SoFaygo – “Go+” review

SoFaygo is a 21 year old rapper from Cobb County, Georgia who’s cemented himself as one of the biggest faces in the plugg/pluggnB & rage scenes in recent memory. He’s since gone on to drop a dozen EPs & it’s even resulted in Houston trap trailblazer Travis Scott signing him signed to a Cactus Jack Records, who put out his long awaited full-length debut Pink Heartz this past fall even though reception towards it was generally mixed. But to coincide with the 1-year anniversary of both him making it on the XXL Freshman Class & the release of B4Pink the previous summer, Faygo’s coming back & turning what was supposed to be the deluxe version of his last album into his 13th EP.

“Pure” featuring YSL Records signee Yung Kayo starts off the EP with some synthesizers & hi-hats talking about refusing to let anyone box them in whereas “4Sum+” goes for a shimmery approach instrumentally thanks to Bakkwoods & Rafmade detailing being too up. “We Good” produced by Noah Mejia takes the cloudy trap route telling his dog that they straight leading into “Ye” keeping the atmospheric vibes going courtesy of BryceUnknwn comparing himself to the person formerly known as Kanye West with all the swag that he creates.

Meanwhile, “Fuck a Post” continues towards the cloud rap trajectory talking about not being on social media like that to chase the paper just before “On the Moon” has a more murkier feeling to the beat from BNYX of Working on Dying so he can flex lyrically once more on the lyrical front. “Backseat” delves back into a spacious groove calling money his best friend, but then “Havoc” appropriately gives off a rage-inducing edge with it’s instrumental causing devastation.

“Wish I Could Tell You” featuring DD Osama was an underwhelming choice for a single from the uneventfully airy production to the mediocre chemistry between the 2 artists while the track “Undercover” pulls from plugg music a bit getting more romantic. “RC” cooks up another trillwave beat comparing his life to a roller coaster & the bonus cut “Beautiful Rockstar” officially sends off the EP by vibrantly detailing the lifestyle that he lives with a roomy trap instrumental backing him.

Pink Heartz for the mixed reception it got is still a fine major debut & I feel like those same fans who’re left disappointed by that previous album last fall will find themselves leaning towards Go+ because there’s no question in my mind that it’s Faygo‘s best since Travis signed him. The feature list isn’t as consistent as the full-length debut even though I appreciate him boiling it all down to only 2 guests & the most refreshing part is him returning to the pluggnb/plugg elements that his previous Cactus Jack material lacked.

Score: 3.5/5

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Concrete Dream – “It Was All a Dream” review

Concrete Dream is a trap metal outfit from New Jersey consisting of Jeremiah Mayhem, Craig Belesi Jr., John Kennedy, Juan Bang & Josh Batista. They began in 2018 with their debut EP Relationshit & then a self-titled debut album the year after that, but signed to Suburban Noize Records last summer after delivering only a couple singles since. But as the spade continues to celebrate it’s 25 year anniversary, Concrete Dream are unleashing their 2nd EP as their debut for the label.

“Catch 22” blends some heavy riffs & hi-hats together talking about hearing angels calling whereas “Pit Trap” featuring Hyro the Hero gets more abrasive as they all make it known that none of them fights fair at all. “Buckout Road” hellishly encourages people to run for their lives just before “Contagion” talks about tuning in to see them fall going into more straightforward rap metal territory.

The final leg of the EP starts off with “Called Out” returns to their signature trap metal addressing those quick to point a finger while the song “Amnesia” is a full-blown metal ballad talking about another case of memory loss. The penultimate track “Twitter” gives off a more nu metal flare discussing the cost of your hate & “Kill the Lights” is a vigorous closer talking about something being different this time.

Now if anyone loved the Dropout Kings’ latest album Riot Music that came out last month, you’re gonna want to give It Was All a Dream a listen too because these guys are in that hardcore trap wheelhouse. Jeremiah Mayhem delivers some his most captivating vocal performances & jots down some of his most well-written cuts yet as the 4 instrumentalists all play with intense ferocity.

