & Project Pat following the “Lunatic” interlude explaining they’re about family, God, business & bread over a Charlie Heat instrumental. After the “Choose Wisely” interlude, “Cole Pimp” featuring Juicy J luxuriously paints themselves as big players while “Wishlist” featuring Armani White charmingly shows the lames how to do this.

“Hit the Floor” featuring Ski Mask the Slump God nears the end of the tape on some rage shit courtesy of ilykimchi dropping bodies 1-by-1 & the final song “Hoodlumz” featuring A$AP Rocky & PlayThatBoiZay ahead of the outro officially wraps up King of the Mischievous South 2: Ultraground with 1 last cloudy Memphis joint & all 3 of them painting images of the lifestyles that each one of themselves live. “Act a Damn Fool” featuring Duke Deuce & Slim Guerilla is a decently trippy start to the deluxe run wylin’ out while “Got Me Geeked” makes up for it from the Powers Pleasant instrumental to the carefree lyricism.

Key Nyata & Sauce Walka join Denzel on “P.O.P. (Paper Over Pussy)” heads for a smooth trap direction prioritizing money instead of bitches while the cloudy “Anotha Late Night” featuring 454 finds both of them teaming up to talk about shawties wanting to test the pimp in them. The final bonus track “Still in the Paint” featuring Bktherula & Lazer Dim 700 samples the iconic Waka Flocka Flame single “Hard in da Paint” capturing the raw energy & reality of life in the streets by conveying themes of loyalty, resilience & authenticity.

Everything that made King of the Mischievous South my favorite tape that Zel has offered us yet has been brought to a whole new level over a decade after a predecessor. He went harder on the features than he did on his mature magnum opus 2 & a half years ago, the reference points from which he draws has expanded significantly. He still has a hypnotic ear even though no longer cakes his music in warped cassette grime, it’s just that he’s seeing Memphis with new eyes now that he’s older & has a decade of experimentation under his belt.

Score: 4.5/5

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Rich the Kid – “Life’s a Gamble” review

Rich the Kid is a 31 year old rapper & songwriter from College Park, Georgia notable for being the founder of Rich Forever Music. Following the debut mixtape Been About the Benjamins, he would catch the attention of the local Quality Control Music & signed a distribution deal with them for his next 6 tapes. The World is Yours along with it’s sequel distributed by Interscope Records were both mediocre in their own rights & the Republic Records-backed Boss Man was his worst album yet. His opening verse on the hit single “Carnival” ended up being more enjoyable than I thought it would & now that Rich Forever Music signed a new distribution deal with gamma., Rich is finally releasing his 4th album independently executively produced by ¥$.

The intro starts off hopping over a trap instrumental with the sound of a clock ticking refusing to pause whereas “Gimme a Second” featuring Peso Pluma & produced by DJ Durel links the pair together so they can flex. “Not in the Mood” featuring Offset takes a bouncier route instrumentally dissing everyone out of the loop leading into “New Chanel” going off-the-cuff for about a minute & a half explaining that he’s a big dog that can never be belittled.

“Upside Down” featuring French Montana darkly finds the 2 looking to flip the club off it’s axis while the hyphy joint “Back Then” talking about never feeling like he’s actually make it out & them thinking he was cappin’ in the early days until all the success came. “Louie Coat” featuring Chief Keef kinda has this uncanny atmosphere that Murda Beatz provides showing off their new coats from Louis Vuitton, but then the d.a. got that dope piano-driven “Band Man” continues to boast his wealth.

BIA joins Rich for the exuberant trap cut “Like Yoga” to talk about making a scene like Doja Cat out here just before the cloudy “Hold On” asks how one would doubt him with all the plaques that he has on the wall giving them racks to riches. “Tell Me” featuring Young Adz continues to emphasize on atmosphere asking who else got the hood trappin’ than them while the “Gimme a Second” remix has a simpler beat from Ye formerly known as Kanye West, The Legendary Traxster & Digital Nas in addition to a new ¥$ verse.

