Rich Amiri – “Grit & Grace” review

Here is the 5th studio LP from Boston, Massachusetts rapper & singer/songwriter Rich Amiri. Turning heads for 4 years now off the strength of his debut EP Ethereal, the 4ersona member would go on to follow it up with 6 more EPs before signing to Internet Money Records & introducing himself to a wider audience on the aptly titled Evolution followed by the sophomore effort Ghetto Fabulous. He landed a spot in last year’s XXL Freshman Class, coming off War Ready last winter to spread Grit & Grace.

“So Long” kick things off with Amiri talking about having to cut a few people off in order for him to blow up & having no regrets whereas “Lights Out” apologizes in advance if he’s been too serious since he dislikes young hoes until the buzzkill outro. “I Don’t Mind” assures that this chick will wish she picked him in a matter of time prior to “Flex N Finesse” talking about the 2 things that he likes to do.

The beat switch on “See Us Now” was enjoyable living like a player until he waits for karma gets him for all the bad he’s done in his life while the lead single “Paranoid” asks if the world’s against him or if Amiri’s buggin’. “Twin Flame” talks about feeling like he’s back in 2016 wondering how he lost his sauce when he’s the one who made it just before “Hoes Mad” turns up 1 time out of spite of these bitches.

“Homesick” starts the 2nd half with another highlight moment minimally diving into his spirituality while the final single “In & Out”responds to 9 Vicious wanting to beef with him, assuring that it had nothing to do with a woman. “Moving Dumb” talks about not fucking around with his payroll since he’s a $1M man & being made for this while “In That Mode” compares himself to a punk rockstar, cautioning that you don’t want smoke with him.

We have some cool sampling chops for the couple minutes “Never Had I” has to offer talking about focusing on stacking his cheddar & keeping his head to when his homie died since it always gets better while the rage-inducing “Brick Brick” confidently assures he’ll be fine. “Party Rock” produced by Synthetic could easily be my favorite track here dismissing a female calling him her Romeo while the closer “Code Red” talks about not coming to fuck around.

In no way am I trying to discredit Rich Amiri’s passion to expand by taking a different approach to Grit & Grace as well as taking heavy inspiration from one of my top 10 producers of all-time Ye or formerly Kanye West regardless of having to take a step back from the fandom because of his inexcusable behavior during the first half of the year, but I didn’t enjoy it as much as Evolution & Ghetto Fabulous or even War Ready mostly because the production isn’t as interesting.

Score: 3/5

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Autumn! – “Rolling Stone” review

Lafayette, Louisiana rapper, singer/songwriter & producer Autumn! starting the 4th quarter of 2025 with his 6th LP. Gaining traction off all 19 of his previous EPs & a full-length debut on SoundCloud since 2018 prior to signing to Victor Victor Worldwide & Republic Records right following the Not Much Left EP, he made his major label debut nearly 3 years ago with his sophomore effort Antagonist! as well as following it up with the last 2 installments of the Golden Child trilogy & Midnight Club. Wick delivered a sequel to Solitary last spring, You Never Was Mine in the summer & ##B4B2MR in the winter. After going Back 2 My Roots this spring, he’s taking on the persona of a Rolling Stone.

The self-produced “Hermes Carpet!” opens with a pluggnb intro telling his ex that her new man can’t ever take his spot whereas “Keys to the Benz!” psychedelically talks about trying to see what’s going through his lover’s mind. “Eddie Wuncler!” gives off a bit of a drum & bass vibe venting over a woman trying to get with him prior until the confidentially tropical “Trip to the Islands!” talks about never getting back what was stolen from him.

“Rebound!” reaches the halfway point of the album with an ambient plugg direction discussing champagne being the only kind of pain he knows while “Tired of Running!” talks about wanting to make this chick his. “Caught in Your Storm!” describes the certain type of fire in his partner’s eyes on the pluggnb tip while “Waiting for Love!” promises to rob anyone who fuck with his romantic interest over a vocal sample.

The song “Private Locations” begins to wrap up Rolling Stone’s final moments with Wick talking about going from filling out job applications almost a decade ago to becoming a rockstar meeting with hoes discreetly while “When You Left! / 1 Way! 3” finishes twinuzis’ 2nd full-length of 2025 in the form of a 2-parter thanking the ex that inspired him to make the biggest song of his career, which the 2nd half is the trilogy chapter of.

