â10 More Intriguing Songs About the Babyâ features music by Ari Lennox, DaBaby, Hozier, Lil Uzi Vert & Meek Mill.
âBaby come back to me / Give me one more chance / One more chance to be, to be a better man.â Thatâs what Kane Brown sung on âBaby Come Back,â which appeared on his 2018 hit album, Experiment. On âBaby Daddyâ (Lil Boat 2), Lil Yachty asserts, âYour baby daddy a sucka, ayy, your baby daddy a busta, ayy / Your baby daddy so broke, he hit the plug for a free line of coke.â Okay â one more for good measure! Sam Smith informed us ââBaby, You Make Me Crazyâ / Whyâd you have to fill my heart with sorrowâ (The Thrill of it All, 2017). All three of these songs appeared on the 2018 playlist, 13 Intriguing Songs All About the Baby.
Now, itâs 2020, and weâre back with a slightly shorter sequel to 13 Intriguing Songs All About the Baby entitled 10 MORE INTRIGUING SONGS ABOUT THE BABY. Just like the previous list, the keyword in each of the song titles is some form of the word BABY. Simple enough, right? Right as rain! 10 MORE INTRIGUING SONGS ABOUT THE BABY features songs courtesy of Ari Lennox, DaBaby, Hozier, Lil Uzi Vert & Meek Mill among others. Without further ado, here are 10 songs about BABIES!!!
1. Lil Uzi Vert, âBaby Plutoâ
Eternal Atake (Deluxe) â LUV vs. the World 2 â˘Â Atlantic â˘Â 2020
âI turned to an addict, I bought me a Patek / I bought her a baby one / Yeah, I bought me a Maybach, it came with two doors / Yeah, thatâs the Mercedes one (for sure).â Drippy to say the least! After more than a two-year hiatus, Lil Uzi Vert returned in a big way with Eternal Atake. No one knew exactly when the new album would be released, ultimately arriving March 6th (Eternal Atake (Deluxe) â LUV vs. The World 2 arrived one week later). Eternal Atake commences Eternal Atake epically with âBaby Pluto.â
âBaby Plutoâ is named after the rapperâs first alter ego of the project. Here, Pluto goes off, rapping with incredible agility over dope, hard-hitting production courtesy of Brandon Finessin, Bugz Ronin, Cousin Vinny, and IKE Beatz. As to be expected, the chorus, excerpted above, is where Vertâs bread is buttered â the drip is real. It continues a little something like this:
âI say with the baddest, Iâm countinâ the cabbage While makinâ my lady cum I bought a G-Wagen, that shit was the BRABUS Thatâs why I be racinâ em...â
You get the picture. As for the rest of the song, well Lil Uzi continues in dripped out fashion. Heâs also quite sexed-up. That said, he raises eyebrows when he asserts, âI ainât fuck a bitch in so long, Iâd do it in a Honda Accord.â Ok âBaby Pluto.â
2. DaBaby, âBlame it On Babyâ
Blame it on Baby â˘Â Interscope â˘Â 2020
When there is a wave to ride, you ride it! That seems to be the philosophy of âSUGEâ hitmaker DaBaby (Jonathan Kirk) who has been quite prolific since 2019. In 2019, he released two hit albums: Baby on Baby and KIRK. Before the abrupt release of his third studio album, Blame it on Baby in 2020, he farted on us with âSHUT UPâ (which didnât make the album), and the brief âFind My Wayâ, which ends up on the 34 minute project. While Blame it on Baby isnât a game changing LP in the least, it has some notable, truly entertaining moments.  Among the most entertaining and at least quasi-innovative moments arrives courtesy of âBlame it On Baby.â
âOkay K.i.D, drop the beat and watch me take it home, baby!â âBlame it On Babyâ is totally unforgettable, regardless whether you particularly like the song or not. Why? DaBaby is more creative here, delivering one of the true WTF moments of Blame it on Baby. What makes âBlame it on Babyâ so interesting is the fact that the beat switches and he, likewise, switches up flows. Maybe this two-minute-plus joint works and maybe it doesnât in the big scheme of things, but this represents one of the moments where minimally you appreciate Kirk thinking forward.  Perhaps his most notable lines:
âThey be like âWhy you switched the beat?â Because my flow neat, nigga âI thought he couldnât switch the flow, how the hell he switchinâ the beat up?â They donât know who they fuckinâ with, do this shit with my feet up Yawning on these niggas, sit back, go to sleep.â
BOOM!