Score: 4/5

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Rico Nasty – “A Nasty Summer” review

This is the 2nd EP from Maryland recording artist Rico Nasty. Garnering my attention in 2018 of her 6th mixtape Nasty, I was still very much impressed by her unique personality & her eclecticism although it was just ok. However the next spring, she got Kenny Beats to produce her debut EP Anger Management in it’s entirety & that ended up being my favorite body of work of hers even to this day. Nightmare Vacation was a bit of a step down from Anger Management even though it has a good share of bangers like “iPhone” & “10Fo”, but Las Ruinas showed a more experimental side to her & is preluding her sophomore effort in the form of A Nasty Summer.

“Turn It Up” is an aggressive trap opener produced by 100 gecs about never paying attention to a hatin’ ass hoe while the sped-up version of “Pussy Poppin’ (I Don’t Really Talk Like This)” is completely pointless & that’s coming from someone who considers the original to be another Nightmare Vacation highlight. The song “Dirty” gives off a more dissonant vibe talking about how her man likes everything while the penultimate track “Countin’ Up” finds Kenny Beats drawing inspiration from The Neptunes with the instrumental airing out bitches on her dick. “Big Titties” featuring EARTHGANG though closes the EP by rambunctiously talking about seeing their dreams vividly with co-production from Baauer.

Although not as good as Anger Management, I will say that A Nasty Summer is definitely still worth the listen for anyone who enjoys Rico’s music as much as I do. Only a couple redundant cuts throughout the 11 minute run, but the other 3 are more than enough to make up for it considering that 100 gecs & Kenny both bring the best out of her in their own uniquely distinctive ways. It’s really enough to make me keep my fingers crossed that we’re in for her strongest full-length.

Score: 3.5/5

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Shaggy 2 Dope – “Professor Shaggs & the Quest for the Ultimate Groove” review

Shaggy 2 Dope is a 48 year old MC, producer, DJ, former professional wrestler, podcast host of The Shaggy Show, Juggalo Championship Wrestling co-founder & the shortest reigning JCW World Juggalo Heavyweight Champion from Detroit, Michigan who formed the Insane Clown Posse with his late older brother John Kickjazz alongside his best friend Violent J & the late Kid Villain. But for the past 3 decades, the Southwest Strangla & the Duke of the Wicked have spread the word of the Dark Carnival whether it be the first 6 Joker’s Cards or the label that runs beneath the streets Psychopathic Records. However, it is widely known that 2 Dope was the first of the Clowns to go solo with his 1994 debut EP Fuck Off! produced by Mike E. Clark as a prelude to the shelved full-length Shaggs the Clown. He eventually returned on his own in ‘06 with F.T.F.O. (Fuck the Fuck Off) & here we are on the 6 year anniversary of his DJ Clay-produced sophomore effort F.T.F.O.M.F. (Fuck the Fuck Off MuthaFucka) witnessing Stretch Nuts returning over 4 years after Gloomy Sunday by dropping his 3rd EP.

“Clown Boi” is a trap opener produced by Shaggytheairhead with Bazooka Joey talking about the only 2 words that he knows are seek & destroy whereas “Illuminati Don’t Want Me” works in some synthesizer patterns & hi-hats to make it known that he ain’t weak or snotty whatsoever which has been historically proven. “Defy” is an electro-trap hybrid talking about disobeying or resisting everything from love & hate to gravity with a fresh reference to both “Stomp” off my 2nd favorite sideshow EP Tunnel of Love during the first verse & WWE Hall of Famer Gorilla Monsoon on the other just before “Done Giving a Fuck” takes a cloudier route with the title saying it all that he’s doesn’t have any fucks to give anymore.

