quannnic – “Warbrained” review

quannnic is a 19 year old singer/songwriter, producer & former rapper from Florida widely introducing themself in 2022 off their acclaimed full-length studio debut Kenopsia ditching the digicore sound they originally came up on because it felt like their attempt at that whole subgenre of trap music was creatively unnatural & an untitled EP experimenting with ambient trip hop merely months a part from each other. They would go on to sign with deadAir Records for the sophomore effort Stepdream matching the praise of it’s predecessor & has unveiled his 3rd album ahead of the supporting tour kicking off a couple weeks from now.

“Prunesnail” begins with a noisy grunge intro singing about the difficulty of trying to maintain a relationship with someone in their life who isn’t as close as they once were prior to the lead single “Wrenches” fusing noise rock, indie rock, grunge, emo & slacker rock to take on themes of self-deprecation. 

The 3rd & final single “Aviator” seamlessly blends noise rock, post-punk, dream pop, gothic rock, post-punk revival & slacker rock feeling like there’s so many things they wish they didn’t care to do while the shoegazey “Scolder” sings about missing the times when their ex rebuked them.

“Torch” takes the halfway point to address an individual who they personally feel as if has lost their spark yet becoming surprised by the realization that they’re just like them leading into the shoegazing “Paperweight” singing about how they worked a miracle & finding nothing special regarding yet another victim of their own.

We have quannnic on the wombadelic “Heavensafe” venting that they’ve been contained in this ongoing war for the pearly gates while “Observer” combines noise rock, alternative metal, grunge, shoegaze, nu metal & post-rock to sing about sheeple stepping in to preach nothing but sounds as well as all of us winning only to lose something.

“Floorface” gets the clock started on Warbrained’s last 9 minutes by throwing it back to the days of ‘90s alternative rock with a small hint of grunge becoming delirious by the quiet depths becoming increasingly deadening & the piano-heavy “Wardeath” finishes the LP singing about considering themselves as more of a topic than a hero, yearning to hand out all of their importance.

deadAir Records has been on prolific run in 2025 constantly dropping digicore landmarks like the new Jane Remover album Revengeseekerz, & the new Lucy Bedroque mixtape Unmusique, but Warbrained carried the momentum with the darkest thing quannnic has ever made. Their production here focuses less around noise pop than Stepdream did couple years previously shifting it’s attention towards alt-rock, shoegaze, grunge, noise rock, Emo, alternative metal & slacker rock to compliment the depressive songwriting.

Score: 4.5/5

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Wildchild – “Child of a Kingsman” review

Oxnard, California veteran Wildchild hitting us with his 5th album. A member of the Lootpack alongside DJ Romes & one of my top 10 producers of all-time Madlib, his first couple solo efforts Secondary Protocol & Jack of All Trades under Stones Throw Records & Fat Beats Records respectively, although T.G.I.F. (Thank God It’s Funky) & Omowale would be received more moderately in comparison. Regardless, I still went into Child of a Kingsman hoping for it to be his best since Jack of All Trades.

“A Kingsman’s Flowers” begins by take everyone on a trip down memory lane in order to explain the definition of a kingsman whereas “Season of Kingsmen” produced by Nottz talks about preserving hip hop since he like many holds it dearly to his heart. “Change for My 2¢” heads for a jazzier direction instrumentally to make some powerful social commentary just before the synth-heavy “Wing Chun” talks about remaining undefeated.

Things take a funkier turn on “Multiverse” feeling as if the boom bap in him has been restored whenever his feet touch the floor leading into “Bat Signal” talking about how he don’t play. The beat Nottz whips up on “Mr. Pinocchio & Positive People” feels reminiscent of the late J Dilla touching base regarding crooked cops while “Freedom Riding” talks about the late John Lewis.

“Black Man Blues” turns the jazz influences back up so he can break down the hardships of being an African American feeling as if his glory is trying to be silenced & after the “Where the Poem Lady?” interlude, MAYAH takes over a good portion of the vocals during “Kingsmen” for a neo-soul jam continuing the themes of preserving the culture’s 4 elements & the overlooked element of knowledge.

The song “My Utopia” brings a drumless guitar beat into the picture describing what a perfect world would look like to him & after the “Brown Identity” interlude, “Welcome Home” ahead of the Antwone Fisher outro officially completes Child of a Kingsman by recapping a trip that Wildchild took to Soweto, South Africa with the MC/producer superduo Liberation.