3. Hozier, âWasteland, Baby!â
Wasteland, Baby! ⢠Sony â˘Â 2019
âAll the fear and the fire of the end of the world / Happens each time a boy falls in love with a girl.â Wow, such beautiful, thoughtful, and poetic lyrics from Irish alternative, singer/songwriter, Hozier. Hozier, of course, is best known for his Grammy-nominated hit âTake Me to Churchâ. He returned in 2019 with his long-awaited, highly-anticipated sophomore album, Wasteland, Baby!, which features standouts such as âNina Cried Powerâ, âMovementâ and âAlmost (Sweet Music)â. Interestingly, the song at hand, where those stunning lyrics hail, âWasteland, Baby!â doesnât arrive until the very end.
âWasteland, baby / Iâm in love, Iâm in love with you / And I love too, that love soon might endâŚâ On âWasteland, Baby!â Hozier âpulls backâ vocally, singing about the subject that dominates the LP â love. Musically, the backdrop has an organic, Irish folky sensibility; heâs accompanied by guitar, with additional color provided by keyboards. The stunning chorus, excerpted above, continues as follows:
âBe known in its aching Shown in the shaking Lately of my wasteland, baby Be still, my indelible friend, you are unbreaking Though quaking, though crazy Thatâs just wasteland, baby.â
4. Ari Lennox, âShea Butter Babyâ
Ft. J. Cole
Shea Butter Baby ⢠Dreamville / Interscope ⢠2019
âShea butter baby, fuckinâ up your pillow / Shea butter baby. fuckinâ up your sheetsâŚâ âShea Butter Babyâ made its original appearance on Creed II: The Album, which corresponded with the release of the film in 2018. The Ari Lennox and J. Cole collaboration reappeared on Lennoxâs quietly released, full-length debut LP, Shea Butter Baby, in 2019.
The M.O. of âShea Butter Babyâ is crystal clear from the onset â sex. Following the intro, which lifts one of the key lines of the aforementioned chorus, Ari Lennox sings about what she wants from her man: âTouch me, take me, kiss me /âŚWishing, you could meet me, see me, freak me.â The infatuation, the yearning, and the horniness is real â âLost in an alley, make love by a trash can.â As for Cole, besides adding some âoh(s)â on the pre-chorus and chorus, he appears on the second verse, speaking about genuine love, meaningful sex, and being regretful about the empty sex heâs had in the past:
âI ainât know then, but I know now Apologies due, to one of the few The ones I ran through, but never loved you I pray you found peace and you whole now Iâm doinâ better, I got me a chocolate bar...â
âShea Butter Babyâ is a fine, sexy R&B record. Ari Lennox sounds fantastic and J. Cole is as consistent and insightful as ever.  Furthermore, Elite and Shroom âput it workâ from a production standpoint, crafting a fresh, soulful backdrop for both artists to work their magic. The guitar is one of the best touches.
5. Arcade Fire, âBaby Mineâ
Dumbo (Soundtrack) â˘Â Walt Disney â˘Â 2019
âBaby mine, donât you cry / Baby mine, dry your eyes / Rest your head close to my heart / Never to part, baby of mine.â Grammy-winning Canadian alt-rock band Arcade Fire delivers a terrific reinterpretation of âBaby Mineâ, the end title from Disneyâs 2019 live action version of Dumbo. This performance thrives off of awesome vocals from RĂŠgine Chassagne and Win Butler, as well as superb production work.
âBaby Mineâ totally works â totally. Following a lovely, lush intro (choral vocals, some rocking guitar, a brief drum groove), Chassagne delivers haunting, warm vocals on the first verse, excerpted above. She maintains the lullaby sensibility of the record, while still bringing some of the left-of-center charm that makes Arcade Fire cool. Some of that âcharmâ includes âold guitars, harp, Theremin, and triangleâ apparently. Her hubby, Win Butler, arrives for the second verse, and the remainder of the song, accompanied by a smooth, alternative/retro-rock-tinged backdrop. Even incorporating the indie-rock vibes into the mix, âBaby Mineâ stays idiomatic of a theatrical, authentic Disney soundtrack. Perhaps itâs the strings? âBaby Mineâ was previously featured on the playlist, 11 Awesome Songs that Tickled My Fancy in March 2019.