Meanwhile, “How Ya Been” begins the final leg of the EP with a smooth trap ballad with Shaggs warmly declaring that everyone’s welcome here while the song “This Ain’t That Bitch” has an eerie vibe courtesy of his lil brother Tre Lb & a Carnival of Carnage title track sample during the hook calling out all the bitch boys. The penultimate track “The Quest for…” has some crazy beat switches throughout courtesy of DJ Clay & 2 Dope talking about looking for the ultimate groove of course, but then “The Ulimate Groove” ties things up with an EDM closer.

It breaks my heart to see people trying to slander the Duke’s name as a juggalo kid from Detroit & as much as I appreciated Bloody Sunday for being darker than J’s previous solo efforts, solo Shaggy never disappoints & he once again proves his point here. The production is eclectic in sound & he continues to expand on his lyrical elevation as shown on the Yum Yum Bedlam era output as phat as he’s always been. Fuck all the toxicity & drama, everything boils down to the music at the end of the day & that’s the only thing that matters to me until I’m dead in the ground.

Score: 4/5

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$uicideboy$ – “Yin Yang Tapes 4: Winter Season” review

This is the 27th EP from New Orleans, Louisiana duo the $uicideboy$. Consisting of Ruby da Cherry & $crim, these guys released a plethora of projects within the last decade whether it be the Kill Your$elf saga & Eternal Grey or even I WANNA DIE IN NEW ORLEANS & the Travis Barker-produced Live Fast, Die Whenever. The boy$’ sophomore effort Long Term Effects of Suffering followed as did their last album Sing Me a Lullaby, My Sweet Temptation over the summer & are wrapping up the month of May by concluding the Yin Yang Tapes tetralogy.

After the intro, the first song “Bossier City Kidnap Victims” starts the final entry of the saga by making the block wet with an eerie trap instrumental backing them while the penultimate track “Didn’t They Give You Percoset?” takes a more straightforward dirty south turn talking about getting the money. “I Deleted Facebook a Long Time Ago” rounds out the EP with a cloudy Memphis trap banger knocking motherfuckers out they case, thus ending the Yin Yang Tapes era & marking the beginning of the Grey Sheep III rollout.

People were complaining about the predecessor to be 1-dimensional & I think I can just come straight out the gate saying that’s not the case with this final installment of the series. I mean yeah we still get doses of cloudy Memphis gangsta rap & rare phonk, but the dirty south opener was a refreshing change of pace from what we heard throughout the dozen joints we got from the boy$ this month excluding the intros & makes me confident about the Grey Sheep trilogy coming to a conclusion this summer since the original contains some of their strongest material.

Score: 3.5/5

Lee Scott – “There’s a Reason for Everything” review

Lee Scott is a 38 year old MC & producer from Runcorn, Cheshire, England, United Kingdom introducing himself through The Wrong Bootleg Demo & the full-length debut Put on the Glasses over a decade ago under his own label Blah Records. Some may even recognize him for his memberships with the Antiheroes, the B-Movie Millionaires, the Children of the Damned, Cult Mountain, the Cult of the Damned, Group, HAPPYPPL, Hock Tu Down, the Mcabre Brothers, Nobodies Home & the Supergang. Peppered Mouth Soup & Happy Sellout Shit were ok, but the sophomore effort Stupid Poignant Shit produced by Illinformed would become his most celebrated work following it up with Tin Foil Fronts as well as CactusOwlMoonGoat & the High Focus Records-backed Butter Fly being another favorite of mine. Nice Swan would become as beloved although Supergod5000plus & Oh, the Fun We’re Havingweren’t as good as that or Lou Reed 2000 or Somewhere Between Here & There. I felt like Friend, Come to Me & Be Saved was alright & he’s giving us his 8th EP almost 23 months since Gates Click Shut.

The self-produced “Views Through the Palisade Fence” turns his neighbor’s latest plot into Salem’s lot over this silky beat whereas “It’s Not Cricket” takes the boom bap route instrumentally lets the crowd know he wants to see their hands from the front to the back. “Raleigh Lizard” goes drumlessly talking about the wind being foreboding & traveling by foot until his bike’s fixed while the dusty, lo-fi “Long Gone Johnny” boasts his autobiography reads back to front.

