Lil Wayne Fleetingly Reminds Us Why He's One of the Best
I Am Music signified a dissonance that marks Wayne's catalog after 2008's eight-times-platinum Tha Carter III. Fans still celebrate him as the punchline-dropping weed head with aqueous cadences who reshaped Aughts hip-hop in his image while personifying Dirty South lyricism at its finest. But he has long since evolved into a pop avatar. The qualities that once made him so familiar yet beloved, from his tangy New Orleans vocal tone to his relentlessly funny rhyme schemes, have been thoroughly absorbed into the genre's firmament. If Wayne was a conceptual artist, perhaps he could rearrange those attributes into a masterwork less dependent on raw ability. But seems cursed to crank out the same 'ol rhythm 'n' blues, albeit not as vibrantly as in his gloried past.
More from Rolling Stone
Lin-Manuel Miranda, Leslie Odom Jr. Open 'Hamilton' Medley With Original Cast at Tony Awards
Lil Wayne Turned Madison Square Garden Into a Time Machine on His 'Tha Carter VI' Tour
Sabrina Carpenter, Lil Wayne, Addison Rae, and All the Songs You Need to Know This Week
Online insta-reactions to Tha Carter VI since its debut on streaming services last Friday have been mixed-to-negative, which seems unfair. It's not as thoroughly desultory as 2020's Funeral nor as distressing as 2013's I Am Not a Human Being II, the latter of which was released amid his widely publicized lean addiction and felt like a call for help. Waynee sounds happy, like a former champion boxer joyfully taking swings at a punching bag in his rec room. There's an appealing playfulness to tracks like 'Cotton Candy,' where he bandies around cocaine metaphors alongside 2 Chainz, and 'If I Played Guitar,' where he sings over a soupy pop-rock track. The album's final number, 'Written History,' opens with the voice of Muhammad Ali circa 'The Rumble in the Jungle,' and Wayne positions himself as a sports legend straining for one last ring. Unwittingly, he raps, 'I'm like Brady at 45, nigga,' never mind that Tom Brady's final season in the NFL didn't end well.
But athletes' careers don't falter because they stop moving; it's because they don't move with the same quickness and creativity of their youth. Wayne's still got the punchlines: 'I still eat the rappers I heard, they're appetizers,' he boasts on 'Welcome to Tha Carter.' Perhaps inspired by how his 2018 track 'Uproar,' which relies on EZ Elpee's beat for G. Dep's 2001 hit 'Special Delivery,' became an ESPN broadcast staple, Wayne doubles down on the old-school hip-hop references. He raps over the bass rumble of Rick Rubin's beat for LL Cool J's 1985 chestnut 'Rock the Bells' for 'Bells,' and Swizz Beatz's keyboard fanfare from N.O.R.E.'s 1998 'Banned from TV' for 'Banned from NO.' 'I was raised on UGK/When them hoes say 'Weezy F.,' Weezy F. say U-C-K, bitch! (Fuck these hoes),' he sings on the otherwise awful 'Island Holiday,' itself a tepid interpolation of Weezer's 2001 anthem 'Island in the Sun.' For 'Loki's Theme,' he alludes to an Ice Cube verse from N.W.A's 1988 single 'Gangsta, Gangsta': 'Hold up, right, left, right, left, you're toothless/Break his nose, right hand full of mucus.' It's fun to hear him chop up OG arcana while overdosing on basketball and football shout-outs. 'Weed smoke got me chokin' like Reggie Miller, nigga,' he raps on 'Hip-Hop.'
The issue with Tha Carter VI isn't relevance – old-head rap made by 40 and 50-something goats has thrived for years now – but a sense that nothing's really at stake. That wasn't the case with 2018's Tha Carter V, where Wayne sounded visibly moved by the innumerable trials he has endured. When he rapped, 'I am not number 1, it's true/I'm number 9-27-82' on the XXXTENTACION-assisted 'Don't Cry,' he sounded relieved to still be alive, regardless of his position in the genre's constellation. Here, there's no overarching purpose other than a desire to still dazzle us like before. At best, that leads to 'Cotton Candy,' 'Hip-Hop' and, if we're being charitable, 'Written History.' It also results in terrible cuts like 'The Days,' where Bono sings over an EDM thump; 'Peanuts 2 N Elephant,' where he riffs over a clumsily amateurish beat from Lin-Manuel Miranda that personifies the celebrity BFF phenomenon at its worst; and 'Mula Komin' In,' a duet with his son Lil Novi where he raps 'That's Lil Mula, that's my son, he my youngest…He's fuckin' your daughter, I'm fuckin' your woman.' And, much like Snoop Dogg's mediocre Iz It a Crime, Wayne only makes glancing mention of his dalliance with Donald Trump. 'I'ma red elephant like Donald Trump, but I still act a donkey like, 'Ha, what's up',' he raps on 'Peanuts 2 N Elephant.' Make of that what you will.
'I can't be nothing, just me…don't try to make me someone else,' Wayne sings on 'Bein' Myself,' a long-anticipated reunion with one time Cash Money godhead Mannie Fresh. Declining to revisit the vintage bounce of peaks like 'Go D.J.' and 'Tha Block Is Hot,' Mannie loops a melody from Dionne Warwick's '(I'm) Just Being Myself,' and Wayne convincingly argues why we should let him do him and stop demanding he evolve into a different type of artist. 'Get off my lawn because your lawn chair ain't a throne yet,' he raps. No one should begrudge Wayne for being contented on Tha Carter VI, secure in his reputation as one of the best to ever do it. But he can't prevent his audience from opting for the classics instead.
Best of Rolling Stone
Sly and the Family Stone: 20 Essential Songs
The 50 Greatest Eminem Songs
All 274 of Taylor Swift's Songs, Ranked
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