6. Roddy Ricch, âWar Babyâ
Please Excuse Me for Being Antisocial ⢠Atlantic â˘Â 2019
Roddy Ricch experienced ample success with his debut album, Please Excuse Me for Being Antisocial, which was released in December 2019. Sometimes, albums released in the final month of the year can get overlooked and do perform to their potential. That certainly wasnât the case with Please Excuse Me for Being Antisocial. With âThe Boxâ becoming such a dominant hit on the Billboard Hot 100, it ensured the albumâs staying power. That said, Please Excuse Me for Being Antisocial has more notable songs than âThe Box,â even if itâs quite the juggernaut. For this intriguing song all about the baby, Ricch serves up âWar Baby,â which concludes the album.
âWar Babyâ is the perfectly suited closing cut, finding Roddy Ricch reflecting on an arduous past. On the first verse, he asserts, âIâm from the bottom of the bottom, check your sources baby / Iâm a war baby, but I canât divorce the pavement.â He goes on to say, âIt was hell in the projects, I survived the storm / Got brothers in the sky, they die âfore they born.â Essentially, Ricch makes it clear heâs been through a lot, heâs rough-n-tumble, but heâs made it â heâs a success story. The centerpiece, of course, is the chorus:
âWe was hoppinâ out in broad day Serving fiends in the hallway Promethazine âtil the morninâ Hope I donât wake up tomorrow We was the type of niggas that would rob the robbers Iâma make the choppa sing like la-di-da-da-da (La-da, la-da) ...Survived in the trenches, Iâm a war baby Had to slide on the sliders, that ainât normal, baby.â
Call âWar Babyâ the âhood gospel.â Sonic stitches up gorgeous production for Roddy Ricch to spit over, led by lush piano and anchored by robust bass and a hella rhythmic beat.  Another lovely touch? The choral vocals, straight out of the black church. I particularly love the âWhoaâ outro.
7. Lil Baby, âBabyâ
Ft. DaBaby
Quality Control: Control the Streets Volume 2 ⢠Quality Control Music â˘Â 2019Â
Well, there are lots of babies⌠in the rap game that is! Fittingly, rappers Lil Baby and DaBaby join forces for â you guessed it â âBabyâ. Literally, you canât make this shit up.  Of course, DaBaby has already made an appearance on this list (âBlame it on Babyâ). Anyways, âBabyâ appears on the Quality Control compilation Quality Control: Control the Streets Volume 2, released in 2019. probably isnât the right characterization.
Donât call âBabyâ scintillating â itâs basic. Neither Lil Baby or DaBaby can be characterized as transcendent artists, despite their population. The production by Wheezy is respectable, but nothing game changing. Lil Baby raps the first verse, focusing on himself: âBaby really a problem, somebody gotta stop him.â Thereâs drip, street smarts, and sex. He follows up with the chorus, which features âBabyâ 12 times! Notably, he concludes the chorus with âBaby like a preacher, Baby prolly still sell reefer.â
DaBaby does much of the same the second verse. âI tell my bitch Iâm faithful, but I still got the hoes.â Typical. Thereâs plenty of sexual references throughout to complement the drip, many of which are incredibly cocky. A prime example:
âI barely wanna hit her, got her begginâ, âBaby, pleaseâ I tell a bitch to shut up, you âbout to fuck my nut upâŚâ
Perhaps the best attribute of this particular âbabyâ song â itâs brief.
8. Meek Mill, âOodles Oâ Noodles Babiesâ
Championships â˘Â Atlantic ⢠2018
âThis shit right here for my Oodles oâ Noodles babies / His maâ smoked the crack while she was pregnant so he canât even help that he crazy /He goinâ to jail, itâs inevitable, for real.â Grammy-nominated rapper Meek Mill commences âOodles Oâ Noodles Babiesâ (Championships, 2018) off with the aforementioned honest, personal, spoken word intro. This intro foreshadows the âreal talkâ that Meek Mill offers throughout the course of the single. His flow is agile on both verses, particularly the fiery first verse where he focuses on the lack of belief and lack of hope bestowed upon him, as well as his lot in life.