“Council Home Linoleum” gets the 2nd half of There’s a Reason for Everything going advising not to worry about a thing just before “Ambassador Rum” takes a laidback boom bap approach talking about being everything they say you shouldn’t be, including a witty Jedi Mind Tricks bar during the final verse. “Dole Jelly Pot” suggests bringing a water pistol to a fire fight might be a right decision over a soulful sample & “Worra Day” ends with him talking about the best you’re gonna get isn’t a whole lot.

I Can’t Figure Out How I Figured It All Out was alright & Ffsman wound up being a little better, but There’s a Reason for Everything makes up for the mixed reception of both those extended plays with Lee Scott making one that tops Gates Click Shut joining the likes of Stupid Poignant Shit & Butter Fly in being some of the Blah Records founder’s finest material. There are much less features than his most recent output, saving more room for his razor-sharp wordplay & handling the production solely by himself.

Score: 4/5

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Crossworm – “Gōst” review

Grand Rapids, Michigan rapper, singer/songwriter, producer & Dirtcore Music founder Crossworm preluding his 7th album ANTI this fall with his 3rd EP. Starting as 1/2 of 2Korpse before branching out on his own for the solo debut Phoenix, this was followed up by a sophomore effort Ready to Burn alongside 2 EPs Mouth Full of Dirt & jaws: Deciduous respectively. He took a few years off after the latter only to return in the summer of 2014 by dropping 4 more LPs: Parasite Avenue, Drowning in Restricting Thought, Finding X & Eat the Weak. Nearly 3 years since the latter, the Gōst has returned to haunt the underground.

After the “Morgue Song” intro, “Rape the King of Horrorcore on his Birthday” was a wicked industrial hip hop hybrid suggesting you keep acting like he won’t stick a fork in your face whereas “Trouble in the Library of Corpses” after the “Gimme a Fuckin’ Break” skit industrially talks about death being what you feel. “Suck a Gun” promised he’ll be there anytime you need the reaper while “Baby in the Microwave” by Bodies Below Sea Level blends boom bap production with horror-themed storytelling. Finally after the “Do Your Fuckin Job or You’re Fired” skit, “PU55YB34TER” closes the EP by getting sexual over an industrial beat.

It’s already been made pretty clear that ANTI will be heavily influenced by the synthpop style Depeche Mode became known for earlier on in their careers, so Gōst is more than enough to satisfy anyone who’s been down with him since he put out Phoenix nearly 2 decades ago coming off the most aggressive full-length of his whole entire career during the COVID-19 pandemic. His production goes back & forth between boom bap & industrial hip hop with the Dirtcore founder unapologetically tackling themes of horror in such an irreverent manner.

Score: 4/5

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$uicideboy$ – “Yin Yang Tapes 3: Fall Season”

The $uicideboy$ are a hip hop duo from New Orleans, Louisiana consisting of Ruby da Cherry & $crim. For almost a decade now, these guys released a plethora of projects whether it be the Kill Your$elf saga & Eternal Grey or even I WANNA DIE IN NEW ORLEANS & the Travis Barker-produced Live Fast, Die Whenever. The boy$’ sophomore effort Long Term Effects of Suffering followed as did their last album Sing Me a Lullaby, My Sweet Temptation over the summer & continuing the Yin Yang Tapes series in the form of their 26th EP.

After the “Fall Season” intro, the song “whatwhat” opens things up with some gritty synthesizer patterns & hi-hats cautioning that you better stay the fuck away from them while the penultimate track “Every Dog Has His Day” gives off a more atmospherically Memphis kind of vibe to it this time around getting on their Scarface shit. “Provolone & Heroin” featuring Freddie Dredd however happens to be a mediocre closer despite its mystic trap production the lyrics representing the north side of New Orleans.

