Benny the Butcher – “Summertime Butch 2” review

Here is the 18th mixtape from Buffalo, New York emcee Benny the Butcher. Being in the game for 2 decades already, it wouldn’t be until 2016 where he alongside his cousins Westside Gunn & Conway the Machine would take the culture by storm off projects like Tana Talk 3 & The Plugs I Met. Harry Fraud came in for a sequel to the latter following the mature Burden of Proof & finally, Tana Talk 4  took it back to the basement a couple years back. We got Summertime Butch last August & only a couple months following Excelsior, a sequel to Summertime Butch has arrived.

“Jasmine” featuring Westside Gunn was a drumless opener immediately after the “Summer Feelin’” intro talking about the state of rap being the same since 2Pac got killed almost 3 decade ago over a Daringer beat only 4 days after West performed during the AEW World Tag Team Champions The Hurt Syndicate’s entrance at All Out IV last Saturday during their defense against JetSpeed & former AEW World Trios Champions The Patriachy whereas “Hood on Fire” featuring Bruiser Wolf finds the 2 coolin’ down their respective streets after they started getting hot.

Benny rubs his success in the faces of all his detractors on “Told You So with a Mike WiLL Made-It instrumental backing him & after the “Where’s Butch?” skit, “Summer ‘25” orchestrally boasts that you can find him outside. G Herbo joins Benny on the cloudy trap crossover “Why Would I?” wanting to find a reason for forgiving the people who’ve switched up on them as their popularity in music continued to grow just before “77 Club” keeps giving the middle finger to naysayers calling him washed talking about the analytics never lying.

“Gold Plated Leica” featuring O.T. the Real brings the pair together to flex their dope line from Pittsburgh to Austin while “In the Wall featuring Bun B gets back on the trap vibes thanks to Cory Mo talking about having drug money for everyone. “Pandoras” featuring Duckman & Elcamino begins the last 5 minutes or so of Summertime Butch 2 with the trio bringing up the fact B$F’s been making the whole rap game play follow the leader all decade up to this point trying to save a few regardless of the Everybody Can’t Go lesson while “Lo Lo’s” sends off the tape with a Bink! heater advising to trust what you see & let your eyes be the proof.

The original Summertime Butch EP still remains the most polarizing entry in Benny’s discography over 11 months since it initially came out because a large crowd of people felt like he was on autopilot that whole time, but Summertime Butch 2 clears both the predecessor & Excelsior as a result of more consistency within the production & a tighter list of guests compared to the previous EP he gave us over a couple months ago.

Score: 4/5

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UFO Fev – “The Ghost of Albizu 2: Albizu’s Revenge” review

Harlem, New York emcee UFO Fev surprise-releasing his 12th studio LP. Coming up a little over a decade ago off his full-length debut Around My Way, it wasn’t until 2020 when he saw his biggest year yet by dropping not 1 but 3 well received projects: the Statik Selektah-produced sophomore effort Fresh Air along with the Termanology-produced debut EP From El Barrio, With Love & the Big Ghost Ltd.-produced 3rd album The Ghost of Albizu. This was all followed up with Magnum Opus along with the Vanderslice-produced Enigma of Dalí & 4 EPs: The Most HighPrayer, Weed & Music, E Pluribus UnumSunsets in the Ghetto & of course the Finn-produced Blood on the Bills. I even enjoyed the Fredro Starr produced Strapped & Pyramid Schemes, although The Ghost of Albizu 2: Albizu’s Revenge already raised the expectations looking at it on paper.

“Road to Redemption” gets the ball rollin’ on The Ghost of Albizu sequel talking about spending it all & making it back twice because he’s a hustler with a Jose Santiago hook performed in Spanish whereas “The High & Mighty” embraces a sample-heavy boom bap direction admitting to thinking before he speaks now. “My People” loops up some sped-up vocals talking about Puerto Ricans wanting to be free since he himself has Puerto Rican origins while “Scarlet Fever” featuring Red Inf makes sure they leave no prisoners boasting that nobody can stand a chance against them.