“Keep It Exclusive” featuring Quavo woozily tells the listeners not to sleep on the gang while the synth-heavy “Sometimes” admits that he has moments where he would rather want to be himself instead of a rapper. “No Mileage” somberly talks about being unable to trust anyone while “Plain Jane” featuring Ye comes straight from the DONDA 2 sessions boasting their wealth once more. “Rocking & Rolling” ends the album hopping over another cloudy instrumental that Supah Mario cooked up saying he can’t be stopped.

Other than “New Freezer” or “Carnival”, I’ve never really been a fan of Rich the Kid myself since all 3 of his previous albums (more specifically Boss Man) have proven how much of a nonessential character & Life’s a Gamble makes a slight cut above everything he’s done as his best full-length yet albeit not by much. Some of the features punch under their weight, the production’s just ok & Rich himself as performer doesn’t excite me as he did on 2 of the biggest singles of his career.

Score: 1.5/5

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Onoe Caponoe – “Tears of the Dragon” review

London, England, United Kingdom emcee/producer Onoe Caponoe continuing summer with his 6th LP. Introducing himself in the early 2010s off his debut mixtape Central Control as well as Willows Midnight Gallery & Holy Mountain, it wasn’t until The Staircase to Nowhere caught the attention of High Focus Records & made his full-length debut for the label with Voices from Planet Cattele during my senior year of high school. Spells from the Cyclops would continue Onoe’s evolution & Surf or Die has become the most celebrated work of his yet as did Concrete Fantasia succeeding Invisible War, returning a year & a half later shedding Tears of the Dragon.

“Jane Flower” featuring Lofty305 begins with this delicate trap instrumental talking about a woman who has both of their minds constantly spinning whereas “Going Sweet” featuring Ledbyher works in this cloudy backdrop & a guitar so both of can describe the strength of this love they have. “Summer of Love” gives off a chipmunk soul vibe creepin’ in parks during the evening on some slayer shit while the trap-flavored “Red Riding Hood” after the “Deadly Nightside” interlude talks about trying to get away from things lately.

We get some 808s & hypnotic sample during “The Wilderness” until a beat switch telling a woman he’s no longer seeing that he hope she never forgets him leading into the boisterous trap heater “Fright Night” ending the first half of Tears of the Dragon letting off flows like a submachine gun. “Peanut Butter” blends hi-hats & a vocal flip flexing that his words can make bones shatter while the Memphis influenced “Vampire Date” gets in his storytelling bag lyrically, vividly describing a dating experience with a female vampire.

“Angel” embraces a bluesier atmosphere talking about having his back against the wall because of a phone call he had received but after Eter & L-Zee Roselli appear for the hollowly produced “Psycho Planet” averagely describing a world fu of lunatics running around it, “Tamagotchi Girl” experiments with a bubbly plugg flare instrumentally for an ode to the women who still happen to enjoy the たまごっち brand of handheld digital pets.

Continuing to push further towards Tears of the Dragon’s final moments, the song “$1M Cat” recaptures the Memphis rap atmosphere asking if his ex still thinks of him regularly while “Fur Rug” incorporates some soulful sampling chops explaining that he’s trying to hold on to this person, but the problem with that being he legitimately can’t. “Funky Butterfly” however finishes the album jumping over a piano-heavy beat talking about being in a state of chrysalis.

The high praise I gave Surf or Die & Concrete Fantasia would already make it pretty clear that I consider Onoe Caponoe to be one of High Focus’ greatest signings in recent memory for his experimentally abstract style. That said: Tears of the Dragon feel like the weakest entry of his entire discography. It has nothing to do with the production taking secondary influences from trap, cloud rap, tread, Memphis rap & plugg aren’t bad either. My thing with it is that he doesn’t sound inspired as the predecessor did when 2023 began.