Conceived during his time away from making music to focus on being a father, Child of a Kingsman stands out as potentially the finest example of Wildchild’s ability to make room in his songs for other artists to shine. Blending jazz & neo-soul together, he makes it a commitment to unify cultures through music & paying homage to all of hip hop’s veterans with intricately powerful songwriting.

Score: 3.5/5

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Hand Habits – “Blue Reminder” review

This is the 4th studio LP from Amsterdam, New York singer/songwriter Hand Habits. Following their first 5 EPs & of course the last 3 albums, they would go on to sign with Fat Possum Records for their last EP Sugar the Bruise to moderate reception although I personally thought it was Meg’s strongest one yet. They’ve put out a small handful of singles already to generate buzz for Blue Reminder, which is Fat Possum’s first offering in over 3 months & their first full-length under the label.

“More Today” sets the tone with a crossover between indie rock & singer/songwriter feeling like their romantic interest’s words are tearing her apart in a good way whereas the lead single “Wheel of Change” maintains both elements of the previous track & combines them with alt-country & folk rock to sing about needing their lover now more than ever.

As for “Nubble”, we have Meg fusing alt-country & dream pop together confessing that they feel like life has been treating her well outside of a few regrets they has just before “Dead Rat” recaps a true story of a mouse’s corpse rotting away from within the walls of their own home & advising people to let nature take it’s course.

“Jasmine Blossoms” was a great b-side to the latter single depicting the contradictions between the neighborhood of Mount Washington out in Los Angeles, California as well as the horrifying things one may come across on social media & the TV news stations leading into “Way It Goes” singing about the ups & downs of a relationship.

After the jazzy piano heavy “(Forgiveness)” instrumental composition, “Beauty 62” shows a bit of a Bob Dylan influence singing about finding beauty within all the chaos while the 4th & final single “Bluebird of Happiness” draws inspiration from the extensive amount of time Meg had spent on the road. 

The title track easily sticks out as the most emotional & confessional moment on Blue Reminder wanting to prove that the love they have for their partner is true by doing literally anything over more keys while “Quiet Summer” sings about wanting to lie down during a warm evening around this specific time of the year. “Living Proof” wraps it all up with a subdued tone admitting they never knew what love could do.

Walking an emotional tightrope between hope & quiet anxiety, Hand Habits’ 2nd offering under the Fat Possum banner departs from the insularity that their previous material had become known for & it takes over Wildly Idle (Humble Before the Void)’s spot for Meg’s greatest LP of the 4. Their indie rock & singer/songwriter production has evolved greatly almost a decade in pulling from indie folk, slowcore, folk rock, americana, alt-country & dream pop to thematically attach itself to the idea of committing in many ways.

Score: 4/5

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Offset – “Kiari” review

Atlanta, Georgia rapper Offset returning after 22 months for his 3rd studio LP. Starting out as 1/3 of the Migos with Unc & Phew, he released a fantastic collaborative project with 21 Savage & Metro Boomin’ on Halloween 2017 called Without Warning only to make his solo debut Father of 4 the best of the 3 compared to QUAVO HUNCHO & The Last RocketSet It Off wasn’t too bad either, but Kiari has been shaping up to be his most personal since Father of 4 & had me anticipating it.

“Enemies” produced by Metro Boomin’ & Honorable C.N.O.T.E. begins by asking for God to protect him from his friends whereas “Pills” featuring YoungBoy Never Broke Again samples “Don’t Let Me Be Misunderstood” by Nina Simone to talk about drug usage “Professional” mildly boasts of him getting bitches like it’s a skill leading into the underwhelming “Back in That Mode” featuring YFN Lucci talking about them getting in their bags again.

Gunna joins Offset on “Different Species” bringing an acoustic guitar & some hi-hats together so they can discuss the baddies they stole livin’ the dream just before the WWE’s official Elimination Chamber XVI there song “Bodies” featuring J.I.D paints poignant imagery of the gangsta lifestyle combining trap & chipmunk soul thanks to Vinylz, FNZ & BoogzDaBeast or trap metal if you include the remix from BNYX of Working on Dying. “Love You Down” by Ready for the World gets smoked during “Love You Down” courtesy of London on da Track telling his new chick that he’ll start trusting her while “Run It Up” featuring Key Glock talks about having money on their minds over.

“Set It Off” oddly enough ends Kiari’s first leg with a demo quality title track that didn’t make his previous album while “Folgers” references my 2nd favorite basketball player of all-time Kobe Bryant & refusing to trip since he’s been bettering himself. “All of My Hoes” incorporates these psychedelic guitar licks & hi-hats talking about his hoes stealing each other while “Calories” flexes that he made $20M from his sound this summer.

