Ramirez – “Tha Playa$ Manual II” review

Here is the 5th studio LP from San Francisco, California emcee Ramirez. Emerging as a longtime affiliate of the $uicideboy$, he would go on to co-found to the New Orleans-based indie label G*59 Record$ with them & build himself as an artist by dropping 8 mixtapes, his last dozen EPs & 4 full-lengths. Tha Playa$ Manual was his best LP yet with it’s g-funk production from Rocci & is looks to mark a new chapter with the sequel on his newly formed EMPIRE Distribution imprint Velvet Note Records over a week after G*59 announced his departure to go do his own thing.

After the “Velvet Note Lounge” skit, the first song “Hollow Tips” was a synth-funk intro & skittering hi-hats introducing y’all to his heater if you even try to make a move on him whereas the jazzy “Cut Throat Game” advises to get back up no matter how hard you fall. “Playas Need Love” fuses both g-funk & jazz to talk about that very subject in hand, but then the 2nd single “True Playas” suggests not to trip because fortune favored the strong putting a synth-heavy feel on the Mobb sound.

“I’m Not Yo Daddy” fuses trap & synth-funk together suggesting you come take a ride with him just before “Boulevard Nights” featuring Jason Joshua & Rocci matches a seducing instrumental that wears it’s jazz influences more during the 2nd half with all 3 of them sharing a melodic delivery. After the “Playing a Fool” skit, “Money Don’t Stop for You” jazzily sings of wanting nothing more to waste his time with a woman he’d fall for while “Shake Junt Hoes”proved to be a Memphis inspired final single.

Meanwhile on “Pushin’ on Some Paper”, we have the Lil Homewrecker talking about pimpin’ being second nature to him & making it look easy while the lead single “Chain Swangin’” turns the Mobb influences back up explaining that he’s still the same playa with a deadly weapon on him. “Scrapin’ tha Corner” throws back to the phonk undertones of Tha Playa$ Manual to talk about being on some larger shit while “Never Listen” offers invest in oneself as his best advice. 

“Don’t Lose Hope” gets back on the g-funk/synth-funk crossovers wanting to hold his romantic interest tight because he wants her to know she’ll always be safe around him in any possible situation & “Cadillac Burnin’” featuring Rocci ahead of the “Goodbye & Goodnight” outro properly finishing Ramirez’ debut of Velvet Note with a captivating duet feeling reminiscent of something you’d hear during the 70s & I mean that as a compliment instead of implying any indication of it being outdated.

Tha Playa$ Manual has been regarded by many in the G*59 fandom to be the crown jewel of the label’s entire discography & I’d have to say it’s aged astonishingly well as a modern g-funk classic since it came out down the 2020 COVID-19 lockdowns. Tha Playa$ Manual II as a sequel raises his artistic stakes even higher than I would’ve thought. There are a few songs where he takes a break from delivering bars of the gangsta life to favor towards sung vocals with on top of the best production he’s had in a few years culminating in elements of g-funk, Memphis rap, pop rap, jazz rap, synth-funk & Mobb music.

Score: 4.5/5

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Ramirez – “The Warlock & The Gorilla” review

San Francisco, California emcee Ramirez following up From tha Guttah to tha Grave by surprise releasing The Warlock & The Gorilla as his 12th EP. Coming up in 2014 as a longtime affiliate of the $uicideboy$, he would go on to co-found to the New Orleans-based indie label G*59 Record$ with them & build himself as an artist by dropping 8 mixtapes, his last 10 EPs & 4 full-lengths in the span of nearly a decade. Tha Playa$ Manual was his best LP yet with it’s g-funk production from Rocci & The Tragedy of a Clown was a good comeback from a year & a half ago, From tha Guttah to tha Grave back in March was good & this new one had me especially intrigued since he said it was to hold us off until his upcoming 5th album Tha Playa$ Manual II.

