I’ve forever had a difficult experience with Eminem to say the least, the ever decreasing talent he has seems to always coincide with both my heavy distaste for his music as well as the fact he has an ever increasing rate of being inconsistent. My journey into his intensified and incredibly tantalising discography didn’t personally begin here, yet his journey as a rapper began with Infinite, his first project released in 1996.
Infinite is both the perfect example of how Eminem ... read more
This album is near perfect for me for a plethora of reasons. I find myself in love with Big K.R.I.T ever so more with each listen and with this album I believe he has reached his peak through an astounding double album that becomes enthralled with a Jazz~/~Conscious~/~Southern Rap album that reflects perfectly upon how K.R.I.T displays some of his best lyrical work, whilst also simultaneously feeding us this project that contains both his biggest hits and also his most deep, nail-biting songs ... read more
From the introspective look Denzel took to the extreme with Ta13oo, he comes in with the instalment of the most outgoing and more traditionally placed album that perfectly makes a dynamic and gives a big salute to his home city of Miami. The localisation May definitely be a lot to swallow for the recently required mainstream appeal that people gained from Ta13oo and to an extent Imperial beforehand, yet it still shows a progressive attitude that through the production and segmented talent as ... read more
In the first project released since his widespread success with hit single Old Town Road, Lil Nas X really surprised me with an EP that allowed him to show a resilience against being a one-Hit wonder and showing the most unexpected playback value in a project that delivered some solid bangers, sticking to the cowboy aesthetic through tracks like Rodeo and Panini and giving himself a somewhat pioneer status as he circumvents, giving a large status in both the mainstream audiences and pushing ... read more
It genuinely is another Jayden album that, as a follow up from the admittedly disappointing Sunset Tapes That acted as a follow-up from Syre, and managed to impress me. The problem that Anthony Fantano summed up pretty much perfectly by stating Jaden was more or less sounding too much like his influencers became one that didn’t, in my mind at least, get overshadowed by the immense love I have for how he managed to implement far more into an album that led driving ambition to a partial ... read more
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