As for “Checkmate (Smooth)”, we have Offset talking about making it onto the news because he’s a fashion week killer & flooding his new bitch out in the pool while “Backends Fasho” boasts of him making finer materials out of the regular things. “Prada Myself” talks about how everything he has makes him the person he is now while “Never Let Go” pays homage to Takeoff.

“Favorite Girl” counts down the final minutes of Kiari with a dedication to the most special woman in his life & “Move On” ties it all up by reflecting on his marriage to Cardi B, explaining that she’s happy for her moving on & asking why she doesn’t feel the same way about him. He even touches base regarding their little back-&-forth convo on Twitter at the beginning of 2025, rightfully explaining that it made them look foolish.

Starting the deluxe run, “Athlete” cloudily talks about getting geeked up on ecstasy on a boat while “History” mixes some horns & hi-hats to give game for free. “How Did We Get Here?” takes full accountability for his divorce from Cardi B while “Swing My Way” links up with Turbo for a cloudy pop rap/trap hybrid. “Style Rare” featuring Gunna shows off their senses of fashion & the final bonus track “10” was a weaker pop rap attempt.

Putting his artistic persona aside, Offset or in this case Kiari looks at himself in the mirror to see how far he’s come & what he’s done whether it’s good or bad. Soul-searching without sacrificing the technical precision he’s been known for, the ex-husband of WWE’s SummerSlam XXXVIII hostess gearing up for her comeback next month peels the layers back & gives the audience a better look at himself as a person.

Score: 3.5/5

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Ami Taf Ra – “The Prophet & The Madman” review

Moroccan born albeit Los Angeles, California raised singer/songwriter Ami Taf Ra making her full-length studio debut. Her husband Kamari Washington has become the most revered saxophonist of the past decade, dropping the crown jewel of Brainfeeder Records’ entire catalog with The Epic during my senior year of high school. However, she’s signing to Flying Lotus’ independent imprint distributed by Ninja Tune herself & introducing the world to who she is artistically through The Prophet & The Madman.

After the “Speak to Us” intro, the 2nd single “How I Became a Madman” begins with Ami & her husband taking inspiration from “Packard Goose” by Frank Zappa for a spiritual vocal jazz opener whereas the 4th & final single “The Prophet” asks herself how can she go in peace without sorrow. “God” goes for a Parliament-Funkadelic vibe continuing to depict themes of spirituality just before the soulfully jazzy “Love” yearns to be spoken to of affection.

“My Friend” incorporates some jaw-dropping guitar work from Brandon Coleman likening herself to a garment she wears rather than what she sees while “Children” sings over acoustics suggesting to give your children your love instead of your thoughts. “Gnawa” comes through with a passionate love letter to her Moroccan roots & after “Gibran” compositionally enhances the spiritual jazz fusions, final song “Khalil” ahead of the “Speak to Us” outro sends off the LP with a powerful 10 minute vocal jazz closer.

The Epic remains my favorite jazz album of the 21st century, so I was all on board the idea of Kamasi Washington returning to the label he dropped it under to help his wife produce her own debut & I think Ami Taf Ra can reach that point of making something as equally groundbreaking a few years from now. The Prophet & The Madman is basically her take on the spiritual jazz/jazz fusion sound her husband has become known for except she’s putting a vocal soul jazz twist to it confronting topics like duality, healing & ancestral memory.

Score: 4/5

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Paul Cornish – “You’re Exaggerating!” review

This is the full-length debut studio album from Houston, Texas pianist Paul Cornish. Known for working with the likes of Terrace Martin or Robert Glasper & Herbie Hancock, he would go on to sign with the greatest jazz label of all-time Blue Note Records this past January after solidifying himself by blending post-bop with blues & gospel. Coming off the heels of 3 singles with in the past 7 weeks or so, You’re Exaggerating! looks to carry the torch for all the pianos players who began an 86 year tradition that’s still going strong.

“DB Song” comes out the gate blending these settle piano passages with Jonathan Pinson on drums & Joshua Crumbly on bass hence the “DB” in the title whereas “Queinxiety” expresses Paul’s habit of chronic overthinking the 3 & a half minutes. “Star is Born” references the formation of literal stars instead of the composer himself leading into “Slow Song” removing the drums & bass from the equation.

As for “5AM”, we have Paul looking back at his days in college where he used to wake up very early to work out just before the lead single “Dinosaur Song” takes inspiration from his girlfriend’s nephew. Jeff Parker plays guitar on 2nd single “Palindrome” complimenting the Monkian keys & after the final single “Queen Geri” pays tribute to the late Geri Allen, the closer “Modus Operani” shows off a bit of a baroque influence to end the LP.

