Category Archives: Reviews

Album Review: ShadyXV | Shady Records

ShadyXV
BY DAN GARCIA 

Modern day Eminem will always have the unfortunate (and perhaps impossible) task of trying to live up to the Eminem of the late 1990s through the early 2000s. From The Slim Shady LP to The Marshall Mathers LP and The Eminem Show, Em was untouchable. Not only did all three of those albums win the Grammy‘s ‘Rap Album of the Year’ award, but everyone at the time knew that this guy wasn’t going anywhere (and they were right). Although taking brief hiatuses throughout the years, Eminem has consistently dropped successful solo albums, four more since The Eminem Show in 2002. While the sales, and even some of the critical acclaim, has survived throughout the years, the issue of whether the quality of Eminem’s latter music is highly polarizing. In his 2010 album Recovery, Eminem even admitted his previous album was “ehhh…”. However many argued that Recovery and The Marshall Mathers LP 2 were not any better. Pitchfork gave Recovery a 2.8 out of 10, stating that “the more (Eminem) motors on about having reclaimed his passion for hip-hop and finally figured out who he is, the more draining the album becomes.” Entertainment Weekly gave Em’s previous album a C+ score, noting the obvious content changes in his music. “At this point, though, his ultimate obsessions are with his disappointing mother and absent father — and those, he uses to abuse himself.” Lately Eminem seems to be having an eternal battle, deciding the best route for his music. At times it seems like he is trying to go back to the ‘old Eminem’, through making a sequel to MMLP and forcing homophobic language and shock value insults towards women and celebrities, something Eminem made a career off of. However it also appears that he is trying to shed the coat of his controversial ‘Slim Shady’ persona, making mends with his mother and cleaning up his content at times, rapping “I’d rather make ‘Not Afraid 2’ than make another motherf*cking ‘We Made You”, which showed his preference over more emotionally mature tracks over the tracks with shock value and shots at pop culture. While ShadyXV is not a solo Eminem LP, it is certainly his project, of which he will be judged on. Producing many of the tracks, appearing on all but two of the album’s exclusive songs and being the head of Shady RecordsShadyXV is an Eminem album in many ways, we just didn’t know what kind of Eminem we would get.

Continue reading Album Review: ShadyXV | Shady Records

Album Review: Hood Billionaire | Rick Ross

BY DAN GARCIA 

With seven albums in just eight years, Rick Ross has another banger in his catalog with Hood Billionaire. Released through Def Jam, Slip-n-Slide Records, and his label Maybach Music GroupHood Billionaire doesn’t reinvent the wheel or show us anything that we haven’t seen from Ross since his debut in 2006, but he certainly isn’t slacking. If you love Rick Ross than you will love this album. If you haven’t been a fan in the past however, don’t expect Hood Billionaire to win you over. Just because Ross has changed on the outside (having lost over 100 lbs.), he hasn’t changed on the inside, musically at least. Depending on who you are, Hood Billionaire either brilliantly sticks with a theme and a certain sound or it is too repetitive and everything sounds the same (it is all about perception for this one). Fortunately for myself however, I can always go for some more music from the “Teflon Don”.

Continue reading Album Review: Hood Billionaire | Rick Ross

Album Review: 1989 | Taylor Swift

1989
BY MATT MONROE

1989 is the fifth studio album from singer-songwriter Taylor Swift. Over the past few years, Swift went from one of the biggest names in country to the biggest name in music. This isn’t just another Taylor Swift album, though. This album is pretty noteworthy not just for being the first album released in 2014 to go platinum, in one week nonetheless, its noteworthy as Swift has made the complete transition from country to pop. This isn’t a country album, or a country album with pop influences, it is a bonafide pop album. It was a predictable progression, and it was a progression I have been waiting on for a while because I’ve always found Taylor to be talented, but I just wish that she didn’t choose country to display those talents (as that somewhat limited her), until now of course.

Continue reading Album Review: 1989 | Taylor Swift

Album Review: Cadillactica | Big K.R.I.T.

BY VIKASH DASS 

When it comes to traditional, organic Southern hip-hop, Big K.R.I.T. is definitely the best representative of that sound in this new, internet-generation of rappers. With his latest release, Cadillactica, K.R.I.T. literally creates a polished, wholesome world of his own where he flexes his experimental muscles as much as possible without stepping away from his hearty, Southern roots.

