A 15 second interlude to quite possibly the best hip hop song of all time.
Absolute epitaph for the younger days of both hip hop and passion for it. A must listen.
Shy of excellency. Experimentation with the non-metal instruments in this make it such a refreshing album for how well it is, that it's almost a relief. Falls short midway a bit.
Although it works best with the video, it's a song I'd leave the radio on for, if I ever do use it.
Starts poetic and immersive, then just water downs to throwing ideas on a wall and seeing what sticks. Promising album for what's to come.
Boring as fuck. Emo Rap is still a relatively new genre, however that doesn't mean it's exciting based on only that merit. One of the worst flows ever, and appallingly apathetic lyrics make this such a dire listen. 20+ for the production. Should've focused on making it an ambient pop record rather than whatever this is.
Incredibly clean production, great instrumentation, and even contemporary political lyrics that don't blow so much. One of the catchiest political albums ever.
So fucking good. Everything from Kanye's production, to the flow, to even the adlib is on point. Although Ye's verse brought it down a bit, overall it's too good to bring that far down. Again, same with KSGs, the length is just about right. Truly a testament to Pusha's long lasting career.
Extremely dense black metal with great vocal delivery. Night listens recommended.
Good music for sleep, but that's about it. Nothing as exciting nor groundbreaking as his best three, just passes the bar.
Ye and Kudi's spiritual revelation in 23 minutes work as a reliable medicine for emotional solace. The length of the album is one of the best things, too. It never overstays it's welcome, nor does it ever feel like it's cut short. Just about the right length for it to be cohesive, satisfying and extremely replayble.
Trent brings back Industrial Rock and blends more than 3 genres in there seamlessly. Sombre, dark and (as you'd expect) brilliantly produced.