Inspired by Robert Glasper’s sophomore effort Canvas & it’s follow-up In My Element, all 9 of the original compositions that Paul Cornish conceived throughout the course of his 42 minute debut continues a historic lineage of local pianists by taking out a few pages from his story leaning towards the styles of post-bop & jazz fusion with an approach that tends to entice the audience rather than impressing them.

Score: 4/5

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Nourished by Time – “The Passionate Ones” review

This is the sophomore effort from Baltimore, Maryland singer/songwriter & producer Nourished by Time a.k.a. Marcus Brown. Beginning under the original monikers Riley with Fire & Mother Marcus until sticking with his current name, he would go on to drop his debut EP Erotic Priobotic followed by the sequel in the spring of 2023 & sign to XL Recordings a year later. His previous EP Catching Chickens would arrive a couple months later, preluding The Passionate Ones nearly 6 weeks after Justin Bieber experimented with bedroom pop over the course of his 7th album Swag in light of him becoming a father.

“Automatic Love” sets up shop in the form of this synthpop intro singing about being loved in a way he’s never known previously whereas “Idiot in the Park” soothingly desires a type of romance that’ll leave him with scars, vocally throwing it back to the days of the late King of Hooks Nate Dogg on certain occasions. The lead single “Max Potential”blends bedroom pop, neo-psychedelia, hypnagogic pop, synthpop, dream pop singing about the stabilization of affection while “It’s Time” admits the only 2 things he has are baggage & a vision of love.

After the “Cult” interlude, the 2nd single “9 2 5”brings together elements of deep house, outsider house, freestyle music & Jersey club singing about life being hateful when that couldn’t be any more accurate regarding the state of the world in 2025 just before the peppy synthpop tune “Crazy People” kicks off the 2nd half of The Passionate Ones suggesting that the insane doesn’t flat out admit it openly. “Jojo” featuring Tony Bontana works in some bass guitar licks singing about never being any worse while the 3rd & final single “Baby Baby” mixes new wave, experimental hip hop, neo-psychedelia, synthpop, Atlanta bass, electro & political hip hop comparing the murder of Freddie Gray to the ongoing Gaza genocide.

“Tossed Away” begins the LP’s final act incorporating some heavy synthesizers with a Stevie Wonder twist to it feeling disillusioned by many Americans having difficulty of paying rent & buying groceries due to everything becoming more expensive while “The War’s Over” sings over a piano instrumental that the only case scenario of him surrendering is if the woman he’s addressing gets with him. The neo-psychedelic title track finishes with one of the most gratifying outros I’ve heard all year, skillfully tying up all loose ends culminating it’s core themes & prominent sounds feeling like he’s lost his reflection or pondering if the future will be in his favor.

Laying out the blueprint for building your own altar in the ruins of the American Dream, what Nourished by Time has done for the bedroom pop subgenre of indie pop in the 45 minutes The Passionate Ones has to offer is far more groundbreaking than Swag earlier this summer & could go down amongst the greatest albums to ever come from that style of music. Marcus’ production further explores alternative R&B, neo-psychedelia, hypnagogic pop, synthpop, sophisti-pop, UK street soul, deep house, outsider house, freestyle music, Jersey club, dream pop, experimental hip hop, Atlanta bass & electro powerfully tackling subjects including love or labor & everyday existential pressure.

Score: 4.5/5

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Tezzus – “King Phønk” review

This is the 5th EP from Atlanta, Georgia rapper Tezzus. Introducing himself with his first few EPs Hard2Kill as well as Hellraiser & Everyday’s Halløween, his debut mixtape Tezzus Khrist last holiday season would significantly elevate his profile locally as did the handful of appearances he made on The XA Tape earlier this year. Coming off his new Søufside collaborative EP with Percaso & more recently Backrooms, there’s still no signs of King Phønk slowing down anytime soon.

“Heroin” gets the party started with some dirty south-esque horns & hi-hats keeping all blues in his pockets along with encouraging the women to get addicted to him whereas the rage-inducing “Scream!” talk about it either being “Øway or no way”. “Bleeds” featuring Percaso finds the pair taking 107 seconds to reflect on making bitch boys shed blood for a bag of weed just before the pluggy “172M” featuring 10KDunkin talks about being showstoppers.