âI used to act up when I went to school Thought it was cool, but I really was hurt Wanted my family to come to my games My mama couldnât make it âcause she was at work Lived with my grandma, she took me to church... Got a black judge tryna tear me down All this jail time probably wear me down.â
Between the two verses on âOodles Oâ Noodles Babies,â thereâs an interlude as opposed to a chorus. The interlude is written similarly to the introduction. Beyond the interlude, Meek ends the record with an outro, once more patterned after the intro and interlude sections. Besides the personal nature of the lyrics, the soulful production work is worth mentioning, helping to fuel his honesty and openness. Itâs rewarding to hear him drop bars about his life and emotions.
9. Action Bronson, âBaby Blueâ
Ft. Chance the Rapper
Mr. Wonderful â˘Â Atlantic â˘Â 2015
Former XXL Magazine freshman Action Bronson released his major label debut album, Mr. Wonderful in 2015. Throughout Mr. Wonderful, Bronson showcased plenty of potential, with a number of memorable songs. Among the best records from the album is âBaby Blue,â featuring Grammy-winning rapper Chance The Rapper.
âHeartbreak drowned sorrows in a large steak.â OâŚK⌠Anyways, on âBaby Blue,â Action Bronson pours out his emotions, beginning on the memorable, pained, sung hook:
âWhy you always all on my back? Why you gotta do me like that? Why you gotta act like a bitch when Iâm with you? Baby girl Iâm blue.â
He continues to address his issues with this girl, which he already characterized as a bitch. At one point he asserts, âGirl, we grown, stop playing on my phone / All your childish attempts to make me angry fall short âŚâ Regardless, sheâs the one missing out because, well, heâs, well, pretty awesome. What youâve got to love is his confidence, particularly throughout the course of the second verse:
âSome [women] would say that Iâm the symbol for sex and uh Others would hate, but I donât give âem no breath⌠I gotta go, youâll never know how good it feels to lay in bed with king Iâm not exactly flawless, but Iâm gorgeous, just like a horse is...â
Big dick energy? Seems like it. Chance The Rapper ups the ante on his verse, which includes the lyrics, âI hope you get a paper cut on your tongue / From a razor in a paper cut / I hope every soda you drink already shaken upâŚâ Also, worth mentioning, Mark Ronson handles the production duties on this soulful, hip-hop cut.
10. Lana Del Rey, âBrooklyn Babyâ
Ultraviolence ⢠Interscope ⢠2014
âBrooklyn Babyâ arrives as the fourth track from Ultraviolence, the 2014 studio album by Lana Del Rey. Ultraviolence as a whole marked a big step forward for Del Rey artistically. Amazingly, in 2019, sheâd take the biggest step forward in career with her Grammy-nominated tour de force, Norman Fucking Rockwell!. Of course this isnât about NFR!, or the majority of Ultraviolence, but rather, âBrooklyn Baby.â
âBrooklyn Babyâ proves to be the perfect for record for hipsters. She references artistic things popular in the 1970s. This includes Lou Reed, Beat poetry, and a ârare jazz collection.â Hmm, wonder what the dates are on the records from that ârare jazz collection?â:
âWell my boyfriendâs in the band He plays guitar while I sing Lou Reed Iâve got feathers in my hair I get down to Beat poetry And my jazz collectionâs rareâŚâ
If you are a hipster, this is a cut right up your alley. Perhaps sheâs a bit indulgent at times, and really loved her boyfriend (at the time), but all in all, this âbabyâ song is one thatâs worthwhile. Vocally, Lana Del Rey is simply hypnotic. Furthermore, the dreamy production by Dan Auerbach only amplifies the hypnotic quality. Also, worth mentioning are the drug references, whether itâs âChurning out novels like / Beat poetry on Amphetaminesâ or âIâve got feathers in my hair / I get high on hydroponic weed.â
10 More Intriguing Songs All About the Baby đ§ [đˇ: Atlantic, Brent Faulkner, Dreamville, Interscope, The Musical Hype, Pexels, Pixabay, Quality Control Music, Sony, Walt Disney]