“No More Talking!” starts the deluxe run with a psychedelic plugg beat making it clear that some of the money he be making isn’t all clean while “Get Out the Way!” shares that very same advice to anybody in his face who’s broke. The rage-inducing “Canon Event!” talks about being in the fast lane & after “Better Off Alone!” admits he was lost for a second, “Finally Rich!” finds himself unable to resist flexing on his competition.

We get some synthesizers during “No Breaks!” talking about being under the impression at a hoe made a wish in the shooting star a.k.a. his Wraith while “Critical!” explaining that this paper is all he’s getting as of late. “Chopsticks!” warns that he carries 2 Glocks on him as if he’s Mad Max & the final bonus track “Devil in Miami!” talks about praying for a woman who met Lucifer himself in the 305.

Standing beside Back 2 My Roots in terms of being the greatest material Autumn! has made since signing to 10K Projects regardless of the latter from this spring feeling repetitive to others, his production on this one primarily focuses on the styles of pop rap as well as trap & alternative R&B rather than maintaining the plugg/pluggnb origins he returned to 6 months ago giving a glimpse of where he’s at in his career almost heading into 2026.

Score: 4/5

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4Batz – “Still Shinin’” review

The full-length studio debut from Dallas, Texas singer/songwriter 4Batz is finally here. Earning co-signs from one of my top 10 producers of all-time Ye or the Nazi formerly known as Kanye West to even Drake, the latter of whom signed 4Batz to OVO Sound for a 1-EP deal although his debut EP U Made Me a St4r was released independently through gamma. last spring. Buvision Entertainment & 10K Projects later bought 4Batz out of his OVO deal once he landed a spot in the 2024 XXL Freshman Class & eagerly anticipating Still Shinin’ to clear both of Ian’s recent output on the label Valedictorian & Goodbye Horses.

“too dam young” kicks it all off with a drumless 67 second intro singing about not being old enough to become this chick’s “main one” whereas “n da mornin” made for a decent R&B single with the biggest criticism lying with the repetitive & songwriting. “she ain’t no angel” featuring Leon Thomas III finds the pair teaming up for a duet about their lovers tryna justify their ways while “big on u” expresses the love he has for Anycia, whom he married in secret last weekend.

We get some heavier alternative R&B vibes on “my lil shootah” asking if he & his soulmate can get it on leading into “twerksongggg” appropriately following through with a tack for the strip clubs. “could we last 4ever?” shows a prominent alternative R&B influence again singing about wanting to sleep with a woman he feel like he can’t trust while “247” featuring Flo unites the quartet for a collaboration where a couple makes each other feel like heaven every day & hour of the week.

“done sippin’” featuring Maxo Kream gets together for a track discouraging the usage of lean putting the cups down for good while “getUwet” sings about going crazy alongside his newlywed wife in the middle of the evening. “yo typical lovestory” opens up to feeling like he done hit the lottery bagging Anycia comparing her to a model while “u” sings about needing the love of his life by his side.

The song “can u” begins the final moments of Still Shinin’ to assure that he’ll get any woman right if they show him what they can do with the cake while “ms. walker” featuring Zillionaire Doe meshes R&B & hip hop to talk about how they love the way their partners move. “let’s press play” finishes 4Batz’ debut with him recalling the first time he saw Anycia in her wedding dress.

In hindsight, it was probably a good thing that 4Batz’ 1-EP deal with OVO fell through because songs like “there goes another vase” & “i hate to be alone” contradict Rolling Stone’s claim that U Made Me a St4r had no purpose of existing. The R&B/trap soul star is Still Shinin’ in the midst of all the pressure he’s been receiving since blowing up becoming prideful of his home state down to Chopstars co-founder OG Ron C’s mixtape-esque narrations in time for Mads Krügger ending Matt Riddle’s reign as MLW World Heavyweight Champion tomorrow at Fightland VII.

Score: 3.5/5

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Dro Kenji – “The End of Nothing 2” review

Summerville, South Carolina rapper, singer/songwriter & producer Dro Kenji is back for his 3rd EP. Signing to both Internet Money Records & 10K Projects not even 365 days after he began making music, he has since put out 7 full-length studio LPs along with a couple EPs & a mixtape. The End of Nothing earlier this summer marked a return to form after experimenting with rage beats & a sequel’s here 6 weeks later.