After the titular intro, the first song “Stackin’ Ends” featuring Soulzay has a slick Memphis vibe instrumentally to officially begin letting us know that’s exactly what both of them be doing whereas the cloudy trap banger “Carti Frames” continues forward talking about cold blooded pimpin’ going through his veins. “Window” featuring Shakewell has an eerier atmosphere to beat almost like it’s something out of a horror flick flexing their gangsta ties & “The Depths” hellishly talks about looking to blast someone in the deepest pits with the shotty.

“Crocodile Skin” builds the concept around the infamous “interior crocodile alligator” line from King Chip of The Almighty GloryUS blending a soul sample with hi-hats while the jazz/trap hybrid on “Medusa Packs” blew me away getting returning to his pimpin’ shit. “Casket Dreamz” featuring Pouya talks only having their brothers over a solemn trap instrumental leading into the west coast-flavored “International Waters” featuring Jay Worthy find the 2 gettin’ fly. “It Ain’t My Fault” featuring Shakewell lastly ends with a homage to Silkk the Shocker’s biggest hit.

In what would turn out to be Ramirez’ final release on G*59, The Warlock & The Gorilla surpasses From tha Guttah to tha Grave as the best of the 2 EPs that he’s put out this year alone. Stronger feature list, the production expanding beyond from trap as well as g-funk, the Memphis scene, cloud rap & jazz rap & the Lil Homewrecker delivering performances that go considerably harder.

Score: 3.5/5

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Ramirez – “From tha Guttah to tha Grave” review

San Francisco, California emcee Ramirez back with his 11th EP. Coming up in 2014 as a longtime affiliate of the $uicideboy$, he would go on to co-found to the New Orleans-based indie label G*59 Record$ with them & build himself as an artist by dropping 8 mixtapes, his last 10 EPs & 4 full-lengths in the span of nearly a decade. Tha Playa$ Manual was his best LP yet with it’s g-funk production from Rocci & The Tragedy of a Clown was a good comeback from a year & a half ago, but is now taking us From tha Guttah to tha Grave.

“Beige Butter” featuring Le$ starts by hooking up this synth-lead with hi-hats swangin’ in their spaceships whereas “Rehabilitation” gives off a more psychedelic approach instrumentally except it hurts to say the Lil Homewrecker’s melodic vocals feel like they’re being drowned out in the mix. “Sleepin’ with the Fishes” takes the morbid trap route getting in his hardcore bag lyrically just before “Amphisbaena” featuring SXMPRA turns up the aggressiveness hitting licks together.

Meanwhile, “Warfare” has a glitchy trap vibe to the beat talking about having his victims brought to him out in the trenches leading into the heinous “Stick Up” letting the gunshots ring out. “Goodfellas” featuring SosMula chillingly asks if anyone wants the smoke with them but prior to the chopped & screwed version of “Rehabilitation” finishing the EP, the final song “In da Trunk” is a Memphis-infused closer pushing down the block.

After pretty much laying low last year, From tha Guttah to tha Grave happens to be a pretty solid return for RVMIRXZ & and. Maybe even the most I’ve enjoyed an EP from him since the Judgement Day trilogy. The production has some cool ideas pulling inspiration from the Memphis scene, chopped & screwed music, cloud rap, glitch hop, trap, psychedelia or hardcore hip hop boiling down the features to 3 as opposed to 5 previously continuing portray the experiences of gang life.

Score: 3.5/5

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Ramirez – “The Tragedy of a Clown” review

This is the 8th mixtape from San Francisco, California emcee Ramirez. Coming up in 2014 as a longtime affiliate of the $uicideboy$, he would go on to co-found to the New Orleans-based indie label G*59 Record$ with them & build himself as an artist by dropping his last 7 tapes, 10 EPs & 4 full-lengths in the span of nearly a decade. The last album Tha Playa$ Manual was his best yet with it’s g-funk production from Rocci & the gangsta rap lyricism, so that definitely intrigued me to check out The Tragedy of a Clown over here.