Score: 4/5

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Leaf Dog – “Year of the Leaf” review

This is the 9th full-length solo LP from Brighton, East Sussex, England, United Kingdom producer/emcee Leaf Dog. Notable for being amongst the best UK hip hop groups in recent memory The 4 Owls as well as the 3 Amigos & Brothers of the Stone, he branched out on his own in 2011 with From a Scarecrow’s Perspective, the sophomore effort 6 years later Dyslexic Disciple quickly became his most well-regarded body of work yet & I enjoyed Live from the Balrog Chamber at the beginning of 2020 under his own label Real Life Drama Records just as much. However in 2024 alone he’s released a total of 5 albums: Photosynthesis, Don’t Scare the Crows Now, Outstanding in My FieldAnything is Possible & When Sleeping Giants Wake. It’s been 3 months since the latter 2 & Leaf’s coming off producing BVA’s most acclaimed solo effort to date The Dam Builder to declare this as the Year of the Leaf.

To begin, “Life’s All I Have” hooks up a soulful boom bap instrumental to talk about being the thing you see come the final destination whereas “Pay to Play” works in another soul sample with kicks & snares reminding us that the game ain’t free at all. “Weed Mantra” is another soulful, boom bap crossover dedicated to everyone listening who loves good kush like myself while the crooning “I Don’t Miss” flexes his consistency.

“Athentic” hooks up some strings keeping the kicks & snares in tact to talk about being the truth although real ones already knew, but then “Dr. Ooze” strips the drums completely explaining that he’ll make futures look uncertain all of the sudden. “Dem Times” returns to the boom bap showing off his wild style prior to “Even If It” sampling soul music again talking about needing the paper like the country gearing up for war.

The final leg begins with “I Need Little” blending elements of orchestral with kicks & snares needing y’all to surrender to the rhythm while the song “No Sound” goes for a dreary boom bap approach instrumentally talking about those he speaks for. “Greed” soulfully tries to fill a hole deep within & finally, the closing track “No Games” completes Leaf Dog’s 6th album of the year by working nights straight shootin’ for a better life.

Leaf himself has said that he plans on putting out 2 more solo LPs before 2024 is finished & regardless of when he’s ready to give them to the fans, the fact remains that this really has been the Year of the Leaf joining When Sleeping Giants Wake in being my favorites of the 6 he’s had to offer so far. There’s more drumless undertones than there was on the predecessor but nevertheless, you still get the boom bap production he’s known for topped with personal & hardcore lyrics.

Score: 4/5

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Stoney Point – “Stoney Point 4” review

Stoney Point is an MC/producer duo from Los Angeles, California consisting of Demrick & DJ Hoppa. One of whom came to my attention after linking up with Ca$his who was on Shady Records at the time for a collab mixtape called Homeland Security & the other for being a former in-house producer for Funk Volume up until the label tragically imploded on itself. They first teamed up as Stoney Point for a self-titled debut in 2015 followed by the 2018 sequel & the 2021 trilogy chapter. Another 3 years later, they’re continuing the tradition releasing their 4th album together almost a decade after the eponymous debut.

Starting us off, “Keep Moving” hops over a piano/boom bap instrumental to admit that a lot’s changed in Demrick’s life over the course of the last year & striving to push forward whereas the psychedelic “Golden” works in more kicks & snares to talk about doing just fine these days. “Look for the Smoke” has a jazzier flare to the beat knowing it’s time to re-up when the bag’s starting to feel light just before “Taking Chances” lavishly talks about being careful for what he wishes for reflecting on simpler days.

“Nothing Stays the Same” picks up further from there with it’s symphonic boom bap production discussing that change is always constant leading into “That’s How It Goes” featuring Kail Problems with co-production from Moo Latte fuses acoustics with kicks & snares so they can set the trends instead of following them. “What’s Left of Me” soulfully talks about being giving a duck less what they think of him after going through a lot, but then “Safety Pins & Soda Cans” jazzily admits to doing drugs as much as the common man.

“Hotbox the Room” marks an eerier approach to the beat asking who got the weed & shrooms while the piano-driven “Keep Building” talks about taking it day by day & brick by brick so you can build up to what you want in life stacking higher than the ceiling. “Forever Faded” brings the keys, kicks & snares back to stay lifted all day every day while “The Recipe” has the LP’s best feature from K.A.A.N. over a soul sample never letting the game get the best of them.

