Review: Trippie Redd’s “Life’s a Trip” Is A Commendable-N-Chaotic Genre Fuser

    Since 2016, Trippie Redd has been a name-to-know in the colorful-dread, face-tat, SoundCloud underworld, thanks to his relentless release of EPs and mixtapes. Meticulously dropping a grand total of eight projects in two years cultivated the Ohio native a hoard of Cool Teen™ fans who have been zealously waiting for his first official LP to rock their world. To make matters even more feverish, “Dark Knight Dummo,” his Travis Scott-featured, Life’s a Trip leadoff single which was released in December 2017, has had the streets and tweets ablaze for seven months straight.

    Which perfectly paved the way for the 14-track “official” debut to firmly removes him from the category of SoundCloud rappers that lack the discipline to ever drop a full-length album. In fact, on paper, his rollout for this album was more traditional than the rest of today’s internet rollout norms (he had a banging lead single, album art reveal, and (almost) unwavering release date).

    The opening track “Together” unfurls with a somber harmony of guitars and sentimental croons more akin to a My Chemical Romance reference track than the intro to a popular rapper’s project. But that’s no mistake or lapse of judgment on Trippie’s part. His young artistry shines through as he paints life pictures across all genres – not just with hi-hats and thundering 808s.

    “Taking a Walk” ushers in some more up-tempo production courtesy of the legendary Scott Storch but Trippie is still firmly in his bag on feelings. “These people don’t want me alive, no/They wanna play games with my life” are chanted at punk rock levels with a wobbly Auto-Tune filter thrown over the top. As if these first two cuts weren’t pop punk enough, “Wish – Trippie Mix” is the holy grail of emotional pop-punk-scream-rap. He drives home a rap/rock vibe that has become wildly popular amongst newcomers but Trippie is hardly following a trend, the sentiments of sorrow are genuinely felt.

    The songwriting itself isn’t too shabby and the faltering vocals double down on Trippie’s candidness but listeners need to be almost exclusively in an angsty teen state of mind to enjoy thoroughly. Whereas some of his other millennial rap cohorts sprinkle in the sad boy aesthetic, Trippie goes all out; rendering the replay value of these tracks. The same headspace is required to both enjoy and revisit “How You Feel” and “Underwater FlyZone.”

    However, the album isn’t just stuck between the pages of his emo teen diary — it also busts out of the confines of Trippie’s composite rhyme-book. He gets some seriously coherent bars off on “Missing My Idols” and “Oomps Revenge”; the former devoted to his musical idols and the latter dedicated to his deceased brother. These tracks could very well be classified as contemporary boom-bap with Trippie getting off some slick lines like “Might just have to drop a bomb, Han Solo/Got me bicken back being bool, Quasimoto.” Trap-tastic bangers fill in the remaining handful of songs with “Shake It Up” likely being the next Trippie track to be thrown into DJ rotations. Nevertheless, when it comes to proverbial bangers, “Dark Knight Dummo” — produced immaculately by Honorable C.N.O.T.E — takes the cake the entire bakery.

    Trippie’s experimentations and genre-blending on Life’s a Trip has to be appreciated (seeing as it eventually will breed a better-rounded artist). As good as Trippie’s trap prowess is, an album packed with several watered down versions of “Dark Knight Dummo” would get old quick. His emphasis on punk-rock also may deter those looking for 14 Rap Caviar-ready cuts. But his core fan base will be pleased with his decision to trip on his own terms.

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    18 thoughts on “Review: Trippie Redd’s “Life’s a Trip” Is A Commendable-N-Chaotic Genre Fuser

    1. Just can’t find the point he’s trying to get across. A mash up of depression, drugs, opps, shots and mental issues but where’s the focus? The clarity in the confusion? What revelation has he stumbled upon in his road to success in fame. Is there one? Where the production and sonic sounds are abdundant the messages are not. I think Redd is dealing with an identity crisis here but that’s just me. Hopefully he can find is purpose throughout his beef and mental strife.

    2. Honestly way better than I expected it to be. There’s still a lot of room for improvement, this kid is super young, but for the most part the sound is super tight. I hope as he matures as a person and an artist, he can find offer up insights that are more compelling and cut down on the filler.

    3. This record has it’s own sound. I was surprisingly satisfied by giving it a listen. As messed up the kid looks/acts, he makes great music.

    4. Demonic satanic lyrics and images seems to be what is fueling todays so call hip hop and by throwing money around is also misleading when will rap return to more lanes than just crap with a beat

    5. Dude can’t be classified as rap.. That’s not fair. What part of this is more hip hop them punk rock? I’ll wait……. If nothin else he can write a really good album review lmao

    6. This is a rock/rap fusion album which I feel is a very prominent feature of Trippie Redd and a full embodiment of him as an artist. He is a very unique artist who transcends rap from his grimy and grungy voice that I think sits well on this album. I would give it a 7/10. Not his best work yet but he has only had 2 albums so far. 1400 gang

    7. I guess the vibe is consistent but there’s nothing very memorable here. Doesn’t seem like he’s pushing his genre forward but just adding to its catalog.

    8. he has a variety of genres, a few songs weren’t very good, but the ones that were good. we’re amazing making up for the lacking of songs. no major features besides travis & thug. overall great album

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