
This is the 3rd studio LP from London, England, United Kingdom emcee Dabbla. Known for being 1/3 the Dead Players as well as 1/3 of LDZ & 1/4 of Problem Child, he eventually made his solo debut in 2016 off Year of the Monkey followed by the debut mixtape Chapsville under High Focus Records & the sophomore effort Death Moves respectively. Only a couple months after the world shut down entirely because of the COVID-19 pandemic, Potent Funk Records co-founder Sumgii’s being enlisted to produce Nobody.
The title track sets the tone of what’s to come advising one to save their expertise until it helps them blow up for the purpose of seeing who really supports him & doesn’t whereas “Out My Way” admits to being a little crossfaded over a boom bap instrumental. “Trenches” goes for a psychedelic direction getting real sick & tired of all the bullshit around him while ”Shimmy” hooks the kicks & snares back up to talk about the only thing we need to do is be ourselves.
“Rare” ends the 1st half of the album confesses of him hustling for the funds because of the rarity in it just before “Same” gets the 2nd leg going returning to the boom bap talking about how neither his address or his number have changed since becoming successful. “Enough” vividly describes a relationship falling apart in front of our very eyes & the woman being fed up with all the bullshit she’s dealt with for so long over an industrial beat while “Explain” talks about having this funny melting feeling inside his brain driving him nuts.
Nearing the conclusion of Nobody, the song “Lucky” discusses his gratitude of taking all the risks he had to in order for him to be in the position he’s at now in his career while “Formless”could have the quirkiest instrumental here talking about these shapeless artists having no capability of outdoing him because of the lack of cutting edge boundary-pushing talent. “Junk” spends the last 3 & a half minutes of the album
Death Moves was merely ok to me a couple years earlier, but Nobody could be the greatest thing that’s ever come out of Potent Funk Records delivering a full-length that I enjoy equally as much as if not more than Year of the Monkeyconsidering it captures the chemistry of the label’s founders in a way that sticks out differently than either of Problem Child’s projects shedding light on the lethal combination of Sumgii’s sonically varied & bass-driven production or Dabbla’s cutthroat syllables & dynamic flows.
Score: 4/5