“Fade” made for an emo rap intro confessing to his lover that he feels as if his heart’s beating I it of frame & the fear of showing how he feels whereas “Stay Focused” finds himself maintaining his concentration asking if he does too much when he’s off the drugs. “Outlandish” talks about never leaving his romantic interest stranded & wanting her to fall in love while “Plug’s House” poses the question of his authenticity being legit or not.

The End of Nothing 2’s final leg starts with “Joggin’”, where Dro hops over a melancholic guitar with more hi-hats talking about running to the bread. “Hookup 4 Anything” looks to start a catastrophe with his partner & realizes he possibly knows her more strongly than himself prior to “Annoying” getting to the bottom of whether or not he’s aggravating her.

Dro Kenji’s previous EP at the beginning of the summer welcomingly took it back to his emo pop rap/trap roots after experimenting with rage beats on Valentine’s Day, but I came away from The End of Nothing 2 liking it only slightly less than I did the predecessor. He’s topically sticking to his bread & butter which isn’t a criticism, except the production on here compared to the original End of Nothing doesn’t catch my attention similarly.

Score: 3/5

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che – “Rest in Bass” review

Atlanta, Georgia recording artist che releasing his sophomore effort a month after its announcement. Starting as a member of the 4ersona collective under the original moniker murkio before settling on cheRomani+ & later abbreviating it, it wasn’t until more recently where he decided to build a solo catalog for himself by putting out the debut EP 3 over a year ago & followed it up in the form of X or the original version of his 3rd EP Closed Captions a couple summers ago. Crueger that same Halloween showed more of a Chief Keef influence & is saying Rest in Bass nearly 11 months since his highly acclaimed rage debut sayso says.

“Slam Punk” was a rage-inducing opener talking about a girl calling him “Based God” shouting out none other than Lil B whereas “Rolling Stone” turns up the hypertrap vibes talking about having the Devil on his shoulders telling him to go. “On Fleek” puts his vocal range on the forefront advising the opps to call it keeps leading into “Lip Filler” talking about being so dangerous that he could possibly die young.

Former 4-time WWE world champion, 3-time WWE United States Champion, future WWE Intercontinental Champion & 5-time WWE tag team champion Sheamus gets referenced on the 2-parter “Hood Famous” posting up with felons just before “Bossupp” incorporates another beat switch referencing both WWE Hall of Famer, former 6-time WWE world champion & WWE Intercontinental Champion Randy Savage and the inaugural 4th Rope World Tag Team Champion & current 4-time TNA World Tag Team Champion Jeff Hardy of The Hardy Boyz.

“Marceline” keeps the rage beats coming likening his girl to the character from the Discovery Global-owned Cartoon Network series Adventure Time because she only comes out during the evening leading into “Die Young” produced by gyro talking about not wanting to grow old & going out in the fast lane. “Hellraiser” by OsamaSon looks to stir up some shit & CXO going for an experimental trap direction instrumentally, but then “Dior Leopard” hits us with another 2-part song talking about relapsing on drugs.

xaviersobased continues the 2nd half of Rest in Bass joining che during “Mannequin” homaging the late great Kobe Bryant bagging 24 hoes together while “Black Swan” splits itself in half again talking about being uncancellable & turning up at Summer Smash last month. “MDMA” makes several callbacks to sayso says speaking up regarding his lifestyle of recording in the studio & doing ecstasy while “Never Too Young to Die” featuring Chuckyy talks about being on top instead of middle men.

“Eardrummer” kicks off the final leg of the LP on a cloudier note thanks to Ginseng addressing his consistency & rise to fame while the distorted “Doe Deer” talks about simultaneously being a monk & a punk. “Stagedivin’” discusses making the mosh pit at the rave even bigger dying on the hill of not fucking with pigs while “Ba$$” samples “Lemon Glow” by Beach House finishing the album by talking about doing drugs & not wanting to leave.

