All posts by vikashdass

Album Review: Dreams Worth More Than Money | Meek Mill

BY VIKASH DASS

Prior to last week, it was safe to say that Meek Mill was not an album guy. His MMG debut, Dreams and Nightmares was a flop of sorts, crammed with deflated bangers with uninspired sounds and hooks, drab features, and boasting nothing more than some decent mixtape leftovers and an epic, even classic introduction track. The truth is, Meek Mill was signed as (and remains to be, to an extent) a mixtape artist—one that thrives on the boundless possibilities of unmastered tracks with uncleared samples, with a screaming DJ Drama positioned beside him. On the road to his sophomore release, not only did Meek seemingly have to address criticisms and run down the fan-checklist, but he had to endure a jail sentence in-between that supposedly changed the shape of the album in it’s entirety. Yes, the pre-jail Dreams Worth More Than Money is not the one we got, which might leave some to anticipate and entertain what could be more music to come, but it might also leave you to disregard what could have been and instead stare at a simpler truth: the Dreams Worth More Than Money we got is pretty damn good.

DWMTM is only a couple minutes shorter than Meek’s last studio album and holds the same amount of tracks, but the glaring difference here is the content featured on these tracks. We don’t get a lot of the epic yet sometimes drawn-out storytelling on this record—instead, every chance Meek gets at a home run, he’s swinging. Generally speaking, Meek chases the catchier hooks and the more club-friendly sounds on this album, not being afraid to lean on his features for the betterment of the track. ‘R.I.C.O.’ is practically a Drake leftover from his forthcoming release with a Meek verse glued on the end, but it’s still a slapper regardless of who shines more. ‘Jump Out the Face’ rides the Future train fresh off of 56 Nights but bangs regardless with a stellar performance from Meek, and even The Weeknd’s addition, ‘Pullin’ Up’ is an unexpected win for Meek even if the Weeknd stimulus is glaring.

Meek’s friends aren’t necessarily helping him all the time though— ‘All Eyes On You’ sounds like a bonus cut off new-boo Nick Minaj’s last album with the traditional, almost mundane Chris Brown hook and a lay-up verse from Nicki, and the other Nicki track ‘Bad For You’ sounds forced and fails to impress as much as their collaborations on The Pinkprint. Still though, Meek is able to stand on his own two and work in unison with collaborators for an upbeat listen, and even if he’s leaning on hooks and guests, he still has room for bars. The Swizz Beatz assisted ‘Classic’ sees Meek rhyming on a major mafioso beat courtesy of Bangladesh with plenty of quotables like “Make a movie on your bitch, tell her friend to get a role/ You thought she was innocent, we laughing like she been a hoe!”. Classic indeed.

‘Ambitionz’ flips Tupac’s aged classic to prove that Meek can fit storytelling amongst the club smashes, lamenting and reflecting about his crime infested past. Boi-1da shines with a glowing sample of Pac’s magnum opus while adding a modern flavour to it, and ultimately permitting Meek to find a sick pocket in every verse to be cunning and chilling at the same time. It’s here where the hope for Meek is restored and the wait for this album is justified for many, as Meek might be able to step outside of the box and make up for lost hits, but he’s also able to return to his roots and deliver what Meek fans listened to him in the first place for. Intro ‘Lord Knows’ sees a similarly stunning performance from Meek with an orchestral beat backing him, as he lyrically holds no punches and grants Canadian juggernaut Tory Lanez permission to absolutely slay the hook. In his own verses, Meek tears apart song structure and ditches the 16’s to find fulfilment in spitting countless bars and letting the beat loop itself as long as necessary.

Meek might not have delivered a classic moment as stellar as his last album’s intro, but he was able to deliver a more memorable and momentous project by cutting the fat with his own verses and having most of his guests kill it, too. There’s not a lot you wouldn’t expect here, it’s Meek using his yelling-inflection to spout raps of grind, crime and bitches all while adding in more topical bits like his new relationship, recent jail time, and new money. When all is said and done, though, Dreams Worth More Than Money might have trouble clawing for a top spot among the year’s elite, but it definitely will not go by the wayside, and will have fans’ collective thirst effectively quenched.