USA Today
2 hours ago
- USA Today
Tyrann Mathieu, Derek Carr headline YouTube's Week 1 NFL broadcast team
It hasn't taken long for Tyrann Mathieu to find a new gig in the media after announcing his retirement. The former New Orleans Saints safety is working as a studio analyst for YouTube, which is broadcasting this year's season-opening Friday night game between the Kansas City Chiefs and Los Angeles Chargers in Brazil. Kickoff is set for 7 p.m. CT on Friday, Sept. 5. Back in Los Angeles, YouTube will be featuring Mathieu among several other retired NFL players as studio analysts on the pregame show an hour before kickoff, which has a surprising number of connections to the black and gold. One of the studio analysts will be recently-retired quarterback Derek Carr. The two former Saints captains will be joined by longtime Saints rival Cam Newton, wide receiver Brandon Marshall (who spent a month on their roster after Dez Bryant's injury in 2018), with noted Saints fan Kay Adams hosting the panel alongside YouTube fantasy football analyst Peter Overzet. The pregame show will be broadcast on the NFL's official YouTube page. So we'll be tuning in to see what they all have to say. A number of former Saints players are busy working in the media these days, ranging from Roman Harper and Benjamin Watson (on the SEC Network) to Mark Ingram II and Jonathan Vilma (on Fox Sports) and Drew Brees (who will call a game for Netflix in this year's three-game Christmas Day slate), among others.


Fox News
3 hours ago
- Fox News
Wife of Browns punter Corey Bojorquez reveals unlikely choice for daughter's emergency school contact
The wife of Cleveland Browns punter Corey Bojorquez recently revealed what unlikely choice she turned to when deciding who to list as an emergency contact for their young daughter as she prepares to start school in Ohio. In a post on social media earlier this month, Diana Bojorquez shared one challenge of being an NFL wife with young children in an unfamiliar city. "So, my toddler is going to start school next month and we don't have any family out here where he plays in Ohio, and we don't really have friends outside of football just because we get so busy," Diana said in a video posted on TikTok. CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON "We have a couple, but they don't live near us, like in the same city, so they live far." The challenge of living in a city away from friends and family makes having an emergency contact a unique issue for many NFL families. For Diana, the solution was to list someone – or in this case, several individuals – who she knew would always answer the phone in case of emergency. "I put the Cleveland Browns security number as her emergency contact," she said in the video, laughing. "I know that in the case where they can't reach me or my husband, they will pick up their phones. They will have access to him when I probably won't have access to him, like if he's in a meeting or something. " Speaking to People Magazine after sharing the video, Diana said that several other NFL wives and mothers have reached out to her about her "great idea." "I do have some friends that have been past teammates here that are now on other teams have mentioned like, 'Oh my gosh, that's such a great idea. I never thought about that.' Even some wives that I've never met before but are in the league, they've come to me like, 'Oh my gosh, it's a great idea. I never thought about that. Definitely going to do that.'" The couple share two young daughters. Diana's family lives in Hawaii, while Bojorquez's parents live in California. Bojorquez is entering his eighth year in the NFL and his fourth season with the Browns. Last year, he led the league in total punt yardage and longest punt.


USA Today
3 hours ago
- USA Today
Former Oregon Duck Justin Herbert at center of dating rumors following pop star picture
Former Oregon Ducks quarterback is camera-shy, to say the least. From his time in Eugene with the Ducks to now, where he is among the best quarterbacks in the NFL with the Los Angeles Chargers, Herbert is not one to make a scene. He routinely ducks out of the way of cameras, goes the extra mile to stay as dull as possible, and rarely finds himself in the news for things off the field. However, Herbert has made quite a stir on social media to kick off the week, popping up in a photo with pop star Madison Beer at a filming session. The two were seen standing near each other, which in today's day and age is enough to spark speculation that they might be dating. It's quite rare for fans of Herbert to be discussing their favorite quarterback in this manner, focusing on anything outside of his play on the field. Still, his proximity to a star like Beer is notable, to say the least, especially in an era where Travis Kelce has seen his fame explode following his relationship with Taylor Swift. There has been no confirmation as to whether the two are in a relationship or merely just friends, but some internet detectives have uncovered the fact that Beer is liking posts of Herbert on the Chargers' Instagram, despite not following the Chargers' account. Neither Herbert nor Beer follows the other on Instagram. Thankfully, we are just a couple of weeks away from the NFL season starting, with Herbert and the Chargers taking on Patrick Mahomes and the Kansas City Chiefs in São Paulo, Brazil, to kick off the season on September 5 at 5 p.m. PT. Hopefully, that means that we can focus on what Herbert is doing on the football field, rather than off of it. Contact/Follow @Ducks_Wire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Oregon Ducks news, notes, and opinions.