Jose Santiago comes back to kill it with the choruses 1 more time on “Work Hard, Play Harder” blending rap rock & boom bap together except he’s singing in English this time about getting it out the mud off the muscle just before “Puerto Rock” leaves wack rappers layin’ on their backs & flexing of him opening up his own lane for Puerto Ricans who’re nice on the mic. “Culture Cypher” jazzily takes us all the way back to the South Bronx where hip hop all started leading into “Vengaza” dustily talking about the concept of revenge.

Lil D saves my personally favorite guest verse of the 2 during the boom bap & chipmunk soul fusion “Benicio” to kick off The Ghost of Albizu 2: Albizu’s Revenge’s last 6 minutes or so assuring that the plug knows his face & he’s been simply running in place as of late prior to “The Cornerstone” finishing up the album with 1 final jazzy boom bap joint about being emotionally generated rather than AI generated & a hook homaging “C.R.E.A.M. (Cash Rules Everything Around Me)” by the almighty Wu-Tang Clan.

Crazy to think it’ll already be 5 years this upcoming Halloween since I first got introduced to Fev by hearing The Ghost of Albizu and catching up to both Fresh Air & From El Barrio, With Love afterwards. And I understand that some weren’t feeling Pyramid Schemes as much as Enigma of Dalí, but most people are gonna enjoy The Ghost of Albizu 2: Albizu’s Revenge a lot more since it continues the hardcore/conscious themes & jazzy boom bap sounds of the predecessor expanding it occasionally in favor of rap rock & chipmunk soul.

Score: 4.5/5

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Cactus Jack Records – “JACKBOYS II” review

This is a brand new mixtape from Houston, Texas label Cactus Jack Records founded by local rapper, singer/songwriter, producer & the honorary WWE Hardcore Champion Travis Scott. The current roster includes Don Toliver, SoFaygo, Sheck Wes, Luxury Tax, DJ Chase B & Wallie the Sensei with both Smokepurpp & Malu Trevejo being signed at one point except neither one of them officially put anything out during their short time. They collectively dropped a JACKBOYS EP days following Christmas 2019 & have returned for a sequel since they’ve brought a few new artists on board since.

The first song “Champain & Vacay” by Don Toliver & Travis Scott after the “JB2 Radio” intro finds the latter subtly responding back to Pusha T with the “Made a hunnid off pushin’ T’s” line over some synthesizers & hi-hats whereas “2000 Excursion” by Don Toliver, Sheck Wes & Travis Scott finds Cardo mixing trap, pop rap, neo-psychedelia, alternative R&B & rap rock homaging the titular brand of Ford cars. “Kick Out” by Travis Scott gives me a gritty dirty south vibe until the switch-up during the last minute courtesy of T-Minus talking about getting the boot of shit gets complicated prior to “Dumbo” also by Travis Scott guaranteeing that the baddie he with is going stupid.

SoFaygo gets his own song with “MM3” shutting down the rumors of him being unhappy on Cactus Jack by giving us what we can expect on his forthcoming sophomore effort Mania rapping like the rent was due sampling “Ski Mask” by Project Pat just before “Velour” finds Don Toliver prominently singing a refrain & chorus with Sheck Wes providing a sole verse & Bugz Ronin musically backing them. “Contest” by SoFaygo & Travis Scott marks the first time they’ve collaborated with each other jumping over a rage beat talking about catching Ws their whole lives while “I.L.M.B. (I Love My Bitch)” by Sheck Wes & Travis Scott made for an average trap single with secondary hypertrap influences.

“Where Was You” by Travis Scott featuring Future & Playboi Carti produced by F1LTHY of Working on Dying reunites the Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Chet Holmgren & Jalen Williams of trap so they can kill all these hoes wanting to eat their bones while “No Comments” by Don Toliver kicks the synths back in full gear to talk about sprinkling more hi-hats in the fold trying to get to know a woman. “Beep Beep” by Travis Scott ruins a self-produced instrumental by giving SahBabii the weakest feature on the entire compilation while “PBT” by Travis Scott featuring Tyla & Vybz Kartel feels like an outdated attempt at dancehall.