After the intro, the first song “Return of the Corpse” kicks off the tape with some heavy bass & a plucky loop asking if there’s a problem whereas the Pouya-assisted “Bacon, Eggs & Grits” finds the 2 over trap beat with a violin sample belittling everyone who be on their balls. “The Dungeon” dives into boom bap territory declaring himself to be the motherfucker you better run from, but then Germ tags along for the quirky yet alien-like trap banger “Carthart Vest” spitting aggressive braggadocio.

Meanwhile on “What the Hook Gon’ Be?”, we have Shakewell & Fat Nick joining Ramirez for an energetic Memphis gangsta rap heater just before “6 Feet Under” shoots for a more haunting aesthetic talking about being in rehab. “The Root of Demise” follows it up with a twangy trap ballad detailing depression leading into the misty yet rowdy “Murdered Out Vehicles” spitting some wicked shit.

“The Gallows Wait” has a more psychedelic quality to the production especially with the chopped & the screwed sample at the start & finish talking about being 1 gangsta ass ghost with Shakewell returning for the closer “Shameless Gorilla” boasting that there’s no shame in their game” with some morbid production from Mikey the Magician.

For him to give us this coming off his most critically acclaimed work to date, I think G*59 fans like myself are gonna be more than satisfied with it considering how consistent they’ve been. Ramirez takes it back to a more Memphis rap emphasis as far as sound goes with the lyricism being a bit more darker 2 & a half years later.

Score: 3.5/5

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Ramirez – “Tha Playa$ Manual” review

Ramirez is a 22 year old MC from San Francisco, California who you may recognize for being the very 1st artist that the $uicideboy$ ever signed to G*59 Record$. Joining his mentors for the G.R.E.Y.G.O.D.S. collab EP & it’s sequel, he would make his full-length debut at the beginning of 2016 off Meet Me Where the River Turns Greyfollowed by The Grey Gorilla & Son of Serpentine. For his 4th studio album however, he’s recruiting Virginia producer Rocci to produce the whole entire thing top to bottom.

After the intro, the first song “Lane Switching”opens with a cloudy yet funky ode to the playas giving middle fingers to the perpetrators whereas “Hunnids” kinda has a Memphis influence to the beat talking about having all the shit that everyone else doesn’t have. “Gold Thangs & Pinky Rangs (Da Hooptie)” featuring Pouya & Shakewell takes the g-funk route for the trio offering fine wine & necklaces instead of money until the moody “Brown Eyes” featuring Rocci finds the pair looking to steal hoes.

“Lavender Lust” after the “Radio” skit is pretty much Rocci singing over a funky instrumental for a minute asking if his romantic interest loves him back just before “Glitter & Gold” gets back on the g-funk vibes to include a dope ass 士セーラームーン reference early during the first verse. “The Fo 5” radiates a bit of a cavernous feel to the beat making way for Ramirez to talk about murder just before “Lead Sled” keeps his head up in the rain with an instrumental harking back to the west coast sound of the 90s.

Moving on from there, “Out da Way” homages the Memphis scene again talking about feeling some type of way as of late while “Tales from da Guttah fuses gangsta rap with trap & dirty south repping G*59 until his body turns grey. After the “Ebony Wood Stock” interlude with a 35 second verse during the backend of it, “Red Dot” featuring Night Lovell ahead of the outro sends off Tha Playa$ Manual with both of them leavin’ people in critical condition by putting bullets through their domes.

The most sonically expansive project that we’ve ever gotten from Ramirez to this day will arguably become the greatest musical opus in the history of the G*59 Record$ discography. Rocci’s production is heavily driven by the g-funk sound that shaped Death Row Records approximately 3 decades ago further drawing inspiration from Memphis rap, trap, hip hop soul, pop rap, phonk, contemporary R&B & the dirty south combined in a smoothly manner with the west coast artist’s gangsta themes.

Score: 4.5/5