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Burden of Proof
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Burden of Proof
Current price: $13.99
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Barnes and Noble
Burden of Proof
Current price: $13.99
Size: OS
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Burden of Proof
, the second studio album from
Griselda
collective member
Benny the Butcher
, comes almost 20 years into a fruitful and hard-fought career. The Buffalo, New York rapper began self-releasing mixtapes in the early 2000s, developing a style of coarse, storytelling rhymes centered around themes of drug dealing, hustling, and unforgiving street life.
finds
fully formed after years of development and growth. There's even a marked upgrade in production compared to his 2018 outing
Tana Talk 3
, which stuck close to the East Coast hip-hop influences that had guided the majority of
Benny
's work before that point. The beats on
still utilize the distant soul samples and in-your-face drums of that style, but high-impact production from
Hit-Boy
gives tracks like the
Freddie Gibbs
-assisted "One Way Flight" a new sense of triumph and emphasis while retaining familiar, almost nostalgic East Coast elements.
's performances are forceful as ever, but feel more relaxed and effortless after years of grinding out mixtapes, features, and countless songs about moving drugs and doing time in jail. Tracks like "Legend" and "Thank God I Made It" sound like they're delivered from the other side of years of struggle, with economic lyrical construction and inspired, atypical instrumentals. Several collaborators lend their talents to the album, including features from
Rick Ross
,
Dom Kennedy
, and impressive verses from both
Big Sean
and
Lil Wayne
on the victorious "Timeless." ~ Fred Thomas
, the second studio album from
Griselda
collective member
Benny the Butcher
, comes almost 20 years into a fruitful and hard-fought career. The Buffalo, New York rapper began self-releasing mixtapes in the early 2000s, developing a style of coarse, storytelling rhymes centered around themes of drug dealing, hustling, and unforgiving street life.
finds
fully formed after years of development and growth. There's even a marked upgrade in production compared to his 2018 outing
Tana Talk 3
, which stuck close to the East Coast hip-hop influences that had guided the majority of
Benny
's work before that point. The beats on
still utilize the distant soul samples and in-your-face drums of that style, but high-impact production from
Hit-Boy
gives tracks like the
Freddie Gibbs
-assisted "One Way Flight" a new sense of triumph and emphasis while retaining familiar, almost nostalgic East Coast elements.
's performances are forceful as ever, but feel more relaxed and effortless after years of grinding out mixtapes, features, and countless songs about moving drugs and doing time in jail. Tracks like "Legend" and "Thank God I Made It" sound like they're delivered from the other side of years of struggle, with economic lyrical construction and inspired, atypical instrumentals. Several collaborators lend their talents to the album, including features from
Rick Ross
,
Dom Kennedy
, and impressive verses from both
Big Sean
and
Lil Wayne
on the victorious "Timeless." ~ Fred Thomas