7.1

Album Review: Coming Home | Leon Bridges

BY VIKASH DASS
BY VIKASH DASS

With the internet lately being extremely mindful and apprehensive towards “industry plants” and label-manufactured artists, Leon Bridges might sound a little too good to be true, as though he was carefully developed by Columbia Records in a secret laboratory somewhere—but really, he was just another young man washing dishes in his hometown of Fort Worth, Texas just over a year ago. It also might sound like Leon was bred and raised on the oldie classics that he emulates and exudes in his own tremendous voice, but that’d be incorrect too. Instead, he was a R&B kid obsessed with R.Kelly and Ginuwine, and happened to stumble upon the likes of Sam Cooke and his contemporaries via Spotify and YouTube. Fast forward to last fall, and he had over 40 labels kneeled over in front of him believing he was the next soul legend, and today, Leon Bridges has not only released his debut album, Coming Home, but he has also managed to craft one of the most refreshing, expressive and tender records 2015 has heard.

In music’s current climate, neo-soul singers of all kinds usually swing towards overexposed clichés; cheesy sexual metaphors, alcohol and drug fuelled lust, autotune and trap-snares and hi-hats—but Leon Bridges found solace in the real, retro ways of the past. Leon’s music is cut from a simple and minimalistic cloth that involves singing exactly how you feel, live instrumentation, brass and jazz chords, and 60’s soul song structures that will have anyone shimmyin’ and shakin’. Coming Home is an experiment in all kinds and tempos of near-ancient soul, with Leon not only flaunting a spectacularly original and rare voice, but also exceptionally moving and beautiful songwriting.

Tracks like ‘River’ slowly spill with warm emotion as Leon croons over the simple strums of an acoustic guitar, while the maternal-tribute ‘Lisa Sawyer’ recognizes the debts owed to his mother over gentle keys and a doo-wop influence. These slower tempo tracks almost leave you frozen upon first listen, as they genuinely sound like remastered soul records from decades past. On the contrary, Leon recorded the bulk of Coming Home digitally, perfectly mastering a sound that belongs on a vinyl record coated in dust on your father’s shelf. Leon can also find a higher-tempo groove without departing from this aesthetic, with the title track and fun-loving ‘Coming Home’ catching a groove that flows from verse to chorus and back around again. Leon doesn’t stray from the heartbreaking side of love, either—’Better Man’ and ‘Pull Away’ point out enough imperfections in his romantic prospects and his own inability to love without strain and blemishes.

If Leon Bridges is half sweet and tender soul, the other half of him is undoubtedly the strong and potent sounds of Southern-gospel. Even underneath the soulful cuts on this record, you can hear gospel-influenced background vocals or church-organs sliding beneath instrumentals. ‘Smooth Sailin’’ is a Southern-blues banger with an infectious riff and enough energy to have anybody at least churn out a two-step. ‘Shine’ stands as a brilliant moment on this record, too, that perfectly blends both halves of Leon’s soul and gospel influences for one slow swaying track that dives into love and faith.

Most often, innovation in music today comes in the form of a sharper and more radical format—whether it’s the distorted and industrial influences that push hip-hop forward or the electronic and dance-funk that seems to be driving pop. Instead, Leon Bridges is able to bring an even more innovative and refreshing outlook on music, all while borrowing sounds from past generations. But, don’t get it twisted—Coming Home is not an album that’s 50 years late. Rather, it is a record that channels sounds and sentiments that are utterly timeless.

9.0

Album Review: Summertime ’06 | Vince Staples

BY VIKASH DASS
BY VIKASH DASS

“He is the antagonist. That’s his character.” These words are rapper Earl Sweatshirt’s description of his 22-year-old dear friend Vince Staples, a fellow MC by way of Long Beach, CA. Vince might be a member of the 2015 XXL Freshman Class and a recent Def Jam signee, but prior to all of this Vince found himself rapping as early as five years ago which was likely a hobby to keep himself away from worse things, but allowed him to make friends with several members of Odd Future and ultimately find his way on Sweatshirt’s debut-mixtape EARL—specifically an exceptionally vile and gruesome verse on the standout ‘Epar’, a song boisterous and entertaining but detailing rape and murder all in the name of shock value. In 2015, though, Vince Staples finds himself embodying a different kind of antagonist—one that embodies and relishes in his matured outlooks on his gang involvement in years past.

Instead of epitomizing a struggle rapper that gang-banged to get by and was a victim of circumstance, Vince is the kid from the hood that “had fun” growing up, playing his part and content in a world where he knew no other destiny, only realizing the toxic nature of his adolescence in retrospect when the notoriety of his music removed him from it. With his mixtape series Shyne Coldchain and other projects like Stolen Youth or last Fall’s Hell Can Wait, Vince found himself glorifying the violent and destructive behavior of his childhood, playing the villainous role of an emotionless, stone cold gang-banger with a haunting and monotone flow, yet on his debut double-album Summertime ’06, Vince presents the tales of his real teenage days with a bleeding heart and without filters. It’s a compassionate, moving record that will still have trunks rattling and speakers throbbing, all while Vince lyrically details his battle with balancing the hyper-masculinity that comes with being a Long Beach Crip, and the emotional torture of pursuing peace in an environment that only promises death.