Beginning the 4th quarter, “About a Bag” instrumentally feels reminiscent to Zapp explaining that’s exactly what it’s gotta be this day in age while “MVP” refers to himself as the Most Valuable Poet” over an orchestral boom bap beat. The penultimate track “Purple Peak in the Air” has a classy trap vibe generally getting higher than a bitch up in the slot & lastly, “The Plan” ends the album doing everything he can while he’s still here.

DJ Hoppa’s just produced Kail Problems & Marley B.’s latest collab EP Shot Clock from a few weeks ago, but the 4th installment of the Stoney Point saga sure enough joins Delusions of Grandeur back from May in being another consistently great project in the Broken Complex canon this year. The production varies from boom bap to trap, jazz rap, soul music, classical, pianos & acoustics providing the soundscape for De to put a current twist to the duo’s titular lifestyle.

Score: 4/5

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Dillon – “What We Have Done” review

Atlanta, Georgia based emcee, producer & engineer Dillon is back with his 7th full-length album. Coming up under the original moniker Intellekt, he would properly introduce himself in ‘07 with his debut mixtape Uncut & enlist Paten Locke for the debut Studies in Hunger a couple years later. Dillon would go on to follow this up with a sophomore effort Food Chain alongside On Their Way & The Tails of Lobsterdamus respectively. Coming off the J57-produced ‘83 Kids & unearthing some Uncut Gems with Diamond D of D.I.T.C. behind the boards, Batsauce is now returning to show What We Have Done.

After the titular intro, the first song “Mind Made” is an 100 second boom bap opener telling people to get off the internet whereas “Quiet as a Library” works in some vibraphones along with kicks & snares to talk about crews rolling up sleeves if a false move is made. “Eddie Farah” jazzily discusses having to find a way to bring the bag in prior to “Make History” grandly talking about continuing to do exactly that nearly 2 decades in the game.

“Cannonball” featuring Grand Puba brings the pair together for a fun ballad that the party people can get themselves loose with just before “Banana Peels” ruggedly declares that any problem with him is a vendetta of it’s own. “Accolades” featuring Jay Myztroh & Reef the Lost Cauze soulfully talks about making sacrifices to have Heaven now, but then “Wakin’ Up Hungry” featuring Headkrack ends the first half on some rugged hardcore shit.

To start the other leg, “Goin’ Viral” dreamily talks about coming from an era where the internet was all dial-up while “Ready on the Left” featuring Kool Keith sees the 2 over boom bap production boasting their wordplay. After the titular interlude, the trippy “Watercolors” featuring Quelle Chris shows y’all what both of their minds be sounding like while “Speak Easy” strips the drums to promise he’ll keep doing this until he can’t no more.

“Isiah Thomas” tells the story of Dillon meeting the titular Detroit Pistons player known during the Bad Boys era which I find really cool as someone from Detroit himself while “Rock Bottom” psychedelically talks about those wanting to watch him to slip up & fall. “Yoga Flame” concludes the LP groovily explaining that he was looking for a sign as opposed to seeking for love.

Over 6 years since Batsauce produced On Their Way, its successor What We Have Done lives up to the standards set by both ’83 Kids & Uncut Gems. In contrast to the latter serving as a willingness to run around the world together, they return for an open invitation to experience the trials & tribulations alongside the small wins & the big losses of being aging independent artists in an increasingly cut-throat world for music makers.

Score: 4/5

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Jay Worthy – “Magic Hour” review

This is the 5th mixtape from Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada born albeit Compton, California raised emcee Jay Worthy. Coming on my radar in 2017 after The Alchemist produced his debut EP Fantasy Island from top to bottom, he would go onto drop 5 more EPs & a fantastic collab album with Larry June called 2 P’z in a Pod even though initial plans of putting it out through Griselda Records fell through for whatever reason. Harry Fraud produced You Take the Credit, We’ll Take the Check & DJ Muggs did What They Hittin’ 4 to significant acclaim, but the Roc Marciano-produced Nothing Bigger Than the Program was still good despite having too many features. Once I heard DāM-FunK was producing Magic Hour top to bottom, I was hoping it would surpass the predecessor from 14 months ago.

