As hard as it might be to remember, there once was a time when Wiz Khalifa was an up and coming hip-hop artist putting out some very interesting stoner rap. His laid back flows, wavy beat selection, and clever yet simplistic wordplay helped allow him to put out some great mixtapes such as Prince of the City, Burn After Reading, and Kush & Orange Juice. As his popularity grew however, the apparent amount of thought and effort that went into his songwriting began to diminish, and after the release of his third full-length album Rolling Papers, it was clear he was heading in a new direction stylistically. Now, with plenty more popularity and a couple big name awards under his belt, Wiz has delivered Khalifa, his sixth full-length release. Former fans of the Pittsburgh born emcee will probably go into this album hoping for a return to the rapper's former ways, unfortunately, they will end up sorrily disappointed.
Not only is Khalifa the worst album Wiz has put out this far in his career, it's also one of the worst rap album's I've heard in a very long time. The album, summed up as quickly as possible, is 13 tracks with absolutely zero effort, featuring generic production, an overuse of overdubbed vocals and echo effects, boring lyricism, and the Taylor Gang leader attempting to say "I smoke weed" as many times as he possibly can on an album before driving the listener insane. Lines like "my chain shit on your car, my rolex fucked your bitch" on Celebrate, or "gettin' all this paper, got me shittin' in public" two tracks later on City View are beyond cringe worthy. Not even the instrumentals, done mostly by fairly talented producers like frequent Khalifa collaborators Big Jerm, SAP, and Sledgren can help save any tracks on this LP, as most beats feel generic and boring, not even seeming good enough to be filler on an older project of his.
The album is 52 minutes yet feels like a lifetime, with guest features throughout adding nothing more than perhaps an appearance on the chorus or a lacklustre short verse. The only decent features comes on the one tolerable cut on the record, as No Permission features fellow Taylor Gang records label mate Chevy Woods. The instrumental, which is easily the most reminiscent of Wiz's past material on the album, is fairly average, and he appears to at least be attempting to put in an effort lyrically on this track. The biggest issue with the album for me, if it isn't clear yet, is that it's obvious Wiz isn't trying, coming through as a shell of himself even on his other commercial releases. While projects like Rolling Papers and O.N.I.F.C weren't great by any stretch, they at least felt like radio-bait, whereas Khalifa doesn't even seem to be enjoyable enough for the radio. It's not catchy, unique, creative, or anything else that could possibly be seen as a positive quality.
On Zoney, one of the later tracks in the listings, Wiz even brings his son Sebastian onto the album as perhaps some attempt to create a cute moment, but that's the last thing needed on a rap album. The only thing it serves to do is help the listener forget the lyrics earlier on the track, which are among the worst found in the listing. It did garner a smile from me though, because it became evident at this point how heavy Wiz was reaching, just looking to fill-up time and tracks as needed.
I'll be completely honest and admit that I'm not much of a fan of commercial radio rap. With that being said, the pop-rap elements aren't even what makes this album so unbearably bad. There's nothing appealing to be found anywhere near this album aside from maybe one or two tracks that are just a little bit above the horrendous standards the rest of the album sets. I'm not going to ramble on about just how poor this project is, or how far Wiz Khalifa, a once at least somewhat talented emcee has fallen off. Instead, I'll just leave by recommending you stay as far away from this album, or any song found on it for that matter, as possible.
Favorite Tracks: If I have to choose, No Permission is at least better than the other songs found on this trash heap.
I'm not even going to attach a video from the album below, instead listen to Never Been, a track from back when Wiz made enjoyable stoner rap.
Least Favorite Tracks: BTS, Celebrate, Elevated, City View, Call Waiting, Zoney
Rating: 1/5
Yes that's right, one, as in the same number of songs that I can actually ever potentially see myself considering coming back to on this album.
Have you listened to the album yet? If so, let me know your thoughts in the comments section down below!
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