If you’re already familiar with the last 2 installments of the series, then you pretty much know what you’re getting yourself into here as they drop off 3 songs that fans can get themselves into the fall mood in about 4 months when the leaves actually start to turn brown. The feature at the backend is probably the weakest of the tetralogy so far, but they continue to expand on the cloudy rare phonk sounds from before & dropping their signature gangsta-infused lyrics on top of it.

Score: 3.5/5

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MonStar Entertainment – “Game Ain’t Safe” review

MonStar Entertainment is an independent hip hop label based out of Flint, Michigan, founded by local emcee Lyte & his business parter Matt Estep almost a decade ago by now. Their presence was first felt in the summer of 2014 when Young Lyte put out his debut mixtape Follow the Lyte, but took a backseat once he signed to Psychopathic Records on New Year’s Day 2017 & preluded his full-length debut Broke But Still Shining at that summer in the form of a debut EP Psychopathic MonStar before leaving the next fall. Eventually, he returned last March by dropping Metamorphosis solidly detailing his artistic & personal growth since taking time off in music. But after signing longtime affiliate Skitzo as well as Hypnotic Sound Studios co-founder Str8jaket & even Psychopathic’s first act that they signed Project Born, all 5 of them are joining forces to deliver a debut EP showcasing the ever-growing MonStar roster.

After the intro, the title track truly opens the whole thing with a nocturnal trap ballad so they can talk about taking over the rap game whereas “Can’t Stop Us” works in some luxurious keys & hi-hats making it known that MonStar is a force to be reckoned with. “Black Sheep” dives into cloudier turf referring to themselves as the underdogs while the song “Another Level” laces a booming trap instrumental addressing their elevation. The penultimate track “Heavy” blends these hi-hats with some whistling flexing about the noise they make & “Soldier’s Code” closes it all out with a vulnerable trap ballad bracing for the fight that’ll soothe the soul.

Even though MonStar’s been around for 9 years, most of us were introduced to them through Lyte’s brief tenure under the Insane Clown Posse’s mentorship & to hear the whole current roster together like this gives me the feeling that it’s only the beginning of the Flint label’s rise in the underground. The production’s more trap based, each artist has their own distinct characteristics to them & they all ping off one another naturally throughout.

Score: 4/5

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Gavyn Gunn – “Malevolent” review

Gavyn Gunn is a 26 year old MC & songwriter from Dallas, Texas who’s been sending shockwaves in the underground wicked shit scene for a while now because of his introspectively content as well as his aggressive delivery & blurring the lines blending a few different genres & styles together. He most recently signed to Dirtcore Music last month, becoming the 7th artist to join its ever-growing roster albeit the 3rd to put out new material following Samson Samson & Madd Maxxx respectively. For his debut EP on the other hand, it’s been said to be the first in a trilogy & was curious to hear what he had to bring to the table for the Grand Rapids imprint.

“Breathe” produced by Crossworm fuses drumless & industrial hip hop comparing the stress he feels to the massive heaviness of an actor whereas “Looking for Trouble” hooks up more synthesizers getting ready to go to work with the razor blade to your throat. “Mind in Madness” switches it bringing a trap vibe to the beat talking about only seeing fear while “The Bug” featuring Bodies Below Sea Level industrially finds the trio honing in all your fears. “Your Scars” featuring Køvin Kestnar uncannily finishes the EP with both of them lighting their way through the dark.

Finally getting to see Dirtcore go from solely handling the discography of it’s own CEO for 2 decades next spring to becoming an actual label increasing their signings has been a long time coming but if you’ve enjoyed Sammy’s most recent sophomore effort Witch Hunt as much as I did or the latest singles Maxxx has been heading ahead of his official debut on the imprint this fall, Malevolent kicks off what’s shaping up to be an exciting trilogy by letting his intense craft shine brightly. Crossworm’s aggressively raw production pulling inspiration from industrial hip hop & trap goes hand-in-hand with Gavyn’s anxiously hungry performances drenched in dark introspection.

Score: 4/5

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