“San Dimas” featuring G Perico starts off on some flawless g-funk shit asking if you’re turned the fuck in at this point whereas “Westside” delves further into the relax & organic sound featuring live instrumentation, use of P-Funk samples & high-pitched synth lines to represent California to the fullest. “Rich Today” embraces the g-funk sound heavier talking about how it ain’t nothing to a pimp like him just before “Boogie” featuring the late Nate Dogg’s son NHale builds upon Nate’s sound that he was the King of spitting that g shit continuing his dad’s tradition.

Meanwhile on “Can’t Do That”, we have Worthy mellowly slickly talking about being on his MJ shit & on a new bag at this point in his career ahead of the spacious g-funk banger “105 West” featuring Channel Tres, DJ Quik & Ty$ for all the party people to slide to. “It’s So Hard” featuring Obsce Chill keeping the gangsta funk alive staying in the ghetto like Too $hort explaining the hardships of being a g, but then “Untouchable” featuring P-Lo futuristically advises that this joint in particular is exclusively for the playas.

After the “Olde 8 Again” interlude, “Heartstop” featuring Channel Tres goes into synth-funk turf explaining that their hearts legitimately stop when they don’t get to see one another while the beat on “Connected” featuring Barney Bones gives me Rainbow Road Mario Kart vibes instrumentally flexing the ties they have. “Bounce” featuring Soopafly takes you a whole millennium head to the future for a joint to the west to bounce to while the g-funk track “Watch Your Tone” advises to do simply that around them.

“Caught Up” heavily builds itself around synthesizers as a way of nearing the conclusion of Magic Hour while “Let You Go” featuring $ha Hef brings the East/West emcees together over a g-funk beat breaking the news to their significant others that they’re cutting off romantic ties with one another going forward. Last but not least, “Can’t Fade the Funk” ends the album charmingly gets self-explanatory for 1 last song showing P dabbling in DāM’s production style.

It was a bit disappointing that Nothing Bigger Than the Program was overloaded with features considering that Marci proved his status as a underrated producer on Marciology earlier on in the year but anyway, I’m finding myself preferring Magic Hour more in comparison. DāM-FunK’s production as one would expect fully embraces the g-funk sound Dr. Dre popularized in the 90s & conceptually, Jay’s paying homage to the roots of west coast hip hop in a modern way.

Score: 4/5

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Eminem – “THE DƎATH OF SLIM SHADY (COUP DE GRÂCE)” review

This is the 13th full-length LP from Detroit emcee, songwriter, producer, record executive, actor, Shady Records founder, the white guy from D12 also known as Slim Shady or mostly Eminem. What can be said now about him at this point in his career that hasn’t been said already? His debut Infinite produced by his now hype man mR. pOrTeR & backed by Web Entertainment showed his potential with a heavy AZ influence & The Slim Shady EP resulted in a deal with Aftermath Entertainment & Interscope Records. His first 3 major label albums The Slim Shady LPThe Marshall Mathers LP & The Eminem Show are considered by many to be the holy trinity in his discography, but I have a bit of a love/hate relationship with ƎNCORE since it had great production except you can tell he was heavy on the drugs. RELAPSƎ came to grow on me from 2018 onward because you have to get past the accents to enjoy the production & really the last we’ve heard the Slim Shady persona until now. I have a love/hate relationship with RECOVƎRY to for the opposite reasons as ƎNCORE & after the decent The Marshall Mathers LP 2, things have been quite rough for Em in the last 7 years. RƎVIVAL was unquestionably one of the worst albums of the 2010s, which he would vent his frustration with on his last 2 full-lengths KAMIKAZƎMUSIC TO BE MURDERƎD BY. 3 & a half years after MUSIC TO BE MURDERƎD BY 2: SIDE B however, Slim’s returning after 15 years to meet his ultimate demise 2 & a half years after the Super Bowl LVI halftime show.

