Complex, Where We Came From | Track Review 🎵
George James: I am not too familiar with this Complex’s backlog, but one thing I know is how great his new track “Where We Came From” is.
Songs (singles + tracks) of various styles are reviewed in this section of The Musical Hype. Songs are assigned a rating between 0 and 5 stars.
George James: I am not too familiar with this Complex’s backlog, but one thing I know is how great his new track “Where We Came From” is.
Terrace Martin and Denzel Curry, assisted by Kamasi Washington, G Perico, and Daylyt, deliver a powerful protest track with “Pig Feet.”
Tee Grizzley, Queen Naija & Detroit Youth Choir express their emotions + frustrations with police brutality & racial issues plaguing America.
Country singer Mickey Guyton provides thoughtful commentary on race and celebrates blackness on the moving single, “Black Like Me.”
Trey Songz lends his voice to the movement & protests on racial inequality & injustice with the brilliant “2020 Riots: How Many Times.”
On “Otherside of America,” rapper Meek Mill delivers a socially conscious, protest banger that truly captures racial inequality.
Rapper turned singer G-Eazy is more accessible on his second ‘vocal’ single, “Stan By Me,” set to appear on his album, Everything’s Strange Here.
G-Eazy ‘shocks the world’ with “Free Porn Cheap Drugs,” an about face from rapping to singing in an alternative style.
“Roses Remix” is enjoyable without being a game changer from rapper/singer SAINt JHN, who’s assisted by Future.
R&B artist Ali Gatie delivers an enjoyable and respectable, if somewhat predictable brief single with “Running on My Mind.”
Rising Australian pop artist Tones and I delivers a fun, relatable single with “Ur So F**kInG Cool” that’s def ‘pretty f**kInG cool.’
Following the “Righteous,” “Tell Me U Luv Me” marks another posthumous single by Juice WRLD, featuring Trippie Redd.