Glorilla’s appearance during “Shyne” by Travis Scott makes sense heavily pulling from Chicago drill & crunk referencing Matthew McConaughey in light of his upcoming appearance in the A24 Films thriller The Lost Bus & hitting the wiggly wobbly while “Outside” by Travis Scott featuring YoungBoy Never Broke Again links the 2 up over synthesizers & hi-hats talking about stealing people’s bitches. “Can’t Stop” by Don Toliver & Wallie the Sensei brings both of them together to deliver a psychedelic tribute to ingesting all sorts of drugs & “Florida Flow” by Travis Scott featuring Kodak Black finishes the tape with them beat reflects on the Miami scene speedin’ people’s shit up the way H-Town slows shit down over a Tay Keith beat.

My favorite Travis Scott solo song is actually the one that starts off the deluxe run “Da Wizard” dropping braggadocio over Metro Boomin’ & TM88 production while “Trip Out” feels like a Yeat song featuring Sheck Wes considering Yeat’s all over it except for the final verse out-rapping Sheck & it’s catered to the rage sound Yeat became known for when his popularity grew. The final bonus track “110 South” by Luxury Tax & Wallie the Sensei marks Luxury’s only appearance on the entire compilation joining Cactus Jack’s newest member backed by a ghostly trap instrumental giving no fucks.

So much going down in Texas this weekend considering Adam Page became a 2-time AEW World Champion ending Jon Moxley’s 4th & worst reign, オカダ・カズチカ defeating his biggest 新日本プロレス rival Kenny Omega to become the new AEW International Champion, the longest reigning ROH Women’s World Champion Athena becoming the current 4-time AEW Women’s World Champion Toni Storm’s #1 Contender, the seeds being planted for a reunion between former 7-time WWE Tag Team Champions Adam Copeland & Christian Cage since the current ROH World Television Champion Nick Wayne turned on the latter and lastly the current ROH World Tag Team Champion & ROH World 6-Man Tag Team Champion Dustin Rhodes becoming the new AEW TNT Champion because of Adam Cole vacating it due to career-threatening health issues at All In IV yesterday. Regarding the Let God Sort ‘Em Out & JACKBOYS II debate, Let God Sort ‘Em Out sweeps because JACKBOYS II feels reminiscent of Drake & 21 Savage’s collab album Her Loss.

Score: 3/5

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Bizarre – “He Got a Gun 5: Basement Jazz” review

5 installments deep into the He Got a Gun saga & the 9th studio LP from Detroit emcee Bizarre. Emerging as an original member of the now defunct D12 led by the late Proof, he was also among the first in the crew to put out solo efforts with his 1998 debut EP Attack of the Weirdos being a hometown classic in my eyes. Fast forward 7 years later, Biz followed it up with a worthy full-length debut Hannicap Circus & has continued to put out music on his own since, with the last time we heard him being his 11th mixtape 18159 Stout during the first quarter or the year. The Foul Mouth-produced He Got a Gun has since become a whole entire series of it’s own, releasing Basement Jazz as a way of celebrating THE DƎATH OF SLIM SHADY (COUP DE GRÂCE) turning 1.

“Therapy” opens with a drumless gospel sample talking about having eternal loyalty for his brethren refusing to be friends with somebody whose brother got popped by him whereas “Screws Loose” featuring B-Real takes the boom bap route instrumentally still getting psycho with it. “Deep into Thought” works in some pianos to talk about living life to the fullest & showing y’all how to ball just before “Warrants” angrily gets involved with criminal activity.

