Nicki Minaj – “Pink Friday 2” review

Trinidadian-American rapper & singer/songwriter Nicki Minaj is celebrating her 41st birthday by putting out her long-awaited 5th full-length LP after a couple delays. Starting in ‘04 as 1/4 of the Hoodstars, she would go solo shortly after & put out a trilogy mixtapes in the mid/late 2000s, most notably her final one Beam Me Up Scotty that later resulted in New Orleans icon Lil Wayne signing Nicki to a joint deal with Young Money Entertainment & Cash Money Records. Her debut album Pink Friday in my opinion is her best full-length, as Pink Friday: Roman Reloaded was trash & The Pinkprint was average as was her last LP Queen over 5 years ago already. She has since departed Cash Money, but is sticking with Young Money & it’s distributor Republic Records alongside her newly launched Heavy On It Records for a sequel to her debut that I went into morbidly curious about.

“Are You Gone Alreaady?” featuring Billie Eilish on the hook has an angelic trap sound to it thanks to FINNEAS talking about only hurting you if you let them whereas “Barbie Dangerous” shows off a speedier flow reminding that these bitches is her sons all this time later over a piano-driven trap instrumental. “F.T.C.U. (Fuck This Club Up)” pays homage to a joint on Waka Flocka Flame’s groundbreaking debut album Flockaveli over a rubbery bassline & hi-hats from ATL Jacob, but then “Beep Beep” featuring 50 Cent goes into spacious trap turf courtesy of Murda Beatz wondering if it’s beef if she don’t even know you exist

Moving on from there, “Fallin’ 4 U” professes her feelings for her childhood friend/now husband & sex offender Kenneth Petty over an genuinely luscious beat with hi-hats just before “Let Me Calm Down” featuring J. Cole goes into a cloudier direction instrumentally so both of them can talk about being taken somewhere mystical. “R.N.B. (Real N***a Bitch)” featuring Lil Wayne continues to delve further into atmospheric territory dedicated to the titular type of women while “Pink Birthday” talks about making one feel like it’s their special day over Boi-1da flipping “Pornography” by Travis Scott.

“Needle” featuring Drake is an awkward reggaeton ballad comparing life to a haystack & their romantic partners as the needles in it hence the title while “Cowgirl” talks about getting drunk over acoustics & hi-hats. “Everybody” featuring Lil Uzi Vert has this danceable groove throughout the instrumental with both of them look to spin & kill guaranteeing that TikTok will have a field day with it while “Big Difference” explains that she ain’t nothing like these other women out here over a chaotic trap instrumental from BoogzDaBeast & FNZ.

We get a bit of dancehall mixed with trap & hardcore pop rap on “Red Ruby Da Sleeze” dropping braggadocio throughout while “Forward from Trini” featuring Skeng & Skillibeng embraces those dancehall elements of the previous cut a bit more heavier describing the kind of woman who has a thing for bad guys. “Pink Friday Girls” heavily samples “Girls Just Wanna Have Fun” by Cyndi Lauter putting her own spin on that concept & “Super Freaky Girl” isn’t any better pretty much building itself around “Super Freak” by Rick James.

“Bahm Bahm” gives off a tropical trap flare explaining you can’t talk on the phone with her because she doesn’t like to put the cops in business prior to Don Cannon & Sean Momberger cooking up one of the stronger instrumentals on the album with “My Life” making it known to everyone tuning in that she doesn’t need any more drama in her life. The spacious R&B duet “Nicki Hendrix” featuring Future advises that feeling destructive leads to destruction while “Blessings” featuring Tasha Cobbs Leonard finds BNYX of Working on Dying stripping the drums to talk about their own respective blessings.

The penultimate track “Last Time I Saw You” blends alt-pop & contemporary R&B with pop rap alongside alternative R&B & even jersey club singing about her father Robert Maraj who passed away over 2 & a half years ago already. However to close out Nicki’s 5th album & the sequel to her debut, “Just the Memories” details that memories don’t live like people do but they’ll always remember you rather. The first of 3 bonus cuts “Love Me Enough” is easily the best from the summery sound Murda Beatz delivers to the lyrics admitting to previously believing love had to hurt while “Press Play” featuring Future teams Pluto with Roman with the fans on K. The last bonus song “Big Foot” is not only up in discussion for being the worst diss track ever made aimed at Megan Thee Stallion, but MAYBE the worst single of the decade.

There was no way in my mind that Pink Friday 2 would be any worse than Queen or especially Pink Friday: Roman Reloaded, but I still came away from the final product kinda on the fence with it. Of course you’re gonna have some filler during the 90 minute or so listening period, but I can definitely hear her incorporating all the things that people love about her with a way bigger sound although the production has it’s lackluster moments such as the way some of the samples were used or even a few features.

Score: 2/5

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Nicki Minaj – “Queen” review

In the light of Cardi B’s increasing popularity within the past year, New York rapper/singer & Young Money Entertainment’s First Lady Nicki Minaj is making a comeback with her 4th full-length album & her first since The Pinkprint at the tail end of 2014.

The album begins with “Ganja Burns”, where Nicki challenges her competition over an Afro-influenced beat that’s actually pretty cool. The track “Majesty” with Eminem sees the 2 getting playful over a prominently plinky piano & the song “Barbie Dreams” is Nicki’s rendition of the classic Biggie song “Just Saying (Dreams)”, but it doesn’t go over at all even with the reference to WWE Hall of Famer Mike Tyson. The track “Rich Sex” is pretty much a mediocre sequel to a Future song on his 2015 magnum opus DS2 that actually shares the same name, except that Nicki brought in a pretty solid Lil Wayne verse to give the audience both gender’s takes of the titular topic. The song “Hard White” talks about how she worked hard to get half back over an eerie Boi-1da & !llmind instrumental while the track “Bed” gets seductive over a moody beat & the Ariana Grande hook is pretty as well.

The song “Thought I Knew You” is more of a Weeknd joint since Abel takes up a good chunk of it while the track “Run & Hide” sees Nicki singing about trust over an moody instrumental. The song “Chun Swae” with Swae Lee sees the 2 getting braggadocious over a bass-heavy Metro Boomin’ instrumental while The track “Chun-Li” is arguably her best single in a long time. It sees her going back to her hardcore hip hop roots from the gritty beat to her confrontational bars. The song “LLC” is a supposed diss towards Cardi B over a bouncy trap instrumental while the track “Good Form” is about how bad she is over a Mike WiLL-Made It instrumental with a pretty cool Too $hort sample.

The song “Nip Tuck” talks about giving this person everything over a spacey beat & the “2 Lit 2 Late” interlude is prettily produced, but the auto-tune does nothing & I wish it was a full song. The track “Come See About Me” addresses his ex-boyfriend Meek Mill over a piano-heavy instrumental while the song “Sir” with Future is another braggadocious tune with a gritty instrumental from Metro Boomin’ & Zaytoven.

“Miami” talks about her prowess over a bouncy Murda Beatz instrumental while the final song “Coco Chanel” is a mediocre attempt at reviving the watered down dancehall that Drake provided on VIEWS & More Life. However, I do enjoy the Foxy Brown verse quite a bit. The “Inspirations Outro” is just Nicki shouting out her Caribbean influences for a minute & while it is interesting, it’s not the strongest of notes to end on.

Overall, this was a pretty average album. I truly believe some of Nicki’s best songs are on here & it does sound like she took quite a bit of time working on this, but it’s chocked with a lot of filler.

Score: 2.5/5