The 10 Best Songs From Lil Wayne's ‘Tha Carter' Series: Critic's Picks
It's officially Lil Wayne week. Weezy is set to return with the sixth installment of arguably rap's most decorated album series with Tha Carter VI arriving on Friday (June 6).
More from Billboard
Fuerza Regida's JOP, Gabito Ballesteros & Lupillo Rivera Join 'Pase a la Fama' TV Show
Jamie Foxx Has One Question For Sean Combs in Midst of N.Y. Racketeering Trial: 'Why You So Nasty, Diddy?'
All-American Rejects Frontman Tyson Ritter Joining OnlyFans to Continue Band's 'Disruptive' Streak
Seven years after C5, Wayne hopes to make more history and add to his decorated legacy. The project's slated to be another star-studded affair with a range of rumored features from Miley Cyrus, Bono, MGK, Wyclef Jean, Andrea Bocelli and more.
Three decades into a hall-of-fame career, Lil Wayne changed the aesthetic of rappers and the genre's sound in the 21st century. Take a look at all the 'Lil's in the rap game, the tattoos and dreadlocks, that can be attributed to Weezy's influence. His intoxicating Auto-Tune-laced rhymes and witty punchlines that seemingly never end ushered in a new archetype of rapper.
'Before I stepped into music, everyone looked a certain way and everyone did a certain thing. Look at me. Now look at music. They all look like me,' he said in 2020. 'I love it.'
At the end of every concert, Lil Wayne expresses gratitude to his fans, saying, 'I ain't s–t without you.' But Weezy wouldn't but the artist he is without Tha Carter series—a staple in his discography and an artifact of hip-hop history. 'Welcome back hip-hop, I saved your life,' he raps on Tha Carter 3's 'Dr. Carter.'
Lil Wayne's prime heading into C3 circa '07-'08 was something you had to see to believe. In a genre with goliaths like Kanye West, Jay-Z and Eminem dominating, Weezy stood tall at 5'5', in a league of his own. At times, his greatness was impossible to measure through sheer commercial numbers, with the droves of leaks and mixtape files being shared online between fans in a pre-streaming world.
'You scare me, man, every time you spit,' Ye told Wayne on stage at the 2008 BET Awards while referring to Weezy as his 'fiercest competition.'
The New Orleans rap deity will take a bow and a well-deserved victory lap on Friday night when he celebrates Tha Carter VI's arrival with his first headlining solo show at Madison Square Garden. How is that possible?
Billboard sifted through all five installments of Tha Carter and attempted to do the impossible, filing down a list to the 10 best tracks from the acclaimed series. (And a quick honorable mention to 'Mirror,' 'This is the Carter,' 'I Miss My Dawgs,' 'Got Money,' 'Mona Lisa,' 'Fly In' and 'Comfortable.')
Weezy didn't waste any time getting busy on Tha Carter II, as he comes out of the gate guns blazing on opener 'Tha Mobb.' He flexes being a legend in the game even if he never released a song, and compares himself to being the ocean, while other rappers are mere tuna swimming around his domain. Being a basketball savant, there's even a shrewd reference to NBA veteran Bill Cartwright, who retired a decade prior to C2. Wayne could do it all.
Wayne's torrid 2007 mixtape run and array of leaks that could be another rapper's best single flooded the market and set the table for Tha Carter III. Expectations couldn't be higher, and a scorching Weezy delivered a smash that radio could wrap its arms around featuring a lift from the late Static Major. 'Lollipop' is Wayne's lone song as a lead artist to top the Hot 100 and earned him a diamond plaque.
Mannie Fresh helmed Tha Carter nearly exclusively behind the, boards as he supplied the jet fuel for every Cash Money artist to take off. Both MF's and Weezy's gifts are on full display with the twitchy 'Go DJ,' which notched Tunechi his first major solo hit and led the way to Wayne becoming the commercial titan he'd emerge as in the second half of the 2000s. '18, how I'm living?/ Youngin, show that Bentley,' he raps.
Lil Wayne long believed he was the 'Best Rapper Alive,' and it wasn't long after Tha Carter II until the rest of the world started to catch up. Weezy flexes on the competition over an Iron Maiden interpolation, and uses clever wordplay to plant his championship flag in ground. 'Best Rapper Alive' went on to be a Wayne fan-favorite deep cut since the track was never made a single or had a video — but the New Orleans legend used the rest of the decade as his canvas to paint a masterpiece and lend credence to his bold claims.