L.A.R.S. or the Last American Rock Stars reunite on “Bag ‘Em Up” talking about servin’ it up & turning up all the smoke that all the hoes bring to them while “Cooley High” strips the drums to spit that gangsta shit asking why a knife got brought to a gunfight. “He’s Nice” featuring Cassidy finds the pair over a rap rock/boom bap hybrid filled with battle raps leading into “All Gas No Breaks” featuring Kain Cole grittily talking about not slowing down.

“Purpose” featuring Fool Boy Marley gotta has my least favorite guest performance on the entire thing despite the theme of not wanting their friends & family to worry for them, but then “Raised in the Ghetto” hooks up a crooning sample to talk about coming to rob instead of poppin’ bottles. “Practice What I Preach” brings some finger snaps & pianos to the fold speaking on being no good until “I Just Wanna Have Sex With You” ruins synth-lenient beat with average depictions of romance.

Meanwhile on “I Miss My Dogs”, we have Bizarre reflecting over the people in his life who can’t be with him presently while “Motion” by L.A.R.S. featuring X Factor works in a trippy guitar riff talk about steadily being on the move. “Mid July” combines themes of sex with the rockstar lifestyle he’s been on for 2 decades prior to Bruiser Wolf linking up to make some “Junky Music”.

“Get Off My Corner” featuring Jalen Frazier & Max Hilli begins the final quarter of the album with the trio advising certain people to back up from their respective blocks while “David Starr” featuring Foul Mouth & Nick Speed brings a jazzier vibe to the table for them to dismiss being soft. “Tap Dance” featuring Lokye ahead of the “Basement Jazz” outro as a closer hops over some pianos, kicks & snares taking on the lustful themes better than “I Just Wanna Have Sex With You”.

All 4 of He Got a Gun 5: Basement Jazz’ predecessors carry some of Bizarre’s most essential material by himself & I can say the same for most of what we got throughout this latest entry. Foul’s production a whole 365 days since the most vital placement of his resume lives up to the name in that it’s than what he’s done with his longtime collaborator almost a decade since their creative partnership began regardless of the few moments where the performances lack.

Score: 4/5

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Weiland – “Fall from Grace (When is Enough, Enough?)” review

Tampa, Florida rapper, singer/songwriter, producer & audio engineer Weiland releasing his 2nd EP of the year & the 4th in his discography altogether. Coming up almost a decade ago off his debut EP Insomnia, his first couple mixtapes Packrunner & Grimey Life resulted in Victor Victor Worldwide signing him for the synthpop inspired Vices to high acclaim. You Can’t Climb the Mountain in N.Y. came out a couple months ago to warm reception & Fall from Grace looks to up the ante.

“Crash” was a 55 second synthpop, hypnagogic pop & coldwave intro suggesting not to blame self justice when we live in this world whereas “The Man Who Last the War” could be my favorite on the EP singing about heartbreak. “Let’s Go to Bed” feels reminiscent to some 80s new wave synthpop with a more lo-fi approach to it while “She’s Got a Gun” ahead of “The Lovefix Purpose” outro finds himself having nowhere to run from a woman who didn’t mean to claim her love.

Fall from Grace carries over almost every sound that we heard throughout You Can’t Climb the Mountain in N.Y. except for the neo-psychedelic undertones taking a darker turn regarding the songwriting portraying himself as an individual trying to make sure everything in his life is in order & searching for purpose in the disorderly conduct. People have all felt lost, tired or broken at a point or 2 in their lives & those themes can heavily relate to many of us continuing to find a reason to move forward.

Score: 4/5

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Noah Cyrus – “I Want My Loved Ones to Go With Me” review

Noah Cyrus is a 25 year old singer/songwriter from Nashville, Tennessee notable for being the younger sister of Miley Cyrus & the daughter of Billy Ray Cyrus as well as voicing the titular character in the English dub of the スタジオジブリ fantasy classic 崖の上のポニョ. She later signed to Columbia Records after becoming of age, her first couple EPs Good Cry & The End of Everything left listeners divided until her full-length debut The Hardest Part found herself beginning to come into her own. We just got her sister’s most acclaimed project of her career Something Beautiful over a month ago & she’s looking to catch up with her sophomore effort.

