Diddy – Press Play

    Sean Combs has been known as many things in
    his day: Puff Daddy, Puffy, P. Diddy,
    and now just Diddy. He has also been
    known as the American dream, a visionary, Hip Hop’s finest entrepreneur, the
    first superstar mogul; and to some, a killer of Hip Hop. Rarely will the
    name Diddy make someone think
    “artist.” It isn’t because his icon has eclipsed his artist, it’s because he’s
    always had other people make his music for him. Blessed with more cash than
    talent, Diddy buys his albums more
    than he makes them.  It is no secret, he even once wrote (or had written
    for him of course), “don’t worry if I
    write rhymes, I write checks
    .” That’s cool, I respect Puff for his business acumen, not for
    his flows.

    Fortunately
    for Mr. Combs, it isn’t that hard to
    purchase yourself a dope album if you’ve got a grip of cash, which of course
    he’s got in spades. Buy beats from the best producers and pay the best emcees
    to pen your verses for you, simple right? And shit, even if he can’t do it
    himself, Diddy has proven over and
    over again he knows how to construct a hit. So he’s got Timbaland, The Neptunes, Kanye West,
    Just Blaze, Havoc, Will.i.am, D. Dot and Rich Harrison producing and Pharoahe
    Monch
    , TI, The Game, and Rick Ross writing.
     How can you fuck that up?

    Well, you
    can when you’re just really wack. Dr.
    Dre
    can’t write a rhyme to save his life, just like Diddy, but Dre can still
    deliver them with rock solid technique. He sounds good when he spits other
    people’s rhymes, be it Jay-Z’s (“Still
    DRE”) or Eminem’s (“Forgot About
    Dre,” “The Watcher”). Diddy, on the
    other hand, butchers them. The first track I heard from the album had me
    thinking he had made some major improvements. “The Future,” a ridiculously blatant
    Pharoahe Monch-penned track, is
    really dope. Havoc’s beat is crazy
    and Puff does a very respectable Pharoahe Monch impression. He
    enunciates really well (and just like Monch),
    and doesn’t kill the conviction of the words with his mush mouth delivery like
    usual. “Hold Up,” another great track, again features a new-and-improved, Pharoahe Monch-coached Diddy. Sadly, it pretty much ends
    there.  When paired up with the uber-talented trio of Nas, Cee Lo and Kanye
    for “Everything I Love,” Diddy
    sounds absolutely bush league spitting.  He again does a bit better when
    he gets his T.I. on for the Big Boi-assisted “Wanna Move,” but when
    he does him on horrible tracks like “Thought You Said” or club trash like “Come
    To Me,” it’s nothing short of embarrassing. Listen to the interlude “I Am” and
    tell it doesn’t sound like it’s a man rapping for the first time, which ruins
    an otherwise good beat. It doesn’t matter who is writing your rhymes if
    you can’t deliver them, and that really holds this album down.

    There are fair
    shares of sappy R&B tracks that do nothing to help Press Play, and sadly the best of the bunch is nearly dragged six
    feet under by “the rapper.” “Tell Me” has the usual Just Blaze banger and Christina
    Aguilera
    lacing the hook (putting any other singer on the album to shame),
    but Diddy is again excruciating to
    listen to rap. His shortcomings aside, there are other issues; the
    aforementioned overabundance of shitty R&B collabs, pointless interlude-type
    joints like “Claim My Place” and “Crazy Thang,” or great producers giving god-awful
    beats (Diddy Rock. Worst. Timbaland. Beat. Ever.). Not to mention
    this shit is 80 minutes long!

    Some people
    are probably gonna be quick to say “how
    you gonna complain about the rapping on a Diddy
    album? What did you expect from him? He ain’t Jay-Z
    .” No, I’m not expecting Jay-Z, but I’m expecting a rapper who is at least listenable and
    doesn’t ruin everything he touches. I don’t care who it is, he doesn’t just get
    a free pass for wack ass rapping – after all, the man is making a damn album.
    If it’s such common knowledge that he is such a bad rapper that he shouldn’t be
    judged on it then he shouldn’t even be making an album.  Sean Combs does a lot of things, and
    most of those things he does very well. Making solo albums, is not one of those
    things.

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