Drake gets called up to the big leagues with his Tha Carter series debut, and the 6 God makes it count. Drizzy handles chorus duties, exhaling over the smoky T-Minus production, which clears the lane for Wayne, who lights up the scoreboard to lead Young Angel and Young Lion to victory, with plenty of punchy one-liners. 'I tried to pay attention, but attention paid me/ Haters can't see me, nose-bleed seats,' he spews on the C4 standout. 'She Will' reached No. 3 on the Hot 100 and topped the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart.
Wayne set the stage for C2 by setting off the alarms that he was gearing up for a hip-hop takeover with the blaring 'Fireman.' He put out the blazes of rhymers around him, but he would remain scorching for years to come. A pop-friendly hit in 2005, 'Fireman' cracked the Billboard Hot 100's top 40, peaking at No. 32.
In the same vein as 'A Milli,' which was also produced by Bangladesh, Weezy lets the chopper sing without a chorus, and spins a hit out of his rapid-fire flow. '6 Foot 7 Foot' is filled with memorable bars, as Wayne somehow rhymes 'charisma' with 'vodka spritzer.' The feverish, Cory Gunz-assisted track set the bar for Tha Carter IV to close out 2010, and cracked the Hot 100's top 10.
Only Lil Wayne's lyrical brilliance could turn the weather's seasons into his biggest haters. Weezy and Jay-Z had a competitive relationship, as they pushed each other's pen to greatness and metaphorically attempted to KO one another with every punch line. With Wayne at his peak, Hov walked into a [Young] lion's den, and Tunechi got the best of him on 'Mr. Carter' with home court advantage.
A Carter series fan favorite, the 'Hustler Music/Money on My Mind' video aeshtetically defined the C2 era for Wayne, as nobody could forget Weezy spitting bars around the city in a pink camouflage Bape jacket and matching kicks. Wayne slows the pace down here, and his hazy flow does the rest. With a catchy chorus built around Weezy powering through life's obstacles to stack paper through any means, 'Hustler Musik' has aged about as well as any Wayne song over the years.
Songs without choruses aren't supposed to be hits, but 'A Milli' finds Wayne leaving earth for three minutes with hard-hitting bar one after another. Who could forget the POV music video, following Weezy around a chaotic tour of the video set? Bangladesh's beat is still one of the hardest-hitting in modern hip-hop history, and 'What's a goon to a goblin' and 'You like a b—h with no a–, you ain't got s–t' are couplets that remain memorable staples of Weezy's repertoire to this day.
Best of Billboard
Chart Rewind: In 1989, New Kids on the Block Were 'Hangin' Tough' at No. 1
Janet Jackson's Biggest Billboard Hot 100 Hits
H.E.R. & Chris Brown 'Come Through' to No. 1 on Adult R&B Airplay Chart
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Rams, Sean McVay Drop Clever Reaction to Surprise Reference by Lil' Wayne
Rams, Sean McVay Drop Clever Reaction to Surprise Reference by Lil' Wayne originally appeared on Athlon Sports. Sean McVay found his way into "Tha Carter VI" courtesy of Lil' Wayne. The Grammy winning rapper dropped his much-anticipated newest album Friday. It's the sixth installment of his "Tha Carter" album series that's won over his fans over the years. Now he's grabbed the attention of the Los Angeles Rams. Wayne references the Super Bowl winning head coach on the track "Welcome to Tha Carter," which is the second track off the 19-song album. The song starts with a church choir theme intro, but then blends in drums and Wayne's signature rapping voice. It goes from Gospel theme to one filled with sports references -- including this lyric that brings up McVay: "Smokin that bomb LA like I'm McVay/Bombs away, I'm just tryna concentrate," Wayne raps. Well, turns out the Rams heard that bar loud and clear. They posted this clever reaction featuring their beloved head coach. The Super Bowl LVI winner isn't the only L.A. reference on the track. Former Los Angeles Lakers champion and NBA All-Star Metta World Peace is mentioned by Wayne on the song too. McVay himself hasn't personally reacted to the song. But it's not the first time the Rams have reacted to any major Hip-Hop news. Rams mascot Rampage posted a picture mimicking Kendrick Lamar's "GNX" album cover -- which showed the mascot in front of the Buick vehicle just like the Compton native. Lamar released that album in 2024 and since has gone on tour -- including performing two shows at the Rams' home of SoFi Stadium. The Rams also used the late Nipsey Hussle's hit track "Grindin' All My Life" as part of their 2024 schedule release. Now the New Orleans native Wayne showed love to McVay and story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 6, 2025, where it first appeared.