Starting the Christmas Day deluxe run, “King of Rock” gives the audience more bass taking about shooting at opps & arguing the rights for that very title while “Make Out with My Choppa” boasts of poppin’ 100 bottles for 100 thots kissing a firearm. “Holy Moly” talks about drugs having him moving in slow motion & never running out of bread while “Die Hard” divides itself into 2 halves homaging the iconic action film that people to this day debate whether or not it’s a Christmas movie.

“Cutthroat” talks about pulling up to a meeting high as Hell & keeping that very attitude while the self-produced “Monster” confesses to sippin’ lean like he’s sick, going beast soon as he pops some ecstasy. “Dirty Sprite” comes through with another 2-parter talking about drank once again while “Serve da Ba$$” references former IWGPヘビー級王座, 10-time WWE world champion & former UFC Heavyweight Champion in both TKO Group Holdings divisions Brock Lesnar.

We have che talking about putting in the work much like one of Rihanna’s biggest hits “Work” off her magnum opus ANTI on “RiRi” & once the distorted “Whippin’” featuring OsamaSon reunites 2 of the biggest artists in rage currently 1 last time admitting that both of them are still up in the kitchen like they’ve always been, “What’s Love?” talks about wanting to be told what genuine affection feels like & yearning for his girl to stick around with him until the evening.

“Freak Neek” shouts out the late Black Sabbath frontman & WWE Hall of Famer Ozzy Osbourne who tragically passed away earlier this summer although there’s a homophobic bar at the very beginning of the verse that made me raise an eyebrow while “UAV” talks about his preference of sleeping with his lover instead of taking ecstasy & cooking opps. The final bonus track “I’m Sorry” appropriately finishes one of the most beloved rage albums of 2025 apologizing for falling in love, only wanting a Mercedes.

Ditching the secondary digicore & electroclash influences of sayso saysRest in Bass hones in deeper on the experimentally hardcore rage sound of his debut last summer perfecting in his own way that makes it feel refreshing when it began to seem that the style was getting played out & taking heavier inspiration from Playboi Carti’s sophomore effort Whole Lotta Red celebrating it’s 5-year anniversary this Christmas by having che pushing this style of trap forward.

Score: 4.5/5

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Dro Kenji – “The End of Nothing” review

Dro Kenji is a 22 year old rapper, singer/songwriter & producer from Summerville, South Carolina signing to both Internet Money Records & 10K Projects not even 365 days after he began making music. He has since put out 7 full-length studio LPs along with an EP & a mixtape, the latter of which being his most recent body of work coinciding with Valentine’s Day departing from the emo pop rap style he’s known for in favor of rage. 4 months later, he’s preluding his 8th album with his 2nd EP & the 2nd body of work from him in 2025.

“Pinnochio” kicks off The End of Nothing with a moody pop rap/trap intro wanting his bae at 2am & telling her how much she inspires him whereas “Tylenol” moodily talks about his drug addiction helping him. “Way Back in August” works in some acoustics from Census, Nico Baran & Niketaz asking why he & his ex keep crossing paths when his life’s goin’ the hardest while the woozy “Rude Girl” finds himself obsessed with that exact type of woman. Lastly, the acoustic trap closer “Unstoppable” caps off the EP by telling an ex who constantly lies to get away from him.

The stylistic departure of Love Kills left a handful of Dro Kenji’s fans divided on it but thankfully if you’re one of those people who missed hearing him over the emo rap sound he came up off of mixed with pop rap & trap, you’re most likely gonna come away from The End of Nothing looking at it is the most enjoyable thing he’s done since Wish You Were Here & it may even raise your expectations for his next album. Even if that tape was a passable experimentation from my perspective, it’s always great to hear artists get back to the basics of what got them this far in the game & he does it with ease.

Score: 3.5/5

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Aminé – “13 Months of Sunshine” review

This is the 3rd studio LP from Portland, Oregon rapper, singer/songwriter & music video director Aminé. Making his full-length debut in the summer of 2017 with the Republic Records-backed Good for You & fulfilling his contract with them releasing the sophomore effort Limbo during the 2020 COVID-19 lockdowns. KAYTRAMINÉ made their eponymous debut in the summer of 2023, now joining 10K Projects to embark on 13 Months of Sunshine coming off a handful of well-received singles.