Summertime ’06 is sonically unlike anything Vince has touched in projects past—it’s glaringly abrasive, visceral and thumps with an industrial-influence. DJ Dahi, No I.D., and Clams Casino who handled most of the production on the double-album all contributed to push a cohesive, unsettling sound, all while Vince rides beats playing flow-roulette, approaching each track with a different bounce. It might be advertised as a double album, but it clocks in at a modest 59 minutes due to the brief, fast-paced nature of the record. Vince adapts by switching perspectives and topics from song to song, never resting his head on one sentiment for too long. The album’s real intro, ‘Lift Me Up’ buzzes with a sinister bass-line, as Vince wastes no time carving his mind into the canvas provided. “I’m just a nigga, until I fill my pockets” are the first bars you hear on the album—lines that are eccentric and self-aware, but the song’s hook serves as a cry for help to any God listening, as Vince spits “Can a motherfucker breathe?/Life ain’t always what it seems, so please just lift me up”.

Vince Staples is not one for finesse or elegance in his bars. He employs a much more bleak, to-the-point mode of storytelling, with an immense amount of energy and intensity in every song, regardless of the dark, dismal content; ‘Dopeman’ sees Kilo Kish lending her vocals for a bone-chilling refrain with Vince following with a verse stretching words playfully, while the Future-sampling single ‘Señorita’ sees Vince matching Future’s energetic verse and the trembling 808’s with a skipping flow. Vince’s tone and inflection on these songs are packed full of bite and youth, but there are points on this double record where he becomes more soft-spoken as he tip-toes around the affairs of love and romance—specifically in the first disc of the album. Songs like ‘Lemme Know’ with Jhené Aiko and DJ Dahi on vocal support and ‘Loca’ outline specific love interests of different flavors, with the latter being a standout in the way it bangs and lyrically lends itself to modern classics like 50’s ’21 Questions’. Summertime ’06 does not follow any linear thematic outline, but it does feature swings in emotion and seems to mature gradually from first disc to the second. It seems at the tail end of the first half of the album, Vince ditches his female infatuations and trades the romance for his pistol again, as the second half of the record morphs into a much more hard-bodied, gang-banging anthems. ‘3230’ rides with a distorted bump, ‘Street Punks’ with a clanging and tropical notes. ‘Get Paid’ with unknown female vocalist Desi Mo is blatantly Clipse inspired with it’s minimalistic beat and perpetually violent lyrics.

Not all of Summertime ’06 is a newer spin on trunk-rattling gangsta rap, though—Vince’s conscious and witty side shapes some bars into poignant, refreshing takes on current events and social issues. The final track on the first portion, ‘Summertime’ is a slow burning jam beautifully produced by Clams Casino, where Vince ponders life and love. Between a Nirvana-inspired hook and his lamenting over romance, Vince also explores things taught to him: “My teachers told me we was slaves/My mama told me we was kings/I don’t know who to listen to/I guess we somewhere in between”. ‘Surf’ on the second disc is also padded with important questions and self-aware lines that speak to the times, like “More black kids killed from a pill than the FEDs in the projects/In the planned parenthood playin’ God with ya mom’s check, you ain’t even been to prom yet” and “Just a pawn and a plan tryin’ to hold on/When the smoke clear why was the war fought?/Bout time you abandon the folklore”. Vince is at his most introspective on the album’s formal conclusion, ‘Like It Is’. The Andre 3000 sampling track features Vince at his most personal and matured, eager to trade in the violence and street life to spark a change in his town and lineage. The track features spoken-word speeches from Vince directly speaking to the listener and telling stories about the insignificance of his race and the struggles of existing in an enduringly pimped and appropriated culture.

It’s this personal, heart-wrenching, reality-stricken side of Vince that is actually the most absent on this record, to a fault. The only glaring issue with Summertime ’06 is the lack of genuinely moving sentiments and overall vagueness of the content. Sure, he talks about and references his neighborhood throughout the record and touches on the illegal ways of his past, but he never shares too much or gets too deep into anything, turning instead to melody and catchy hooks before ever lyrically expounding into any topic; and by the end of the record, you walk away without knowing why the summer of 2006 was specifically so important to Vince—an issue made worse when you realize there isn’t enough of an emotional and personal story arc to fill two discs, let alone one.

