Boys have a ton of emotions.
By pulling back on the "haaaaaan"s and putting a little more time into crafting better songs, French does a modest job at keeping listeners invested.
Let us know when the version without the skits drops. Fourteen breaks on an album is just inexcusable.
The pride, the fall, the consequence and the retribution all wrapped up in one forcible package.
Neighborhood Nip continues to be a necessary influence on those aspiring to up their own position.
Even when he dials it in, Tity Boi still manages to connect.
An embattled Harry Powder can't shake the itch to fight for relevance in the rap game, despite an obvious rush job.
The Thugga is using his rap skills to inspire this go around.
Thug motivation — to dance to.
Weekends were made for partying and this album is the Sunday before a holiday.
The OVO recluse delivers his most heavy-hearted collection of R&B cuts on the third installment of his self-titled series.
Just like Khaled’s infamous Snapchats, this album is only exciting for a few short intervals.
All these gunshots and no hits? Something's got to give.
“The Land” is everything a typical movie soundtrack should aspire to be with cinematic stories told through popular music.
Benton's first endeavor since the Funk Volume divorce is a messy affair with about as many misses as hits.
The man Drake claims is “outta here like NASA” manages to get his official debut off the ground with minimal turbulence.
Amidst all the trapping and flexing in today’s game, Phonte and Eric Roberson slow it down for the seamless Rap&B fusion.
With the entire world watching, La Flare doesn't deliver the classic many had hoped for but he doesn't disappoint his core, either.
Compiling loosies from several top players in the rap game isn't the best way to ensure "quality" and this album proves it.
Lil Durk’s sophomore album is the epitome of new-gen gangsta rap but unfortunately, lacks any distinct personality.