“Renaissance” produced with Luis Resto starts Em’s first offering in 4 years apocalyptically explaining how his music has changed since his sophomore effort albeit commercial debut 25 years ago already in addition to criticizing everyone who was hating on Kendrick Lamar’s final TDE/Aftermath album Mr. Morale & the Big Steppers for not having any bangers when it certainly did whereas “Habits” works in some kicks & snares prior to a switch up throwing it back to like mid-2000s era. “Trouble” ruggedly tries to get himself cancelled thanks to Aftermath in-house producers Dem Jointz & Fredwreck just before “Brand New Dance” feels like a successor to “Same Song & Dance”.

Don Cannon & Cubeatz give “Evil” a boom bap flare centered around his Bad Meets Ǝvil persona & after the “All You Got” skit, “Lucifer” reunites with Dr. Dre behind the boards hypnotically talking about TikTok & Twitter trying to get him kicked off. “Antichrist” featuring Bizarre likens themselves to the sons of Satan wishing they’d go off the deep end like Ye formerly known as Kanye West over vibraphones asking if you really want to dance with the devil until a dusty beat switch from Foul Mouth, but then the mR. pOrTeR-laced “Fuel” featuring the future of Dreamville Records himself J.I.D with both Grip & Westside Boogie on the remix goes head-on trap saying all their homies gonna ride with it asking what’ll happen when their fuel runs out & Em dissing Puff Daddy a.k.a. P. Diddy or Diddy. “Road Rage” returns to the boom bap discussing coddled groups in society until a Dirty South switch-up at the end trying to get even & referencing the [adult swim] block of the Discovery Global-owned Cartoon Network while the lead single “Houdini” serves as a fun sequel to “Without Me” sampling “Abracadabra” by Steve Miller.

After the “Breaking News” skit, we get a devilish rap rock boom bap sequel to “Guilty Conscience” except that Dre isn’t on the mic this time around welcoming himself to his last hoorah bidding goodbye attempting murder suicide while “Head Honcho” featuring Shady/Aftermath’s newest artist Ez Mil ruggedly talks about money coming from their flows getting it on the pronto over some boom bap shit. “Temporary” featuring Skylar Grey serves as a tearjerking pop rap open letter to his daughter Hailie Jade Mathers who just got married to Evan McClintock a couple months ago for her to hear when he’s gone while “Bad One” takes a Middle Eastern trap approach trying to not sound arrogant in any way shape or form brushing off corny white rapper culture vultures like Tom MacDonald.

“Tobey” featuring Babytron of the ShittyBoyz & Big Sean with co-production from Lyrical Lemonade founder Cole Bennett was an experimental hardcore trap fusion talking about being bitten by goats rather than Tobey McGuire getting bit a spider & after the “Guess Who’s Back?” skit resurrecting Ken Kaniff, the final song “Somebody Save Me” featuring Jelly Roll bids farewell to the Slim Shady character once & for all asking to be saved from oneself over a flip of “Save Me” off the 2nd & final It Goes Up Entertainment/Strange Music album in Jelly Roll’s discography Self Medicated that benny blanco & Emile both cooked up apologizing to his daughters & being proud of the way they turned out. After a Steve Berman skit, “Kyrie & Luka” featuring 2 Chainz starts the bonus track run letting DJ Premier sample “Move the Crowd” by Eric B. & Rakim comparing themselves to Kyrie Irving & Luka Dončić additionally referencing WWE Hall of Famer, former NWA World’s Heavyweight Champion, 4-time WWE United States Champion, WWE Intercontinental Champion & 8-time WCW World Tag Team Champion Ricky “The Dragon” Steamboat while the other “Like My Shit” ends the deluxe calling out those biting his style over a trap instrumental d.a. got that dope supplied him.

Say what y’all want about the Rock & Roll Hall of Famer, but I grew up on his first 3 major label albums & both D12 albums. They made me who I am today: And if you including myself whose first concert was Eminem on The Monster Tour thought that RELAPSƎ would be the last time we’d ever hear from Slim Shady, we were wrong because he traced the character’s life story & eventual downfall to the point where I can say what I’ve listened to is a genuine top 5 album in his discography. He discusses where he came from & where he is as we stand today with an interesting musical hodgepodge of ideas & influences. Rest in peace, Shady! Thanks for everything.

Score: 4/5

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