Review: “Quavo Huncho” Not As Bad As Social Media Told You It Is

    Ever since the Migos caught their unstoppable second wind in 2016 and became Ellen Degenerous-level household names, fans and critics alike have wondered who would be the first of the trio to branch out and go solo. People quickly assumed Quavo and crowned him the modern day chorus king thanks to his repeatedly catchy hooks. Even when it comes to non-Migos tracks (see Khaled’s two latest hits).

    Don’t get it twisted though, in no way has Quavo gone completely solo dolo, breaking free of his Migos affiliation (nor will he ever). Yet he is the first of the trio to take a stab at a completely unaccompanied album.

    Quavo Huncho comes on the heels of a pack of solo loosies that Quavo dropped back in early August including “Lamb Talk,” “Workin Me” and “Huncho Bubba.” Most fans thought these were just that, simple loosies that maybe merited a flashy video and a couple thousand streams but they were actually just a microdose of the 19-song trap overhaul to come.

    To no one’s surprise, the album is very on-brand for Quavo and doesn’t stray far from the musical stylings he dishes out on each and every Migos song. In short, most of these cuts sound just like Migos songs just sans Takeoff and Offset. Sure, Quavo attempts to fill in the blanks with his strengths; those being mainly trap-tuned melody catching and luxurious hums that delight even the staunchest Hip Hop purists. That said, Takeoff’s rapid-fire verses and Offset’s ominous presence are both missed dearly when rounding out these trap cuts – leaving the majority of them sounding far from complete.

    “Biggest Alley Oop” and more specifically “Pass Out” featuring 21 Savage open the album with serious firepower but that is largely thanks to CuBeatz, 30 Roc and Buddah Bless for going absolutely nuclear with the AirPod rattling production. In fact, the production on this album deserves as much credit or more for the level of replay value. Despite the verses and song structures not being up to usual Migos-standard, Quavo doesn’t fumble or drop the ball on any of the catchy choruses and neither do the all-star trap production team (Murda Beatz, Wheezy, Tay Keith etc.). In fact shatter, the beats shatter the backboard with flutes, hi-hats and of course, thundering 808s.

    Over an hour of Quavo hums and high octane beats can get dizzying which is why slower songs like Travis Scott-assisted “Rerun” is a much more re-listenable love/drug track (better than anything found on the pair’s joint Huncho Jack, Jack Huncho album). The same modern slow jam vibe appears on album closer “Lost” featuring Kid Cudi. Perhaps it’s Cudi’s Godly presence or perhaps the metaphysical beat but on this particular track Quavo is the most honest he’s ever been. Lines like “Lifestyle, it get crazy, it get brazy/My bitch mad at me, the days get rainy/She always try to leave” don’t sound like they are coming from Quavo Huncho of the million dollar Migos but instead from Quavious Marshall, the 27-year-old Atlanta native caught up in the crazy business of rap.

    Quavo shows consistency on this album through trap-a-long choruses and fresh sounds but there are definitely some misses that will likely never be streamed again. “Go All the Way” is so disturbingly digital sounding that it feels like it was filtered through a 1990’s dial-up Internet connection. The same skip factor applies to lukewarm track “Shine” and sloppily sampled Madonna cut “Champagne Rosé.”

    Those misfires don’t bode well for Quavo Huncho as a re-visitable project but the highlights of the album do in fact pour fuel onto the fire of anticipation for 2019’s Culture III where all three Migos will be thankfully reunited once again.

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    19 thoughts on “Review: “Quavo Huncho” Not As Bad As Social Media Told You It Is

    1. I didn’t really have any expectations for Qauvo or this project, but this was bad. Like really bad. All the hype for a serious flop. The Migos musical style doesn’t really work solo as a feature or a group it can sound pretty good most of the time, but solo it just isn’t as good.

    2. Whoever does you all reviews should stop , just report on hiphop , this site should stop doing reviews, I notice every review of true talented people get critiqued under a microscope and always get stated that they miss the mark or some type of improvement is necessary, but when it comes to the corniest rap or rappers with no talent but the production that someone else creates , this site goes out of its way to push it as great music, weird biases or lame reviewers

    3. This dude is ignorant, wack, bad for kids, and bad for Hiphop. I don’t care how “catchy” their little hooks and jingles are. This stuff is garbage, made for stupid people. They’re laughing their way to the bank, cashing checks off young people’s stupidity, and no rappers will call them out, no real artists will call then out, because everyone is so afraid they might lose a buck. It’s a disgrace to HipHop that mainstream media has chosen these fools as the representatives of rap music, and is poison to impressionable young kids that are forced to listen to these clowns. Someone has to say it.

        1. Sure, but who else is calling them out? Eminem is one of the greatest, but he’s not the end all, be all, ambassador of hip hop, especially now where disses aren’t as effective as they used to be. Instead of rappers feeling defeated when Em disses them, it’s more like “Oh look everybody, Eminem mentioned me in a song. Yes!” Even Em himself acknowledged that. And they’ll only continue to make their mumble trap songs and their fans will still continue to support them until their wave starts to fall.

    4. “luxurious hums that delight even the staunchest Hip Hop purists” ok Scott lol I don’t think any hip hop purists are listening for Quavo’s hums. I’d rather watch gay porn than listen to a dude hum.

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