Slimm Calhoun "The Skinny" Review
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With his first single released half a
year ago, Slimm Cutta Calhoun gears up to release his first album, 'The Skinny', on
Aquemini/Elektra Records. Slimm is more of a hip-hop rapper even though he represents the
ATL. If it comes down to that dirty south flow that can be accomplished though. The album starts off with your boy from the Dungeon Family spitting a freestyle-like rhyme introducing his partna Slimm Cutta Calhoun. The beat is slowed and kind of on some devil shit. The next track 'This Young G' raps about how he's out to change the game of rap with his hip-hop type flow. The beat is laced with simultaneous beats and 'Oooohhhhh's.
'Red Clay' is up next, and it seems like a space filler for the album. It has the some of
the same braggadocios rhymes that the last track displayed. "Well", the next
track is the next single off his album "The Skinny" and it features Killer Mike
and Andre 3000 doing the vocals on the verse. As the second single I think this was a
great choice for the next single to push the album, nice lyrics and the beat is tight
also. "Why Ya Smilin" is the first real
appearance of either one of his mentors from Outkast rapping. This track is tight. It's
laced with some frantic drums and Big Boi comes with a flow kind of similar to the one on
'B.O.B'. Daddy Fat Sacks lays two tight verses on this song. This song is basically bout
some of that skull therapy if you know what I'm talking bout. The next track features
Backbone, which is ok but not great. The beat is tight to death, but the flow Slimm
applying to it isn't. There are some bright spots on this track when Backbone comes raps
with his Do Or Die-type flow. Slimm seems to follow the same pattern on his 2nd verse. Next is the well-known cut 'It's Ok'
featuring Andre 3000, which is his first appearance. This is about one of the tightest
tracks on the album by far. This track is on some pimped-out shit. Andre 3000 spits his
verse from the view of a female or a second person point of view in his cartoonish
sounding voice. "How Much Can I" is the smoke song
on the album. It's a track you can just sit back chill and smoke a blunt to. It sounds
like an R&B track, but you'll most definitely feel it when you high. This song reminds
me of the track 'Stanklove' on Outkast's latest album "Stankonia". No rapping
just pure funk. Next up to bat is 'Da Calhoun's', its on some ol' gangsta shit like the
track 'Gangsta Shit' on "Stankonia". It's filled with rhymes bout hustlin' and
sellin' dope. The next track 'Piece Of Tha Pie' has one of the best beats on this track.
It's filled with drumbeats non-stop throughout the song. Slim retreats back to his hip-hop
style flow on this song. |
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