Reviews

What's OG Dutch Master Really Saying in His Blue Light District Mixtape?

With the way we’re processing and absorbing music right now, being a newcomer to the game can be a harsh life to choose; I mean, there’s millions (probably billions) of people uploading music to the site you’re using, everyday. There’s a good chance that it’ll all sound alike, more than likely sounding like the popular style of the moment. And what sucks the most is that some random person out of that pool of everyone sounding just like the hot dude on the radio will get discovered and signed. I see it. The music game can fuck an artist’s head up if they follow the fame route over making quality music. Seems that it can definitely be a floss-thin line to balance on.

OG Dutch Master comes to mind when I think about all of that. He’s a black, male rapper in his early-twenties and talks about smoking weed, drugs and guns. On the surface, that could be one of the hardest things to make it through, given the number of others who rap about that. There are millions of other guys in that category. But, on the flip-side, there are plenty of rappers who don’t have the same advantages as OG does; He’s from Baltimore, so with his understanding of Baltimore Club and close proximity to pioneers of the genre, he could be utilizing styles and sounds that no other rapper could do with organic ease. Second: No one has a voice like his. Most major-label rappers have the same faintly-nasal tone that Kanye and Drake have (Big Sean, J. Cole, Rockie Fresh, Travis Scott, on and on) but the stuffed-nose squawk of his is purely unique. Third: He’s from Baltimore. How many fairly well-known rappers can say that? None except Los and he’s not out here spitting narratives on the regular. If his content comes from a unique experience that only he can draw from, then who else can do that? No one, because it’s him. Join all that with some futuristic Baltimore-club tinged rap beats and now we’re talking; The pool of similar rappers would be dissolving. Where OG stands on the conform-to-popular-sounds/content or run-with-my-own-style conundrum is still in question with his latest project, Blue Light District.

Early on in the tape, a few lines set up the way I analyzed this project. In BLD’s second track, “Numb Or Dumb”, OG says these things: “Looking at these rappers, all them look the same. Promethazine and Molly, looking like some fiends.”,  “Too many rappers, not enough fans”, “Started in the kitchen, Pyrex vision” and  “Damn a nigga bored at the top, I feel lonely”. On the topic of being like everyone else, there isn’t much of a distinguishable quality in any of the music here. He may not be poppin’ the seal and doing Molly, but there’s plenty of other run-of-the-mill content to be had on this tape. Randomly guess when he’ll drop a drug or gun reference and you’ll probably be dead on, or at least just missing the mark. There are so many stories about the kid who had nowhere to turn but to sell drugs, who’s down for his friends that won’t hesitate to bust one for him. True or not, that story is like the standard in rap music and if there aren’t any profound twists and bends to the traditional way of telling that story, there’s no point in listening. Or peep the “two white girls” reference in “3 M’s”; How many rappers are talking about their white girl obsession in songs now? In “Paper” he’s riding foreign luxury cars. In “Done It All” he bought his girl a new Aston Martin, for being loyal (Personal Highlights from this song: 1) How weird and rewarding is it to hear someone rap a line about eBay in such a heartfelt track? 2) I dig the channeling of early-2000’s pop-R&B hook). Neither sounds likely and all of these things are typical in follow-the-formula rap songs—Something he pointed out in "Numb Or Dumb."

There are two songs where OG seems to approach things from the run-with-my-own style angle. “Knuckleheadz” is one of the better cuts as it uses the huge “Hey You Knuckleheadz” Baltimore Club mix. He rides the beat with ease, seems to genuinely have fun and he voice is amplified perfectly. On “Money Motivated” he’s at top form with a tireless verse even though most of it is popping off about selling drugs. Both the latter and “Knuckleheadz” have party speaker-ready production; They sound fun. From there, my focus shifted to the place from which OG is speaking on some of the project. A lot of this tape is OG rapping from above and not eye-level. Yeah sure that happens often from people like Jay-Z but when a 43-year-old, two-decade vet worth a few hundred-million dollars does it, it feels much more appropriate than a newcomer in his early twenties who’s trying to scratch the surface. Whether it’s him being lonely at the top or being friends with Danny Brown or being better than Los or people wanting to suck him off because he’s getting cash now...it all seems forced and gives way to a bigger issue that permeates the hip-hop scene in Baltimore.

There’s no need to give a backstory on Baltimore as a city. Shit’s rough, we all know this. But for whatever reason, that plight has not yet propelled one rapper to a breakthrough where that story can be told in an effective way. And because of that, rappers from Baltimore have a skewed view on what “making it” really is. There are two things the internet can do: 1) Serve as a platform for people sharing their art no matter their location. Ten years ago I probably wouldn’t have known about an underground rapper from Alabama while living on the East Coast. But now with a simple tag-search, I can do that with ease, which I love. 2) People learning about each other’s music and showing love on the internet can give artists a false sense of self. Being posted on some well known blogs and publications does help but that’s not where it should stop. More importantly, it’s far from an arrival to the world. Rappers in Baltimore get coverage and attention so seldomly that a post from a blog can really get their heads going. And to a certain extent, it should. Take the blog post, make connections, work even harder, then build a core fan base and you’ll probably end up on a bigger platform. Sure, from a local-perspective OG Dutch Master is doing some cool things but he isn’t selling out local shows and his fan-base isn’t fully established. So if he really plans on buying his girl an Aston Martin, he’s gonna have to start aiming a bit higher and not thinking he’s at a higher place than anyone in Baltimore. People lose interest so quickly in music now that it’s tricky to know where an artist stands until they put out an undeniably solid body of work. Blue Light District isn’t undeniably solid. It has no cohesive sound, the content can be found in an abundance of other rap songs and, not to forget, that weird transition into sleepy, furniture store music at the end of the outro, “Done It All”. Overall, it’s sloppy and that was the case with his debut project, Art Of War, earlier this year. So if he’s gonna make a huge cultural impact and be that Baltimore guy who makes it, OG has to graduate from being that local guy making only a bit of noise before overtly resting on his laurels.