Moving on from there, “Don Dølla” goes for a minimalistic trap direction instrumentally talking about having real problems & the legitimacy of being a crime boss leading into the phonk-inspired “Me & Gang” looks back on the paper plate days when he knew he’d be in the position he’s currently in doing good financially. “Balling” talks about going off so hard to the point where he might as well get himself a jersey while “Damn” finds himself waking up next to a hoe he doesn’t even know.

“In the Hills” featuring southsidesilhouette pushes further towards the conclusion of King Phønk with both of them embracing a hypertrap vibe to talk about going brazy with friends out in the west coast hills & once the raging “20K Bitch” flexes the amount of money he made in only 7 days’ time, “Bones” caps everything off with a dark plugg outro talking about his trust issues.

Tezzus shifts his focus back to the music only 24 hours after being hacked, leaked, lied on & almost having his spirits killed to seamlessly continue this run he’s been on these past couple weeks by dropping off his 2nd EP of the month if you count Søufside separately & one that I find myself leaning towards more than Backrooms merely 10 days ago. Stronger production based around the modern trap sounds of rage & dark plugg, tighter contributions from the guests & the phonkiest himself delivering angrier performances.

Score: 3.5/5

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Shaggytheairhead – “Secret World” review

Las Vegas, Nevada producer, rapper & fashion designer Shaggytheairhead dropping his 5th EP without warning. Peaking my interesting after producing one of my all-time favorite Ouija Macc songs “Nardwuar Glocc” back in 2018, he would back that up with 4 EPs before becoming an in-house producer for Chapter 17 Records & Psychopathic Records alongside his Mythic Mindz cohort Devereaux. Shaggy dropped his debut Wakin’ Up during the 21st annual Gathering of the Juggalos, which was the only Gathering I’ve ever been to & a weekend that I’ll never forget. As far as the actual music on Wakin’ Up, it’s my favorite of his thus far because of how much he improved his lyricism & that he dabbled with a wide range of sounds to show his influences. Grin to the Grave, Coffee, Blood Sweat Tears and Lazy & Crazy have all followed since to equally warm reception & looks to embark on a trip to a Secret World.

“Cursed” begins our exploration with a g-funk instrumental feeling like he wouldn’t make it as far as he has whereas the depressive “Never That Deep” talks about shit getting annoying to him. “Ghosts Ride” pulls a little inspiration from the Memphis scene sonically getting high in his zone leading into another g-funk cut “Relax” talks about needing to chill out. “Animosity” embraces a boom bap vibe to discuss antipathy & “I Ain’t Happy” angrily finishes the EP by dissing the crowd trying to stop his shine.

A little over 15 months since he & Darby O’Trill got with Devereaux to deliver their celebrated 10 Bandz collaborative effort, Shaggytheairhead first solo offering in over 2 years over 24 hours since the current GCW World Tag Team Champions YNDP became the new JCW World Juggalo Tag Team Champions during The 2 Day War between Juggalo Championship Wrestling (JCW) & Game Changer Wrestling (GCW) coping with the personal issues he’s gone through since we last heard him on Lazy & Crazy by solely killing a deft batch of beats that range from g-funk to boom bap & Memphis rap.

Score: 4/5

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Brigid Bites – “Lil Tart” review

Davenport, Iowa rapper & dancer Brigid Bites coinciding the Gathering of Legends or the 25th annual Gathering of the Juggalos with her 4th EP. Creating the juggalette burlesque troupe in 2017 called Juggalesque, they’ve have since become a drawing attraction at the Gathering since then with her eventually joining Chapter 17 Records CEO/Psychopathic Records recording artist Ouija Macc on stage quite a few times since. However, she made a pretty solid introduction into the music world with Hatchet Girl & Pumpkin Spice respectively. She just dropped Hot Honey back in February during Juggalo Weekend & is following it up with Lil Tart.

The title track hops over a hip house instrumental to get things started talking about her shine being unstoppable whereas “Never Forget” takes a more industrial approach speaking to those thinking they could have a chance of avoiding her. “Neon Nightmare” combines hip hop & house music again comparing herself to a puppet master leading into “MCL (Mad Clown Luv)” showing her appreciation towards the juggalo family.

6 months to the day since Hot Honey marked Brigid Bites’ official return after a year & a half of not releasing a project, Lil Tart already reveals itself as my favorite EP of the 2 we’ve gotten from her this year. The production’s more experimental than what I’ve heard from her previously & ditching the trap sounds of her earlier material to emphasize the electronic influences a lot more prominently. Particularly hip house & even giving industrial hip hop a chance at the halfway point.

Score: 3.5/5

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