“I Saw the Mountains” made for a tight singer/songwriter, Americana & indie folk intro singing about holding onto hope whereas “Don’t Put It All on Me” featuring Fleet Foxes was an unexpected folk pop, singer/songwriter, indie folk, Americana & adult contemporary collaboration that impressed me as a Father John Misty fan since my senior year of high school a decade ago. 

Another favorite has to be “What It’s All For?”, delivering vocal performances that feel reminiscent of Miley’s over acoustics reflecting on Noah’s current relationship with her father & the 2 divorces he’s had in 24 months just before “Way of the World” featuring Ella Langley finds the pair coming together for a contemporary country track explaining that them crying on the curb is usually the way it works with them. 

“New Country” featuring Blake Shelton served as the final single learning to walk on your own 2 feet & finding your own independence drawing inspiration from Americana once more & the secondary soft rock influences during “Long Ride Home” making our way to the halfway point of were incorporated pretty well singing about her feeling as if the wheels have left the road.

We have Noah over some heavy pianos over the course of “Apple Tree” cautioning not to question or push her to lessen her love since she’s learned from her own experiences that it’s a weapon that ruins everything while “Man in the Field” returns to an Americana sound singing about her father becoming unrecognizable to her & having unfinished emotional business with him implying that he disappears when she calls out for him.

“With You” starts the final act of I Want My Loved Ones to Go With Me wanting someone in her life she’s shared good & bad times with to know that she’ll always be by their side while “Love is a Canyon” comes to a “beautifully true” realization comparing romance to a gorge vulnerably pulling off these low register vocals. “XXX” featuring Bill Callahan closes the album with a duet radiating a nostalgic campfire vibe signing about signing every letter with 3 X’s regardless if it’s to their exes or not.

I wasn’t a fan of Good Cry or The End of Everything, but I did enjoy The Hardest Part for the complete stylistic departure she went for compared to those early EPs & I Want My Loved Ones to Go With Me only reveals what she had inside her all this time. It’s more singer/songwriter & indie folk lenient than the last LP was comfortably finding who she is further pulling from country pop, soft rock, Americana, contemporary country, folk pop & adult contemporary.

Score: 4/5

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Justin Bieber – “Swag” review

Justin Bieber is a 31 year old singer/songwriter from London, Ontario, Canada signing to Island Records during my time in middle school to put out My Worlds & Under the Mistletoe only to fulfill his obligations with them on Believe & Journals. He has since been on Def Jam Recordings for the past decade & Purposemarked a divisive debut for the label, although Changes & Justice was equally as bad as a great deal of his Island output. Coinciding with Clipse’s comeback Let God Sort ‘Em Out, his 7th album has arrived after receiving an 8 hour notice.

“All I Can Say” made for a decent synthpop intro singing about the inner turmoil in his life at the moment & trying to find some sort of solace whereas “Daisies” fuses bedroom pop & sophisti-pop courtesy of Mk.gee to count down the days he has left for him & his wife Hailey to reunite. The stripped-back “Yukon” tries to figure out what his soulmate would do if he didn’t love her including corny lines like “get a move on like U-Haul” until the atmospheric “Go Baby” sings about creating an emotional space without any sort of judgment.

Haile gets brought up again during “Things You Do” throwing out more weak bars such as “Sunday to Sunday, I’m here whеn you’re weak” leading into “Butterflies” responding to paparazzi gangin’ on him at Coachella this spring. “Way It Is” featuring Gunna was an underwhelming pop rap/synthpop crossover talking about wanting to settle down with their respective partners just before “First Place” sings about wanting to see his spouse in 1st place like “it’s a birthday”.

