Image via Lil Tony Official/Instagram
Brandon Callender says it should be illegal for a bus detour to be so crazy that you have to walk half the trip.
Even though the music video shows them all together, if you told me that YTB Fatt, DeeBaby, and Mg Lil Bubba recorded their verses for âKing of Poppin Itâ without consulting each other, Iâd be inclined to believe you. Thatâs not to say that the song isnât hard, but it sounds like three verses stitched together on the same beat. Just listen to how disjointed it feels: West Memphis, Arkansas breakout YTB Fattâs blustering raps hit harder than MMA blows; the bouncy cadences that Texasâ Mg Lil Bubba deploys are reminiscent of Peewee Longwayâs mischievous flows; and the swaggering presence of Houstonâs DeeBabyâs feels like the product of endless freestyle cyphers. âKing of Poppin Itâ might as well be a study on the current state of Southern rap.
The groovy feel of Sk8starâs âi luv u ,i doâ calls to mind some of Playboi Cartiâs romantic and nostalgic music. (Think more âWe So Proud of Himâ and its sparkling beat, less âLove Hurts.â) On âi luv u ,i do,â the Atlanta rapperâs voice freely drifts in the space left by projectforeplayâs buttery horns and subdued drums. The boilerplate flexes and tough talk (âYou lil n*ggas sweet, this shit could get sourâ) takes away from the dreamy ambience, though Sk8starâs doesnât stray away from passion long enough for it to matter. When he croons âIâm on a diet, eat nothinâ but youâ and follows it up with an audible slurp, the hearts circling his head are practically visible. Calling this capital-r Romantic would be a stretch, but Iâm not judging. You gotta say whatâs on your heart sometimes.
Look no further than Whyceg if youâre searching for some head-splitting beats. The Atlanta producer, engineer, and artist has been lacing 2Sdxrt3all, Lil Tony Official, wildkarduno, and even himself with production that taps into the dark psychedelics of Piâerre Bourne and Coupe as well as Chief Keefâs maximalist odysseys. (Thereâs a splash of plugg in there because nearly every underground producer has a bit of MexikoDro in their DNA). The chilling beat for Lil Tony Officialâs âDonât Know How To Feelâ pulls from the Piâerre side of Whycegâs brain. Synths swerve in and out of focus, ominous keys loop forever. And then thereâs Tonyâs glassy-eyed deadpan, which sounds cool-headed and hostile at the same time. Somethingâs cooking in Atlantaâs underground.
With each successive line on â42,â Oodaredevil sounds as if heâs leaning further and further away from the mic. âDifferent designer I put it on the belt / Weed that Iâm smokinâ itâs prolly top shelf,â the Dallas, Texas rapper shrugs in the opening bars. Itâs some of the most fun rapping Iâve heard all year, and it makes the relatively simple wordplay (perky sex/perfect sex) sound cool as hell, too. When it comes to rage rap, he and collaborators like Talinwya are closer aligned with Lunchboxâs New Jazz than Yeatâs sunken eeriness, opting for instrumentals with weird-sounding synths that wriggle in your headphones every four bars. With the low-end rumbling and sizzling before suddenly dropping out and reappearing like nothing happened, Kelewya, Synthetic, and Keshâs beat fits perfectly into Oodaredevilâs world. Itâs like a fever dream you can put on replay.
Loe Shimmyâs dedicated to keeping rap funky. Of all the tracks that the Pompano Beach rapper has dropped this year, Iâve returned to âSafe Routeâ the most. The combination of chunky basslines, twinkling church chords, and breezy sing-song melodies leave just enough funk for it to be socially acceptable to start gliding around the dancefloor when it comes on. âWok & Minute Maid,â his newest single, is no different. Simo Fre and TapeKidâs steel drums and smoky keys carve out a slick groove that Shimmy takes control of, using it to turn his rasp on and off while sliding all over the pocket. âI get the ball, I run it back every time they punt it to me/I get them bows, Iâm cashinâ out, donât need to front it to me,â he raps while getting his 2-step on in the music video. Someoneâs gotta slide him some Sly Stone records to flip.