That's Law: A Word on Shy Glizzy's Law 2 Mixtape

Last summer when I first stumbled across D.C’s Shy Glizzy, I wasn’t convinced. He’d just released his first tape with all original material in Law, was still deep into his beef with Fat Trel and his song construction left a lot to be desired. Still, there was some sort of cosmic connection I had to his music, or maybe just him as an individual. After all, if there’s nothing else you can give Glizzy credit for, it’s the conviction in his words. I know he’d did some time as a teenager for robbery, got stabbed in a club not too long after and seemed to have a legit reputation as a street dude in D.C. so he had every right to talk big boy shit as much as he wanted to in his music. In ways, he slipped into a personal void that I needed filled after Boosie Boo had been in prison: A small dude in size, with big personality and the yelpy street narration to top it off. I’d gotten through his diss songs (“3 Milli” for Chief Keef and “Disrespect The Tech” for Fat Trel) and while they were both entertaining, I wasn’t moved.

Law started to sway me a bit. Glizzy was still spitting like he was in his diss tracks but the recklessness was a bit more concentrated. His message was clear, though: he was a young street dude translating his reputation through music. Most of the tracks are about the money he’d made, being D.C. through and through, and having no reservations about turning to the gun. “Law” was the tape’s standout with his hilarious, yet effective ad libs like gun-sound “Bloom Bloom” and “OH”. Overall, the tape was subpar though and like most internet rap, I processed it as such: Enjoy it for the moment and for the experience, no matter how small it may be. What I hadn’t taken into consideration is that Shy Glizzy isn’t much of an internet rapper. Even with a rap star like Wale featured on both Law and his Fxck Rap project, he’s just getting to people outside of the DMV area with help from Fader’s Gen F column and last year’s short-lived beef with Chief Keef. But mostly Glizzy is somewhat of a hometown hero for D.C.’s youth. Most of the YouTube comments on his videos are praise from kids in the District and in the aforementioned Fader feature he confessed: “Even if I don’t ever blow, Imma always be remembered here.”

That was a perfect precursor to “I Am DC”, the lead-off from his latest project Law 2. The airy chant of “I run my city, I run my city” throughout the song translates an emotion that can’t be fabricated for youtube views and download stats; it’s authentic. The most impressive thing about Law 2 is that, in content, Shy Glizzy has shown no growth yet he’s still made leaps and bounds as an artist. Just like everything else he’s done, you're gonna get guns here, you’re gonna get drugs and you’re gonna get money. But he’s never made those things sound so amazing. He’s finally come around to using that Cow from "Cow & Chicken" voice to his advantage. Take “Free The Gang” for example, a song about friends being locked up (The millionth rap song of the same topic), where his sing-song method does wonders with the hook “You threw your life away, threw your life away/ Man I hope and pray the streets don’t take my life away.” “Guns & Roses” does the same as he goes through a guide of street rules: “Police took away my friends, or they life came to an end/ These niggas ain’t my friends, they just want some of my ends.” His curatorial prowess sticks out on this tape too. He grabs a couple beats from rising trap producer Metro Boomin, recruits Kevin Gates (another sing-song street rapper) for “Gudda” and on the tape’s most entertaining and club-ready track “Wassaname” (fucking banger!!! OMG) he brings Migos along.

Law 2 also finds Shy in a more introspective, matured state. Where he was quick to draw on the tape’s prequel, here he’s cognizant of his position and is at least a little smarter with pulling the gun as he says in “Free The Gang”: “Man we this damn close, you wait ‘til now to start killing?/ Why the fuck you stealing cars when we riding ‘round in foreigns?/ Music shoulda been your job, boy I’m ‘bout to start touring/ Every club we scorin’, kept the Rose´ pourin’/Yeah I shoot shit up too, but I’m smart when I’m doing it.” Moments like this where he’s sitting his friends down and giving them a heart-to-heart is how he maintains the “I’m not really a rapper” thing that Jeezy held onto so dearly when he was a new artist. He actually dedicates the hook for “The N Word” to that stance too: “Rap niggas is rap niggas and trap niggas is trap niggas/ I’m still in the trap nigga.”  “I’m not your favorite rapper, I just wanna motivate you” is what he says in “I Am DC” and in the Yo Gotti-assisted “Money Problems” he talks about his absence of funds causing him to get into arguments with his right hand man, who’s in a better financial position. Really, Law 2 is the stories that old head on your block tells you while you chill on the stoop about the people he’s shot up, the crazy club nights, women he’s had sex with and how he could’ve made it big. Glizzy’s that dude and seems to welcome that role.

From me first discovering him, like Migos, Glizzy has had an element to his music that’s inexplicably enjoyable; Neither are offering foreign subject matter and most of their hooks are painfully repetitive but they’ve both developed an audible aesthetic that can’t be duplicated.The craziest part about this is how much better he’s gotten since the first Law tape—It’s a bit scary And for that reason, Law 2 hasn’t gone a day without play on my iTunes or in my car since it dropped. Whether Shy Glizzy is really a rapper, or a trapper who’s just trying to drop gems for people from a similar background, his incantatory street tales are great in this tape.