“New Flower” produced by DJ Dahi & FNZ was a funky ass intro to get the ball rollin’ talking about success being all he wants whereas “Feels So Good” takes a rawer approach instrumentally flexing that the drank & his girl got him feeling great. “Sage Time” awkwardly admits to having depression soon as he nuts dabbling with hip house just before “I Think It’s You” tropically chooses to think about everything he’s lost.

Meanwhile on “Cool About It”, we have Aminé crossing over funk & house trying to maintain his composure with this woman he wants to sleep with leading into “History” taking a shot at alternative R&B talking about the previous run-ins he’s had with his partner. “Vacay” brings back the hip house vibes expressing his desire to get away from everything for a certain amount of time while “Familiar” blends alternative R&B, hip house, deep house, glitch pop, microhouse, chillwave & French house showing obsession for his romantic interest.

“Doing the Best I Can” gets the 2nd half of 13 Months of Sunshine going by hooking up some pianos singing that he’s trying when all of us are, but then “Temptations” soulfully talks about not knowing what he has until it’s eventually taken from him. “Be Easier on Yourself” opts for a slicker approach to the best advising not to be so hard on themselves while “Raspberry Kisses” asks for a woman to take him in now they’ve sealed the deal.

The title track starts the final leg with a 2-parter refusing to put shame on his name since he was named after his grandfather while “Changer” explains he has to be at terminal 7 when his girl wants to have dinner at 7, hoping the love he has for her doesn’t change. “Arc de Triomphe”samples “Has it Come to This?” by The Streets to make this hip house/UK Garage fusion wanting to know what everyone else on & “Images” featuring 454 ends by calling days in our life moments in time.

When you take in consideration of Aminé descending from Eritrean-Ethiopian heritage, it really shouldn’t come as a surprise to many that 13 Months of Sunshine acts as an overt love letter to his African ancestry. The production shows influences of alternative R&B, hip house, deep house, glitch pop, microhouse, chillwave, French house, UK garage, speed garage & 2-step refraining from having guests join him for most of the performances to his ancestors.

Score: 4/5

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Autumn! – “Back 2 My Roots!” review

This is the 5th studio LP from Lafayette, Louisiana rapper, singer/songwriter & producer Autumn!. Gaining traction off all 19 of his previous EPs & a full-length debut on SoundCloud since 2018 prior to signing to Victor Victor Worldwide & Republic Recordsright following the Not Much Left EP, he made his major label debut nearly 3 years ago with his sophomore album Antagonist! as well as following it up with the last 2 installments of the Golden Child trilogy & Midnight Club. Wick delivered a sequel to Solitary last spring, You Never Was Mine in the summer & ##B4B2MR in the winter. To end the 1st quarter of 2025, it’s time for him to go Back 2 My Roots.

“Replica!” sets the tone of what’s to come excellently with the self-produced plugg instrumental talking about the only thing he copies is Margiela whereas “Brainrot!” named after a term I feel like out-of-touch people use to call dank memes rocks Balmain showing respect to the late Lil Keed. “Passenger Princess!” keeps the plugg vibes going for a love song about his glock leading into “Sunburn!” sampling “Plastic 100°C” by Sampha & shouting out Summrs only having Burberry material on his end.

As for both “Something New!” & “Laws of Power!”, we have Autumn! taking a couple ##B4B2MR highlights & placing them on the final version of the album just before “Upper Echelon!” maintains the plugg sound talking about seeing the limelight. “Louie V Everything!” featuring Summrs on the remix expresses their love for Louis Vuitton referencing the Rockstar Games-owned Grand Theft Auto V protagonist Trevor Philips, but then “1 Way 2!” throws it back to the Antagonist! sequel aesthetically.

“Still the Same 3!” continues a trilogy that began with his breakout single stuck in a place he wants to forget while “Both Ways!” talks about his hoes being bisexual. “Did It Again!” a lot like “Something New!” & “Laws of Power!” reappears after being on ##B4B2MR while “Count It Faster!” talks about stacking his racks up. “Free Promo!” flexes his brother moving in slow-mo because of the lean while “Stuck in a Loop!” admits to the way he feels at times. “When I Pray” finishes Back 2 My Roots waking up with money on his mind.