Still, Summertime ’06 presents a pressure-filled record that bounces and bangs in a traditional way, but also leans on modern industrial influences. It might lyrically borrow from the likes of Dipset and G-Unit, but Vince innovatively pairs this with Yeezus-inspired bass-lines and fast paced drums akin to El-P or Death Grips. Vince might not have dove too deep lyrically, but the verdict still stands on one of the year’s most poignant, inventive albums: Summertime ’06 is gangsta rap in a straight jacket and skinny jeans, and ultimately delivers a sound you can’t find anywhere else.

8.5

Hear Planetarian’s Groovy New Track, “Keep On Your Lingerie”

BY VIKASH DASS

Massachusetts-based artist Planetarian recently let go of a new single for an upcoming, unnamed album that is “coming soon”. The song, “Keep On Your Lingerie”, is a poppier, funkier sound for Planetarian that sees him emulating the likes of Pharrell on the thematically female centred single. The song is available for stream and download on Soundcloud below.

Continue reading Hear Planetarian’s Groovy New Track, “Keep On Your Lingerie”

Childish Gambino Previews Brand New Track at Bonnaroo 2015

BY VIKASH DASS

Photo by Dan Garcia/The Early Registration
Photo by Dan Garcia/The Early Registration

The Childish Gambino drought may be coming to an end. The rapper/writer/creative hasn’t released any new music since his STN MTN / Kauai Mixtape-EP last fall, but when Donald took the Bonnaroo stage this weekend, he premiered a brand new untitled track. The song doesn’t have any rapping on it, but instead features layered melodies and crooning that sounds super Prince-y. The refrain seems to feature the lyrics “I’m in love when we are smoking that la la la la”.

Whatever this is from, we can’t wait to hear the full version. Watch the performance below.

Vince Staples Drops Stellar Single “Get Paid” From Upcoming Debut Album

BY VIKASH DASS

Photo by Dan Garcia/The Early Registration
Photo by Dan Garcia/The Early Registration

Late Sunday night, Vince Staples decided to drop another single from his debut album, Summertime ’06. The track entitled “Get Paid” features female guest vocalist Desi Mo who provides backing vocals and a hook, while Vince spits relentless bars over a sinister sounding instrumental that takes inspiration from Clipse and The Neptunes. With yet another excellent single, Vince’s Def Jam debut is shaping up to be one of the most promising albums of the year.

Check the track out below, and buy Summertime ’06 when it hits stores June 30th.

Watch Earth, Wind & Fire Bring Out Kendrick Lamar and Chance the Rapper at Bonarroo

BY VIKASH DASS

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Photo by Joshua Mellin

Bonarroo is no stranger to surprise guests on stage, but this year might have yielded one of the most strange yet fulfilling collaborations yet. During Earth, Wind & Fire’s set Friday night, Kendrick Lamar and Chance the Rapper came out to freestyle with the band on stage. Peep the must see clips after the jump.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=loXmabFQPC0

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YombI2ouCUs

Troy Ave Takes One of the Biggest L’s of 2015, Sells 30 Hard Copies of ‘Major Without A Deal’ in First Week

BY VIKASH DASS

IFWT_TROY-AVE

Well, constantly ragged-on rapper Troy Ave added yet another reason to talk shit about him as his Nielsen Soundscan reports came back today reading the first-week sales of his latest album, “Major Without a Deal”. The album sold a total of 4,373 copies in total with a mere 30 copies being of the physical. Ouch.

Of course he is an independent rapper as his album title suggests, but with the numerous amount of industry co-signs, New York radio play, and features like A$AP Ferg, Fabolous, 50 Cent, and Ty Dolla $ign, that’s still incredibly underwhelming.

Kanye Clears Up Rumors on HOT 97, Teases New Music From ‘SWISH’

BY VIKASH DASS

Photo by Dan Garcia/The Early Registration
Photo by Dan Garcia/The Early Registration
Following ridiculous claims that Kanye West kicked children out of a Chuck E. Cheese on his birthday, Kanye called up to Hot 97 to defend himself to Nessa and Ebro. During the short conversation, Kanye was being Kanye and dispelled how bogus that rumor was by informing the station that he’s actually cutting back on carbs, stating, “I don’t even eat pizza, what am I gonna do at Chuck E. Cheese?”

Yeezus himself also informed Nessa that he has been strictly working on new music as he’s been “in the studio everyday”, and that his daily routine of going to the studio is so boring that he’s been “riding thru the ‘burbs with no woes”. You know how that shit go.

Listen to the audio of the interview below.