Therapist asks good questions (almost like he does it for a living!). Everybody wants who’s hot and people love to say that you fell off. This is a damning assessment of not only music but life. “You see the club popping when we do a show but you don’t see the studio my life isn’t a movie bro.” Talks about how fake the rap industry is with handshakes and love that is forced and theatre like. “Where I’m from, everybody wants to make it out but nobody wants to see somebody make it out.”įocuses on how empty sex can be with groupies, long days and early flights take a toll on artists. Heavy snyths coming in and rippling through.ĭiscussing how people from his area flex in order to protect themselves and any doubts they had. “I got a girl from the screwface capital.” It’s amazing to me how Dave had to become the man of the house at such a young age. I swear he references 99 marks on my test on We’re All Alone from his second album We’re All Alone In This Together!ĭave is levelling up. You met the Russians, Dave? Location track reference.īeat drops and comes back. Another non PG reference.ĭecent track but hasn’t grabbed me like the others have. 808s and snapping background beat makes the track feel dark and murky. What is that in the background? Oh, a Burna verse is what we needed. Man can speak Indian now? Kept that Benz huh? Your house party is a what, Dave? Shout out to Chase and Status with that line.īurna is killing the chorus. I’ll catch him at a traffic jam, red light, Amsterdam if he tries to disrespect.”Īhhh, so it’s a love story told via a deck of cards? Joker, clubs, purple heart. “You’ve had a couple of boyfriends but never had a man. “Black is being guilty until proving that you’re innocent.” Had to pause at 2:40 because… I mean there’s so much here about the struggles of being black it makes me sad about how the country that me and Dave live in caused these situations. Had to move from his area because of trouble. “Tryna help a lady cross the road to have walking off.” Kendrick Lamar reference with ‘blacker the berry’. Black is watching child soldiers getting killed by other children.” “Tell us we used to be barbaric, we had actual queens. Talking about how hard black people have to work because of their skin colour. Great skills to make me and you sound like MENU and tie in with the chef line. Beef with a dealer? Nudes from attraxtive weather doesn’t interest him. “Friends of enemies are enemies and enemies of enemies are friends.”īenz out, Beamer in. If it’s like this for the remaining ten tracks then I’m going to read to lay down after this. Scared he won’t leave a legacy first beat comes back. It’s like I’m happy for a second then I’m sad again.” My head is already getting superlexed by Dave’s lyrics. “If I’m a psycho, I don’t want to be sane.” Here is an unfiltered review of that album. On 8th March 2019, South London rapper Dave released his debut studio album PsychoDrama. The notes below each track detail what came to my mind at the time. It is now a word to generally describe full-length albums released for free, which is the modern form of mixtape that was made a popular following by 50 Cent and his group G-Unit in the early 2000s, sometimes containing all original music, other times composed of freestyles and remixes of popular tracks.DISCLAIMER: This review is from a first listen and isn’t focused on anything in particular. In the hip hop scene, mix tape is often displayed as a single term mixtape. Also since the 1990s, it describes releases used to promote one or more new artists, or as a pre-release by more established artists to promote upcoming "official" albums. Blend tapes became increasingly popular by the mid-1990s, and fans increasingly looked for exclusive tracks and freestyles on the tapes. Ron G moved the mixtape forward in the early 1990s by blending R&B a cappellas with hip hop beats (known as "blends"). In the mid-1980s, DJs, such as Brucie B, began recording their live music and selling their own mixtapes, which was soon followed by other DJs such as Kid Capri and Doo Wop. (who later became known as Whiz Kid) and DJ Super V would create personalized House Tapes which would eventually circulate throughout New York City. In the late 70's into the early 80's DJs began recording mixtapes out of their homes, referring to them as House Tapes. As more tapes became available, they began to be collected and traded by fans. Hip hop mixtapes first appeared in the mid-1970s in New York City, featuring artists such as Kool Herc and Afrika Bambaataa. In hip hop's earliest days, the music only existed in live form, and the music was spread via tapes of parties and shows.
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