Young Dolph – King Of Memphis

    The term independent is one that’s used very loosely in the Hip Hop industry. It’s hard to find a successful artist that’s truly independent. Guys like Chance the Rapper are shifting the paradigm but for some, being independent means having your own group that’s distributed by a larger label, who also has to split a check with an even bigger parent company. Memphis trapper, Young Dolph has found success keeping his appropriately-named Paper Route Empire completely independent by cranking out a handful of hits and an influx of successful mixtapes over the last six years. With a spot on Forbes’ Hip-Hop Cash Princes list and hits like “Preach,” “Pulled Up,” and “Cut It” heating the streets up without the backing of a major label, it’s easy to see why Dolph declares himself the King of Memphis on his debut album released the same day as fellow Memphis MC, Yo Gotti.

    Don’t let the debut album price tag fool you into thinking Dolph is switching things up this time around. Dolph shows promise on the hard-hitting opener, “Facts,” before retreating to his comfort zone on the majority of the album. King of Memphis takes the form of his last two mixtapes, Shittin on the Industry and 16 Zips only without the features. Eleven songs is all the Paper Route Empire CEO needs to remind those familiar with him what he’s about: money, money and more money. Those unfamiliar with Dolph will cringe at all the paper talk especially when you pair it with his gruff Southern delivery. Still, his knack for infectiously catchy hooks and slick punchlines that are so elementary they sneak up on you, are almost enough to carry a 11-track album. Lines like “my sneakers match the car, that’s what you call styling,” “bankroll in my pocket as big as a midget” instant favorite, “I fucked her so good, she got up and started cooking,” are undeniably simple but Dolph’s straightforward delivery over shimmering trap production make them bearable.

    Dolph is at his best when he meshes his street CEO identity with personal trap anecdotes like he does on the introspective closer, “Real Life.” You can hear the deep-rooted pain of his struggle as he says “I came from shit… literally” to provide the canvas for an unforgiving yet relatable picture of a broke dude getting rich only to reverse that fortune. When Dolph notes that he’s made enough money in the trap to send his kids to Stanford University on “Fuck It” you can’t help but be motivated by the family first attitude of the same guy who says he copped a Rolls-Royce just to smoke kush in it. The patriotic flip of America’s colors on “USA” is the funnest part of the album as Dolph cleverly shouts out his homies that rep both red and blue while leaving room for his red (and white) women over a breezy Zaytoven beat.

    A workhorse mentality and production from Atlanta’s top beatsmiths, Zaytoven, Mike WiLL Made-It, Nard & B, Cassius Jay and TM88 have made Dolph the adopted son of Atlanta that Drake so desperately wanted to be a few years ago. Unfortunately, on the King of Memphis, his progression is stifled by a formulaic approach to churning out a familiar product that he’s relied on his whole career. Dolph plays it safe on most of the album—making you wonder if that’s all we can expect from the self-proclaimed King of Memphis. The album’s lead single “Get Paid” (which was ironically lifted from the aforementioned Shittin on the Industry mixtape) is the most obvious example of this approach while “How Could” intertwines a Zaytoven beat with bars that never travel outside the spectrum of dollar signs and women.

    King of Memphis has all the ingredients of a breakout debut album with 12 featureless tracks but it settles in as another conventional Dolph project. The obvious jab at Yo Gotti in the form of the album’s release date and title, pack more of a punch than the album itself. If this is all it takes to be the “king” of Memphis, the crown ain’t safe.

    12 thoughts on “Young Dolph – King Of Memphis

    1. decent album better then i expected …not sure if you guys have a review of anderson paak malibu couldnt find it ….. its a great album

    2. Uh-huhhh haha dope album , if your listening to dolph for lyrics your in wrong place but this album bumps from start to finish . Dolph flow and delivery still on point

    3. Just because Dolph stays true to his style doesn’t mean this album is good. I don’t understand all the positive talk around this thing. The beats are uninspiring and lack any pop or catchiness to them. All the tracks run together, like trying to rate this LP track by track is virtually impossible because I can’t remember what any of the tracks where, the all sound the same! He’s the monotone teacher or sub that you just can’t stand. Slow unforgettable beats mixed with a side of monotone vocals leave me here scratching my head asking myself what did the reviewer see that I didn’t? Sure fans will rate this thing good and call it “fire (insert 10 flame emojis here), but I true reviewer should not rate this album any higher than like a 1.5, and that’s being EXTREMELY generous. Someone even had the nerve to say “if you came here for lyrics, than you’re in the wrong place.” Like WTF?! Every single artist should have songs with some meaning, not just a mess of the same lyrics cycled over and over. I didn’t think is possible, but Yo Gottis awful album (that was realesed on the same day) absolutely trumps this thing. Young Dolph, step your game up.

      1. Is this a law that every artist needs to have good lyrics ? Lol, I’ve never once listened to dolph expecting thought provoking lyrics or even introspective . It’s music to bump, and what you consider monotone others consider dope so to each his own. Its the same in other genres too, there are bands/artists out there that will wow you with their lyrics or instrumentation and others that survive on being catchy and easy to just play loud when partying. Doesn’t make it bad. It’s music snobs that judge every thing way too far. Back to hip hop, for example I respect/appreciate and listen to Lupe , but would never play any of his songs when partying. Same reason you don’t hear him or similar artists at clubs. Artists have their place , try and enjoy it all

      2. Yes. Gotti album, makes this album. The worst album outta Tennessee this year. I respect the hussle. But damn, who listens to this trash? He Sounds like he makes music for people with parent’s in rehab. Foh

    4. Any dolph fan will give this a high score but comparing it to a 5 isn’t true. 3.5 is pretty accurate. Enough said.

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