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Super Bowl-Winning Coach Gets Name Dropped in New Lil Wayne Song
Super Bowl-Winning Coach Gets Name Dropped in New Lil Wayne Song originally appeared on Athlon Sports. Music fans likely all rushed to their devices on Friday, as Grammy Award-winning rapper Lil Wayne released what was the sixth of "Tha Carter" series. His 19-track album titled "Tha Carter VI" features from notable artists such as BigXthaPlug, MGK, Kodak Black and 2 Chainz among many others. The New Orleans rapper who many felt was snubbed from performing at this past year's Super Bowl LIX between the Philadelphia Eagles and Kansas City Chiefs in the Big Easy has always been known for being a lyrical genius. While he's a New Orleans native and a well-known Green Bay Packers fan, Wheezy shouted-out Los Angeles Rams head coach Sean McVay in one of his new songs, "Welcome to Tha Carter." Shortly after name-dropping former NBA star Metta Sandiford-Artest formerly known as Metta World Peace and Ron Artest, Wayne threw in McVay's name while alluding to one of his (Wayne's) personal favorite hobbies. "Smokin' that bomb L.A. like I'm McVay," said Wayne. Aside from being a music icon, Wayne is a huge sports junkie. He has made appearances on ESPN's "First Take," Fox's "Undisputed," and even won an episode of the iconic ESPN show "Around the Horn." As for McVay and the Rams, they came up a couple of plays short of playing in the Super Bowl this past season, and are hoping that with a new addition like All-Pro receiver Davante Adams, they can rectify their shortcomings in 2025. While McVay is likely appreciative of the bar from Wayne, he is also presumably focused on the team's upcoming minicamp in Maui. The Rams open up preseason play on August 9 against the Dallas story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 6, 2025, where it first appeared.
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
Fuerza Regida's JOP, Gabito Ballesteros & Lupillo Rivera Join ‘Pase a la Fama' TV Show
Fuerza Regida's Jesús Ortiz Paz (JOP), Gabito Ballesteros and Lupillo Rivera join the new reality show Pase a la Fama, set to premiere Sunday (June 8) on Telemundo. The three Mexican artists will form part of the music competition series — focused on discovering the next great regional Mexican band — as mentors, where they will guide the contestants before they perform in front of the previously announced judges Ana Bárbara, Adriel Favela and Horacio Palencia. More from Billboard Telemundo, HYBE Latin America Launch Music Competition Show to Discover Next Regional Mexican Band Watch SEVENTEEN Bring the 'Thunder' to 'Kelly Clarkson Show' Performance 'This Is What You Asked For': Watch Linkin Park Star in Ice-Shattering Stanley Cup Final Promo In each episode, participants — who are vying for a $100,000 prize, a record deal with HYBE Latin America and will be crowned the next regional Mexican band — are expected train, perform and face challenges at a bootcamp during their mentorship. 'We are proud to partner with HYBE Latin America on a multifaceted journey to showcase the importance of music to Latin audiences throughout the U.S.,' Javier Pons, CCO and head of Telemundo Studios, previously said in a press release. 'With Pase a la Fama, music fans will witness firsthand the energy, identity and dreams of this new generation of talented musicians looking to make it in today's highly competitive music industry.' Isaac Lee, chairman of HYBE Latin America, added: 'Pase a la Fama is a love letter to the power of music and the creative process behind building something unforgettable. From the roots of our artists to the global reach of our vision, this series shows what's possible when talent and opportunity collide.' Pase a la Fama premieres at 9 p.m. ET on June 8 via Telemundo. Best of Billboard Chart Rewind: In 1989, New Kids on the Block Were 'Hangin' Tough' at No. 1 Janet Jackson's Biggest Billboard Hot 100 Hits H.E.R. & Chris Brown 'Come Through' to No. 1 on Adult R&B Airplay Chart