After the first of 3 questionable Druski skits, “Walking Away” breaks down a few different chapters in the story of his decade-long relationship with Haile while “Glory Voice” sings over a bare guitar for a minute to show off a religious side of himself. “Devotion” featuring Dijon co-produced by Daniel Caesar finds the 2 teaming up for a tribute to Justin’s son Jack stripping the sound back even further while “Dad’z Love” continues to expand on the themes of fatherhood.

“Sweet Spot” featuring Sexyy Red after another Druski skit gets together to bang out a decently sexual synthpop & pop rap duet while “405” after the final Druski skit makes a weak reference to Tom Holland’s portrayal of Spider-Man in The Walt Disney Company-owned Marvel Cinematic Universe. The title track feels like a Cash Cobain song since Justin’s only handling the chorus & it does very little for me since I prefer Cash Cobain as a producer than a rapper.

The song “Zuma House” counts down towards the last 5 minutes of the LP singing over an acoustic guitar for a mere 83 seconds asking Hailey if she would catch him if he happened to fall backwards & “Too Long” ahead of the “Forgiveness” outro feels reminiscent to those luscious new wave pop songs you would’ve heard back in the 80s letting off some steam regarding the length of time he’s had away from Haile.

Didn’t even have a review for Swag in mind for the majority of the weekend but when Biebs joined Travis Scott & Jim Jones in dissing Clipse because they “make music for bitter grown men who collect KAWS dolls & still shop at KITH & Union”, it gave me some inspiration & I’ll argue that I liked Swag less than I did Jackboys II & At the Church Steps combined. Mainly because it feels like his attempt at Mr. Morale & the Big Steppers for casuals except it stylistically focuses around contemporary R&B, pop, pop soul, alternative R&B, bedroom pop, sophisti-pop, neo-psychedelia, synthpop, pop rap & gospel

Score: 2/5

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J. Michael Phillips & Yelawolf – “Whiskey & Roses” review

Toledo, Ohio singer/songwriter J. Michael Phillips joining Alabama rapper, singer/songwriter, producer, fashion designer & entrepreneur Yelawolf for a new collaborative album. One of whom is an urban country artist with only 1 LP of his own under his belt thus far & the other used to be signed to Eminem’s own Interscope Records imprint Shady Records a decade ago. Tony Martinez put out his own debut last summer Everything West introducing an outlaw country style to Slumerican Records & the producer of that is teaming with his newest signing for Whiskey & Roses.

“Helping Hand” throws it back to the 80s new wave & soft rock era instrumentally so both of them can talk about being there for one another whereas “I Swear” marks the first of 3 Yelawolf solo tracks throwing it back to the Arena Rap era suggesting to meet him at the church since he’s no longer afraid of death. “Amnesia” & “Falling” continue the themes of love speaking on a rough breakup during the first & continuously falling for their new partners on the other.

Reaching the halfway point, “Honey Hole” finds both parties sharing verses agin getting on their country shit together just before “Giddy Up” switches it up since Catfish Billy takes on the role of a feature letting J. Michael shine more talking about 2-faced people. “Searching for Heaven” speaks on finding Satan during their journey of seeking the pearly gates while “Yay Yay Yay” featuring Struggle Jennings finds the trio on some trap shit dropping hardcore lyrics.

“Big Trucks” sets Whiskey & Roses’ final minutes off revisiting the structural of “Giddy Up” except Yelawolf’s verse on here in comparison to that previous song feels garishly half-baked prior to “All I Ever Seen” saving J. Michael Phillips’ only solo cut for last embracing a traditional country vibe singing about not forgetting the nightmares & rising above the depths of where he was in life to live his dreams.

For clarification: I firmly believe that J. Michael’s upcoming sophomore effort & Slumerican debut will capitalize on his artistic potential much like Everywhere West did 11 months ago, but Whiskey & Roses would’ve made a better EP than a full-length because of everyone feeling like guests on their own project much like Drake & 21 Savage’s collab album Her Loss or the new Cactus Jack Records compilation Jackboys II.

