Album - T-Wayne
In
2008, this project would have broken the internet. Long before Kim
Kardashian claimed that feat with
her celebrated and commoditized
nudity, a
T-Pain and
Lil Wayne joint project would have turned the internet on its head, and sent music fans screaming to heavens and back.
The
pair were the biggest double act in the game. They both defined an era,
with some of the greatest music in the world, songs such as T-Pain’s ‘Kiss Kiss’, and Lil Wayne’s ‘Lollipop’,
were the anthems that everyone had on repeat in street corners, in
cars, on phones, and many more. They were flat out the biggest acts.
But
this album is returning at a time when their mortality has become
established. Their golden era had long been gone. They are both simply
respected acts who have moved the culture, but their days at the top of
the game are gone. These days, one of Wayne’s proteges, Drake is the
frontman of pop music. Another one, Nicki Minaj has some of the biggest
records in the world. The baton has effectively been handed.
Lil Wayne and T-pain performing
“T-Wayne”
album arrives as a nostalgic exercise to remind us all of how things
used to be. Wayne and Pain possess a chemistry strikes right from the
opener ‘He rap’. And the connection flows all through the project. They
trade verses, share a brain, and generally uplift each other on the
records. But it all feels dated. The project is mainly made up of
10-year old lost files, mixed and mastered into a collection. ‘Heavy Chevys’, and ‘Damn damn damn’
are the worst culprits who spot outdated pop culture references. But
they all connect. Nostalgia is a beautiful and powerful thing.
The
music comes from a light era of Hip hop, where the world is one big
party, and the serious issues that dominate pop music today were not on
the radar. There’s bounce in the lyrics, party in the vibes, and sex in
the corners.
“T-Wayne” album doesn’t sit
in with the soundscape of today. But it’s a reminder of how cultures
shift, and tastes evolve. For putting the past in the present, and
reminding us of how things used to be, it wins big time.
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