##B4B2MR promisingly had many including myself thinking that Back 2 My Roots would be a return to form for him considering the mixed reception of You Never Was Mine almost 9 months ago & I personally would tell you that it’s the most I’ve enjoyed his music since Golden Child 3! exactly 3 years to the day it dropped. It’s primarily self-produced other than a couple tracks delving back into the plugg sound that made him blow up & he’s more focused than some of his recent output.

Score: 4/5

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YoungThreat – “It Gets Greater Later” review

Here we have the 4th mixtape from up-&-coming Los Angeles, California emcee YoungThreat. Emerging in 2019 off his debut tape Chucks Laced, he wouldn’t return until the fall of 2022 with his previous tape Still in the Trenches in addition to It Was Never Going to Be Easy & the 83 Ways Out EP. Coming off his appearance on the title track off Kendrick Lamar’s surprise 6th album GNX last month however, he’s remaining confident that It Gets Greater Later by putting out a new project with only less than a week away from Christmas.

“Road Runner” starts the tape by mixing west coast hip hop & trap into 1 talking about being addicted to running the streets whereas “Headtaps” takes a calmer trap route instrumentally bustin’ scripts as if he’s looking for his meds. “Gallery” maintains the west coast trap vibes calling out those mad at him & walking out with charged up batteries just before “‘91 Premium” taking real bulky squabbling anytime anywhere over a sample & some 808s.

Meanwhile on “Big Bad Wolf”, we have YoungThreat aggressively discussing his lone wolf status in addition to dissing everyone out here who be actin’ like hoes & blowing shit since they ain’t make any bricks leading into “Belt 2 Ass” talking about moving as if he’s a part of the military & not rushing greatness. “Dot” admits that he felt like he hasn’t changed until the Kendrick collab while “Ina Set” talks always aiming above the neck & that resulting in headshots.

“They Woke” blends chipmunk soul & trap flexing that he rose from the concrete cement while the ominous “Can’t Let Go” talks about hittin’ blocks like they raidin’ them. “AI” wants to know why everyone can’t see his time being now while “Demon” talks about not affording to lose another gun suggesting that everyone wants to see a darker side to him. “Late Night” properly finishes It Gets Greater Later by clarifying that keeping it real is in his blood & refusing to let these rodents breathe.

Every feature on GNX had their own unique qualities to them & given that I wasn’t too big on the new Siete7x mixtape Stucc in the Hole when he initially dropped it a couple weeks ago, I happen to find myself gravitating towards It Gets Greater Later in the sense that it’s the best body of work from the up-&-comers who got their biggest breakthrough a month ago. The west coast trap production is darker than the previously mentioned tape from earlier this month & I like that YoungThreat refrained from overloading it with guests.

Score: 3.5/5

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Lelo – “When It’s Over” review

This is the 6th EP from Detroit, Michigan up-&-comer Lelo. Signing to 10K Projects earlier within the year following his first 3 EPs, he would make his presence known more widely in the local trap scene by putting out his 4th EP Nightingale not too long after landing a record deal & gained even more exposure a month later by dropping the single “No Contempt” on SoundCloud. LifeAfterDogshit just so happened to come out a month ago & exactly 30 days later, he’s picking up exactly where he left off on When It’s Over.

“Broken” starts by mixing a rubbery bass-line with hi-hats talking about his top shelf status & being in it forever whereas “Get It Together” takes the cloudy trap route instrumentally talking about trying to get everything all in order. “Manga” has a cool symphonic trap vibe advising not to compare him to anyone he’s better than while “Dresser” cautions that all the extra shit is gonna result in y’all getting lined up.

To get the other half going, “Evangelion” talks about his desires of becoming rich & not trying to come off as being too brash while “Game” speaks on racing his idols out here rather than looking up them & callin’ a fuck boy his child since he raised him. “Numbers” nears the end of the EP by talking about having hoes leading into “Real Dogshit” closing up shop pointing out some of these dudes be actin’ tough & not seeing any action.

Whenever the time comes for Lelo to put out an official full-length debut, I really do think it’s gonna elevate him to the next level because I can say with confidence that When It’s Over has to be the most enjoyable EP in his discography other than Nightingale. The production maintains the consistency of the EP that he gave us only a month ago, once more holding off on any guests to make way for him rippin’ mics by himself.

Score: 3.5/5

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