TRACKLIST:
01-big_sean-why_would_i_stop
02-big_sean-lucky_me
03-big_sean-deep_reverence_(feat._nipsey_hussle)
04-big_sean-wolves_(feat._post_malone)
05-big_sean-body_language_(feat._ty_dolla_sign_and_jhene_aiko)
06-big_sean-story_by_dave_chappelle
07-big_sean-harder_than_my_demons
08-big_sean-everything_thats_missing_(feat._dwele)
09-big_sean-ztfo
10-big_sean-guard_your_heart_(feat._anderson_.paak_and_earlly_mac_and_wale)
11-big_sean-respect_it_(feat._hit-boy_and_young_thug)
02-big_sean-lucky_me
03-big_sean-deep_reverence_(feat._nipsey_hussle)
04-big_sean-wolves_(feat._post_malone)
05-big_sean-body_language_(feat._ty_dolla_sign_and_jhene_aiko)
06-big_sean-story_by_dave_chappelle
07-big_sean-harder_than_my_demons
08-big_sean-everything_thats_missing_(feat._dwele)
09-big_sean-ztfo
10-big_sean-guard_your_heart_(feat._anderson_.paak_and_earlly_mac_and_wale)
11-big_sean-respect_it_(feat._hit-boy_and_young_thug)
12-big_sean-lithuania_(feat._travis_scott)
13-big_sean-full_circle_(feat._key_wane_and_diddy)
14-big_sean-time_in
15-big_sean-story_by_erykah_badu
16-big_sean-feed
17-big_sean-the_baddest
18-big_sean-don_life_(feat._nipsey_hussle)
16-big_sean-feed
17-big_sean-the_baddest
18-big_sean-don_life_(feat._nipsey_hussle)
19-big_sean-friday_night_cypher_(feat._42_dugg_and_royce_da_59_and_eminem))
20-big_sean-story_by_stevie_wonder
21-big_sean-still_i_rise_(feat._dom_kennedy)
INFO:
Supplier : Team TosK
Ripper : Team TosK
Artist : Big Sean
Album : Detroit 2
Label : Getting Out Our Dreams / DEF Jam Recordings
Retail : 2020-09-04
Release : 2020-09-14
Genre : Hip-Hop
Source : WEB
Tracks : 21
Play Time: 72:02 min
Size : 165.37MB
Bitrate : 320Kbps
Encoder : LAME
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MIRROR 3 :
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SCENE MOB:
In the late 2000s and early 2010s, Big Sean was like a streetwear Tumblr come to life, able to rap like Gucci Mane’s kid brother in one song, only to shift gears and drop a pretty serviceable Consequence impression in the next. The Detroit rapper’s manic energy and corny punchlines recalled Quagmire from Family Guy, a comparison that Sean himself stoked on his 2011 track “I Do It,” when he spent a few lines rhyming things with “giggity-giggity” and then rapped, “I’m Quagmire.” His “Marvin & Chardonnay” fit like a glove within the dizzying heights of Rustie’s transcendent 2012 Essential Mix, while the Nicki Minaj collaboration “Dance (A$$)” yielded both a pitch-perfect homage to the ghettotech of his hometown as well as perhaps the decade’s finest song about butts. Before too long, he’d carved out a niche for himself as a squeaky-voiced goofball, a fast-rapping Fabolous soundalike who was a welcome addition to any posse cut, able to parachute into songs provide some high-energy levity, and tastefully bow out before you had a chance to think too hard about what the hell an ass-state is.
The problem, though, is what happens when you’re stuck with a whole album’s worth of Big Sean. He doesn’t make bad records per se—this is a guy who releases music under the imprimatur of Kanye West, so there’s a certain level of grim competence to each of his full-lengths—it’s just that every time Big Sean attempts to reveal a deeper side of himself, he can’t help but come across as a woefully unpleasant person.
On Detroit 2, the rapper’s fifth solo album and the ostensible sequel to his 2012 mixtape, Big Sean positions himself as an enlightened despot. He rules over a kingdom in which wisdom is gained by woo-woo self-help books, relationships are transactional (“I can’t waste the sex on you and give you everything you can’t give me back”), and cancel culture is an existential threat to your brand (“It only takes one time to fuck up your whole Wikipedia.”) Between that stuff, the multiple judgments he renders on people’s “vibes,” and the ayahuasca reference on “FEED,” it seems like Big Sean has spent the past few years internalizing the hyper-capitalism of the early-’70s New Age movement. Sure, at least it’s an ethos, but the places it takes Big Sean to feel incongruous with our current moment.