Rari Talk 16 Big Game Edition. Drill Musik. Chief Keef - Sorry 4 The Weight. Crypto Trappin. DJ Ransom Dollars. Chicago Season. DJ Krave. Trappin Mackin N Kruzin 4. Way 2 Dirty 5. DJ Testarosa. Extra Sauce 4 Hosted By Dee30shotss. Dirty Glove Bubba. DJ Official. Hood Official Mediabase DJ GxxdMuzic. Game Changers 2. DJ Young JD. The Vault. Extra Sauce 3. DJ Cinemax. Drip Coin. Sam Hoody.
Tha Raq Vol. Tha Raq 2. Playlists are available for members only. Sign up for free. The remix is featured as the final track on the G.
Music compilation album, Cruel Summer. The song features a guest appearances from fellow rappers 50 Cent and Wiz Khalifa. On September 21, , the music video was released for the song 'Ballin'. Finally Rich received generally positive reviews from music critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of to reviews from mainstream critics, the album received an average score of 62, based on 17 reviews, which indicates 'Generally favorable reviews'.
Musically, however, the album shimmers with power, which makes the dozen songs feel even more dangerous'. Keef's innovation, if it can be called that, is to appear even colder than any of his predecessors, devoid of feelings, let alone guilt or remorse.
Deliberately defining a song titled Laughin' to the Bank by its absence of any mirth is entirely in character for Keef, who wears his perpetual screwface like a badge of pride across Finally Rich and never once lets light in. So people will love it. People will hate it.
Chief Keef probably doesn't care either way. He's 17, and he's finally rich. Jesse Fairfax of HipHopDX gave the album three out of five stars, saying 'A fair assessment can see his dangerous character as a product of his environment rather than simple glorification of wrongdoing, with Finally Rich creating entertainment out of hopelessness.
Having taken off in a short time span while growing into adulthood, immaturity is certainly a big part of his shtick, but most importantly Keef's rise puts a mirror up to devastating socioeconomic conditions all too often swept under the rug. And in addition to succeeding on its own terms, it proves that Keef has a lot of potential—much more than his detractors might have hoped.
This tone of manic, furious immaturity persists throughout, whether he's railing on 'bitches' or 'snitches' or detailing the outlines of boilerplate affluence to which he robotically aspires. Jordan Sargent of Spin gave the album an eight out of ten, saying 'He may forever be known as the kid whose videos depicted children waving handguns, but you wouldn't know it from his Interscope bow: He's no longer asking for that to be his calling card.
Instead, as the torrent of controversy continues to swirl around him, Keef has written an album positioning him as one of rap's most rewarding pop stars. The effect is mesmerizing, and a little scary.
0コメント