Score: 2.5/5

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Giffy Pluggo – “Luxury Manifesto” review

Chicago, Illinois emcee & ATIP Records founder Giffy Pluggo dropping his 3rd EP ahead of the Douda deluxe. Emerging a couple years ago off his debut mixtape Paid Leave & it’s sequel last summer, put out a deluxe version of his debut album Los Pluggos several months ago followed by Pluggo’s Birthday & Douda respectively. The latter mostly produced by Myles becoming the most beloved entry in his discography thus far, coming back after a few months for a Luxury Manifesto.

The title track produced by Scott Storch will arguably surpass “Casino” in being his biggest hit from the exuberantly cloudy instrumental to the lyrics about having the winning head whereas “Long Distance” featuring Global blends cloud rap & jazz rap taking on more romantic topics. “Livin’ Life” brings a soulful trap vibe to the table expressing gratitude for being in his current position until “Smoke & Stack” featuring BSF Tone 066 pleas for their homies who took risks to come home from the penitentiaries.

Shifting focus away from the conceptual Douda this spring letting the world inside of Giffy Pluggo’s personal life, Luxury Manifesto turns the pressure up for the midwestern Black Soprano Family affiliate to state his aims of fortune ditching the predecessor’s balancing between boom bap & trap in terms of production opting in favor of ditching that traditional east coast sound in favor cloud rap along with jazz rap & chipmunk soul.

Score: 3.5/5

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Larry June – “Until Night Comes” review

This is the 12th LP from Vallejo, California emcee Larry June. Someone who’s been quite busy for almost 2 decades his last 11 studio efforts as well as 14 EPs & 7 mixtapes with the highlights of his ever-growing discography including the Lex Luger-produced Trap Larry, the Cardo-produced Cruise USA & it’s sequel Into the Late Night, the Harry Fraud-produced Keep Going & more recently the mobb music-influenced Jay Worthy collab effort 2 P’z in a Pod, The Alchemist-produced The Great Escape & The Night Shift. His previous album Doing it for Me just came 11 months ago & he’s looking to link back up with Cardo for him to produce Until Night Comes.

After the “Free Uncle Sherm 6” intro, the first song “50’s in the City” kicks it all off showing everybody the way he does shit in the bay over a slick Mobb instrumental whereas “Black Man” kinda leans heavier towards g-funk in terms of sound givin’ a fuck less of what others gotta say regarding him. “Meet Me on Harbor” featuring Black C finds the 2 smoothly doing whatever the fuck they be wanting to do having everything others desire, but then we get a sequel to “7 Mile Bike Ride” off Orange Pint.

“Organic Free Range Chicken” finds himself catching Ws & mobbin’ on all these hoes but after the “Cardo’s Groove” interlude, “Ya Feel Me” featuring E-40 turns the Mobb influences up even higher talkin’ about feelin’ good with a couple big stacks on ‘em. “Gotta Be Love” goes for a nocturnal g-funk vibe to the beat tellin’ his girl how fly she is just before “On the Unda” portrays himself as a pimp suggesting this chick to slip out of store shoes for hoe shoes.

To get the final act of Until Night Comes rollin’, “100 Bags” featuring Don Toliver gets together for a psychedelic pop rap cut responding to their partners asking where they’ve been by saying they’ve been around while “Canadian Snow” soulfully boasts of him speaking like a boss & walking like a kingpin. “Still Game Related” featuring HBK & Payroll Giovanni finds the trio talking about doing what others can’t while the title track featuring Richie Rich & Wiz Khalifawraps it all up with a Mobb outro.

Standing by that Doing it for Me wasn’t up to par with either The Great Escape or The Night Shift, I did however come to enjoy it as much as the Life is Beautiful collaborative effort Larry June did with 2 Chainz produced by The Alchemist back in February & cuts above the last solo effort almost 2 years ago. Cardo’s production get back in the Mobb/trap fusions that made his previous material with Larry stick out & making slight improvements regarding the choice of compared to guests Until Night Comes’ predecessor.

Score: 4.5/5

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