Saigon – GSNT 3: The Troubled Times Of Brian Carenard

Just under four years ago, Saigon finally released his debut album, its title having floated around for the better part of a decade prior. After being released from prison in 2000, he spent years building an early career as a mixtape upstart before enduring an agonizing six-year span on Atlantic without a release. At the same time that Sai appeared as a recurrent, television-ready version of himself on Entourage, the label shelved his debut, The Greatest Story Never Told, before letting him loose in 2010. The next year, Saigon released the album and proved to himself as much as fans that he could transcend mixtape inclinations and his own title’s self-prophecy with a well-formed and reduced budget debut. The album also seemed like Saigon’s first chance at taking his next steps forward with Hip Hop, but then he sequelized the record to lesser effect the following year, signed up for Love & Hip Hop the next, and stepped away from the reality show earlier in 2014.

Like parts of the release itself, the album artwork on this third iteration of Saigon’s GSNT series immediately looks back. Saigon stands in front of an old-timey newspaper backdrop with a real article written in the Village Voice in 2011 propped prominently above his right shoulder. Separate headlines on the paper include Saigon’s other career-defining newsmakers: his arrest and subsequent jail time and a stabbing incident in 2006 in which two assailants tried to snatch his chain. Here though, Saigon looks up and away even though his jailing and uphill industry battles seem to perpetually frame parts of his music.

The major gripe begins early and continues throughout with an inconsistent beat selection. Saigon seems bent on skirting any obviously modern Hip Hop trendiness with the music but also fails to settle into a groove almost anywhere. The first song sounds like an attempt at arena Rap for the emcee’s dramatic grand entrance, but it’s so far removed from the record’s best moments that it’s an odd first choice. The album’s first rapped lyrics also frame the type of conversations Saigon wants to have without proving that he’s ready to actually dive in: “I heard we ‘bout to send the Navy out to Syria / And niggas yappin’ ‘bout some Maybach interior,” he raps. He never circles back, and instead laments that Tupac is gone and questions the rappers who drop his name. (Saigon raps about Tupac at least once more later as well, comparing him to Malcolm X with drums underneath before presenting himself as a figurative third coming.)

Either way, the Yardfather lays out some of the most positivity-charged music of his career as well. “Best Mistake” was the record’s initial single and proof that the emcee is at a different stage in life. Still, lines like “This is like a Scandal minus the Kerry Washington / Hard for me to breathe, it’s takin my very oxygen” are clunky and frustratingly characteristic. Later he starts a verse with the following: “If I was a mistake and you was a mistake? Then how can two mistakes create something so great?”

Still, there are obvious highlights and when Saigon loosens up and drops the pretense he churns out his strongest moments. “Sinner’s Prayer” is a reminder that he and Papoose are cut from the same cloth while the prospect of an Omar Epps verse might raise eyebrows more than perk up ears. Later, on “Mechanical Animals,” Memphis Bleek manages to jump start one of the record’s freshest moments, the remnants of his Roc-A-Fella heydays still bubbling up in his flow.

With 17 tracks, one of which is an interlude and two more of which are built from spoken word performances by prison activist Bryonn Bain, the tracklist is jam packed. The middle of the album in particular though is sequenced clumsily, a string of four consecutive Clev Trev produced tracks lead into a bundle of three DJ Premier songs with a jarring transition as a side-effect. Premo’s tracks adhere to his late-career standards, somehow both a caricature and shell of his former sound’s glory. But to both the producer and Saigon’s credit, the songs spice up the album and Sai sounds more pleasantly straight up here than elsewhere.

While he’s developed himself into a recognizable Hip Hop pundit outside of his music, Saigon has struggled to maintain his voice inside of it. There’s consolation in the fact that he’s still a talented emcee, but he’s tried too much while staying safe at the same time. Saigon fans will find plenty to pick through on GSNT3 but they may be the most alienated listeners as well, more aware than anyone that he is capable of better.

26 thoughts on “Saigon – GSNT 3: The Troubled Times Of Brian Carenard

    1. I absolutely agree with you. I thought the 2nd GSNT was bad, but GSNT 3 is a fuckin joke! He just needs to hit the studio with Just Blaze for his next album.

  1. Dogshit in, dogshit out… Who this bitter ass nigga again?

    Backshot for Brian’s daughter though, she loves gangata’s nut.

  2. although this album is more mainstream than GSNTone & GSNT2….this is my fave album of 2014…it still is fIRE!…GSNT3 is way better than allthe other Hip Hop albums period in 2014….2012 & 2013 were better though…only a handful of albums are worth buying this year

    1. That’s a bold statement considering Barrel Brothers and Mega Philosophy came out this year too. Definitely a slow 2014 tho….

    2. Yall sleeping on Ab Soul’s better days released in 2014. So did Common Nobody’s Smiling and Dilated Peoples Directors of Photography. Definitely all were better than GSNT 3

    3. Pharoh Monch, Dialated and Common are the best of a really slow year that is almost over. I think Ab soul and schoolboy q both disappointed though Q more than Ab. They both dipped below their last albums and some might say far below.

    1. You didn’t like “One Foot In The Door?” “Nunya” and “Lets Get Smart” were some dope tracks too.

      The album is off and on for me. I think Sai tried a few new things and it came off just ok in certain spots. He’s better off sticking to that pure boom bap.

  3. I like that Saigon has the courage to not be trendy and do his own thing on the mic but that’s only half the package. This is high quality mixtape material, it achieves lyrically but not sonically. Might be time to end the GSNT series and start fresh.

  4. Album is good, don’t know what the hate is about. If Eminem did that same first track, come alive ya would say it’s classic. Sai murdered Street Gospel, the two spoken word joints are fire, Sinners Prayer is very good. Sequencing in the middle dips a little but it picks back up with the DJ Primo joints. He then goes into his stories with his girl for those who are not up with him on the reality show. He then goes back to M Animals with Bleek, Bibby and GRap who all murder the beat. He then ends album with old fans who remember his Contraband 3 mixtape joints. Solid album stop the hating.

  5. There are only 3 tracks i enjoyed on this entire album

    Lets get smart
    One foot in the door
    Nunya

    If it were not for Premo , this would have been a total disaster!

  6. Better than GSNT 2 but not nearly as good as GSNT. Seems like some leftover tracks from the last 2 albums and some new tracks. All in all its better than 80% of the shit out now. I love how true he keeps it and the old school masculinity that is lost on today’s gay ass rap like drake and young thug.

  7. 3 out of 5…LOL…yall must be joking. This album is better than 95% of the garbage comin out today. I’m giving it a 4 out of 5. Solid album.

  8. 2014 has albums with quality over record sales……SAIGON’s GSNT3..is not better than GSNTone..but,..it showed that SAi does Not have to be so hardcore on every track..NUNYA was needed..u actually get to see SAIGON smile…AB SOUL was my other fave THESE DAY by AB SOUL was better than SCHOOLBOY Q OXYMORON..oXYMORON did good in sales b/c it rode off of KENDRICK LAMAR’s GK

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