
Double disc 13th full-length LP from Atlanta, Georgia rapper, songwriter, trap pioneer & actor Jeezy. Emerging in the early 2000s off his full-length debut T.U.I. (Thuggin’ Under the Influence) & the sophomore effort Come Shop wit Me, his biggest breakthrough wouldn’t come until 2004 where he began a partnership with Def Jam Recordings that’s going on strong to this very day & dropped the classic Thug Motivation 101: Let’s Get It the following summer. Subsequent discography highlights would include Thug Motivation 102: The Inspiration, The Recession, Thug Motivation 103: Hustler’z Ambition, Seen It All: The Autobiography & even The Recession 2 that came out the day after his Verzuz battle against longtime rival Gucci Mane during the COVID-19 pandemic. He went back to basics with the help of DJ Drama last fall on his 14th mixtape Snofall & a year later, Jeezy’s departing Def Jam after nearly 2 decades to state that I Might Forgive…But I Don’t Forget.
“I Might Forgive” sets off the 2-disc effort with a triumphant trap instrumental addressing those who say the Snoman fell off & that he needs another hit whereas “My Name” hooks up some melodic background vocals & hi-hits talking about not letting anyone throw dirt on his name hence the title. “No Complaining” gives off a ghostly trap vibe thanks to the J.U.S.T.I.C.E. League & TM88 making it clear that he ain’t buggin’ since he came a long way that is until the orchestral-trap “They Don’t Love Me” produced by ATL Jacob admits he feel like the streets don’t love him anymore.
Moving on from there, “Trust No One” says it all hoping over pianos & hi-hats to declare that he ain’t trusting nobody since everyone out here’s getting killed just before “Sad” brings these unexpected bagpipes into the fold talking about the way his competition is going out. “Couldn’t Lose If I Tried” shows plenty of charisma for 3 minutes flexing that he can’t take no L’s, but then the piano-trap driven “Rewrite History” talks about still celebrating of his victories to this day.
“Never Had a Bad Day in My Life” pretty much says it all as it’s simply a W for him to wake up in the morning over a reversed loop & hi-hats from Cubeatz while “This Too Shall Pass” has this chilling vocal sample throughout providing advise to those that don’t wake up without a bag. “Don’t Deserve Me” gives off an ominous trap flare saying he feels like the rap game don’t deserve him prior to the victorious “If I’m Being Honest” once again talking about how it’s a win he isn’t dead or in jail.
The smooth “Don’t Cheat” has to be the most mature song on the first disc declaring that real ones aren’t unfaithful to their significant others & the soulful “Shine on Me” promising that it’ll be ok in the end. “Keep the Change” ends the first disc of I Might Forgive…But I Don’t Forget on spacious note calling out someone he always thought the best of & how much of a real shame it is. To start the 2nd disc or the But I Don’t Forget half of the album with J.U.S.T.I.C.E. League production top to bottom, “Delusional” is a jazzy start asking why they let the submarine implode.
“Nothin’ to Prove” blends in these horns & hi-hats asking what’s the matter since he ain’t letting them have it their way while the epic trap banger “Titanic” advises that this type of shit isn’t for the weak. “Everything About Me is True” asks what if he told y’all exactly that over a shimmery trap beat while “Expectations” gives of a mystical atmosphere declaring the first mistake is actin’ like you really enemies with him kinda sounding as if he was almost trying to do a 2Pac impression when he said that.
The sample throughout “Claim to Fame” is absolutely stunning explaining that winning, losing & bouncing back is all part of the game while the groovy “What I Gotta Do” talks about how this is a real song as opposed to a chill song oxymoronically. “My Intentions” is more of a slow jam dissing those who be throwing shit his name all day & the spacious trap cut “Never Be a Fan” cutting off those who he ain’t vibing is or even going as far as to telling them the truth if they really don’t know what love is.
“Sade” shows a more sensual side to Jeezy talking about bumping the smooth soul icon & sampling her own music appropriately on top of that, but the cloud rap/trap hybrid “Don’t Let Up” talks about being fucked over as a youth & that it left him with too much trauma. “Since Pac Died” glamorously confesses he hasn’t shed a year since the day 2Pac passed while “Free Champagne” mixes these pianos, guitars & hi-hats declaring a toast to tomorrow. “No Choice” ends the 2-disc full-length by warmly telling y’all to go get it.
I personally like to refer to Jeezy, Gucci Mane & T.I. as the Big 3 trap pioneers & I already went into I Might Forgive…But I Don’t Forget expecting it to be a step above Gucci’s latest double album Breath of Fresh Air from a few weeks ago especially considering that the J.U.S.T.I.C.E. League fully produced disc 2. Sure enough, that’s exactly what we got. The first half of it is cool, but man that 2nd disc joins The Recession 2 & Snofall amongst the best material Jeezy has done this decade. Now let’s see how T.I.’s upcoming double album & supposedly his last Kill the King does.
Score: 3.5/5
Keep up with @legendswill_never_die on Instagram & @LegendsllLiveOn on Twitter for the best music reviews weekly!