In 2012, K.R.I.T. found himself to be yet another victim of a fairly new dilemma plaguing artists that built a career on giving away free, album-quality music. As soon as these said artists sign a major deal and release a studio album, many factors including label pressure, lack of creative control, single-chasing, and ultimately exerting focus on mainstream appeal allow for a lacking, deteriorated, diluted product. K.R.I.T.’s debut, Live From the Underground, received notable amounts of critical acclaim, but seemed to suffer a similar fate. Although it was far from horrible as a standalone project, it seemed flat compared to K.R.I.T.’s near-perfect discography. Live found Big K.R.I.T. seemingly plucking the thematic highlights and messages of his mixtape and making it repetitive in an effort to be catchy, while beefing every track with scattered, radio-ready production that ended up not striking the hearts of his fans the same way his free projects did. K.R.I.T. himself expressed his own retrospective discontent with Live in regards to the lack of creative-control and production issues. Shoutout to sample clearances.

Continue reading Album Review: Cadillactica | Big K.R.I.T.

EP Review: Prakruti | Jaden Smith

BY DAN GARCIA

The Smiths have been taking over in the past couple of months.  Last week Jaden’s sister, Willow, dropped a 3-song EP and recently Jaden has been dropping music videos at a rapid and random pace, all while calling out the rap game. While Jaden told fans he has a couple albums in the vault and ready to drop, he recently gave us a sample by dropping his own 3-song EP, titled Prakruti. If there is anything bad to say about Prakruti, it is that it reminds us of why we hate EPs, as we definitely can’t wait for more.

Continue reading EP Review: Prakruti | Jaden Smith

Album Review: Michael | Les Sins

BY VIKASH DASS ★★★★☆

It is a personal, deep rooted, almost religious belief of mine that Chaz Bundick, more popularly known as Toro Y Moi, is one of the few people on the planet that can musically do no wrong. With his latest release under his dance-house moniker, Les Sins, Chaz continues to prove my theory with a release that might lack in innovation, but makes up for it in quality with his first dance project, Michael.

Continue reading Album Review: Michael | Les Sins

Album Review: Run the Jewels 2 | Run the Jewels

BY VIKASH DASS ★★★★★
BY VIKASH DASS 

The guys who were once the internet nerd’s preference to the Throne has now solidified themselves as one of the most important duo’s out today. With what sounds like their Tarantino-directed sequel to the first project, Run the Jewels 2 serves as a violent, abrasive, energetic record where both Killer Mike and El-P have found the balance between old-school influence and new-school relevance, while ultimately being one of the best rap projects 2014 has seen so far.

Continue reading Album Review: Run the Jewels 2 | Run the Jewels

Album Review: Under Pressure | Logic

Logic - Under Pressure
BY DOMINIC BARICEVIC

24 year old rapper Logic is a dictionary perfect definition of a talented rapper. Compare him to other seasoned big name lyrical rappers such as Eminem, Kendrick Lamar, Common, and J. Cole, and he would fit right in. I could imagine him easily going on a tour with them and even appealing to those rappers’ fans. From first listen, he also sounds great. Logic obviously has the kicks to hang out with the pros; he has solid lyrics, can switch up his flows, and can play “look at me I’m cool” by rapping fast. Furthermore, it only helps that he came from a similarly troubled background, which helps cement his authenticity.

Continue reading Album Review: Under Pressure | Logic

Album Review: Paperwork | T.I.

BY TRENT KRESLINS 

“It’s the King b*tch” those are the word one typically expects to hear from OG southern rapper and self declared King Of The South, T.I. . He is one of those rappers who has managed to stay relevant and keep his game at an elevated level while also holding the thrown of King essentially unchallenged. T.I. has had some slips, most notably No Mercy, but it was the late entry Trouble Man: Heavy is the head in 2012 that showed TIP hadn’t left, he just took a short break.  Looking to follow the success of his previous effort T.I. is dropping Paperwork in the 4th quarter of 2014 but also leaving a free one time stream up via Itunes Radio. However much like No Mercy, Paperwork is burdened by an over-saturation of guest verses and similarly to Trouble Man it is stretched thin trying to cover various styles in rap. With a blazing start, mediocre middle and solid closing tracks the saving grace of the album is T.I. himself so rarely lets down with weak verses.

Continue reading Album Review: Paperwork | T.I.

EP Review: helloe. | LOE

BY TAYLOR POPE 

Like an all-day lounge in one’s bedroom after a breakup or similar emotional meltdown, helloe. is all parts relaxed, introspective, moody and reserved. The up-and-coming Houston-based singer LOE exudes a certain confidence on this EP that is demonstrated by a persisting lack of care for conformance. Whatever standards are held by female singers delving into this sound, LOE clearly, and sometimes frustratingly, has no interest in acknowledging them. The EP format helps her leap over potential pitfalls with her decisive artistic vision, leaving us with a sonically strong work. It shamelessly shows off its youthful ambition as it commands the respect typically reserved for LOE’s more established peers.

Continue reading EP Review: helloe. | LOE