Cardi B's New Mixtape…Isn't As Bad As You Thought It Would Be (It's Actually…Good)

I think it’s fair to say that my appreciation for consumption of entertainment of the avian element is quite well documented. My favorite celebrity couple is Cam’ron and Juju. Close second? Remy and Papoose. I have been known to hit the chickenhead and the toe-wop in the club in this year of our Lord, 2016.…

I think it’s fair to say that my appreciation for consumption of entertainment of the avian element is quite well documented. My favorite celebrity couple is Cam’ron and Juju. Close second? Remy and Papoose. I have been known to hit the chickenhead and the toe-wop in the club in this year of our Lord, 2016. I send semi-monthly requests to Spotify to make β€œSuck it Or Not” available to stream. When I ultimately meet my Maker, I plan on requesting that my friends and family Milly Rock to β€œMelodies from Heaven” mixed over β€œCrush on You” at my wake.

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Trump’s Tariffs Might Stick Around. What Should We Buy Now?
Trump’s Tariffs Might Stick Around. What Should We Buy Now?

All of that said, every woman has a line. And until March 7th, 2016, I was under the impression that my line was listening to mixtapes from Instagram celebrities. Until Cardi B, Highbridge pioneer, proved me wrong.

Gangsta Bitch Music Vol. 1 kind of slaps, you guys.

I’m not saying this hyperbolically, either. For one, she certainly has more bars on the album than the Life of Pablo. Which to be fair is absolutely not saying much as there are entire stretches of that album where Ye barely even gets 16 bars on a track. And it certainly gets a strong assist from the production*: β€œOn Fleek,” β€œWashpopping,” and β€œForeva” all have just enough bass in them to provide energy to any girl crew’s β€œgetting ready before the club” session, the latter being an obvious rework of Plies’ β€œRan off On Da Plug.”

For two, you can never underrate Cardi B’s innate understanding of the medium she flourishes in; namely, Snapchat and Instagram, concise video platforms that pretty much on allow you to squeeze in one or two witty lines within their time constraints. And the bulk of her songs make sure that she has at least one quotable to pair with the new dog-face filter that everyone seems to be so keen on. On β€œWashpoppin”: β€œ Real niggas fuck with me, the bad bitches fuck with me/ so if you don’t, it’s probably cuz you broke or you ugly.” β€œLit Thot” - β€œIf you ain’t talking β€˜bout money, then I’m pitching nothing but curves.” You could tell me that those quotables aren’t better than β€œif I fucked a model and she just bleached her asshole” but you’d be lying. (Editor's Note: This isn't a very high bar you're setting here.) No one’s lip-syncing to that on IG. And if they are, then you need to run far in the other direction because that person has a cocaine problem.

I’d be remiss to not acknowledge where Cardi B’s artistic endeavors could use some growth. And what I will say is that this mixtape is missing a few features to take it over the top. β€œForeva” is a Remy Ma verse away from being the petty anthem of every chick who still has β€œStillettoes (Pumps)” in their workout playlist (see: me). If β€œTrick” had a Trina assist, it would be the β€œ10 Crack Commandments” of hoeing. (Although if Cardi wanted to keep her coins in the Mona Scott empire, MariahLynn could work in a pinch.**)

If nothing else, this mixtape shows us that Cardi B is a woman of many layers. She covers a wide swath of topics β€” scamming, loyalty, resilience, safe sex, physical abuse, pride, bravado, self-confidence, authenticity, and independence in 13 tracks β€” all while making sure its over a popping beat. Yeah, the fourΒ skits were overwrought and pushing it, but so what? Folks defend Lauryn Hill’s silly-as-hell skits on the Miseducation to this day. Cardi can do fake interviews if she wants. Cardi used a skit to shed light on domestic violence against strippers. Lauryn told us that grade school kids don’t know much more about love than to spell it.

It amazes me that on a season of Lust and Unpaid Studio Time in Harlem that featured one of my favorite female rappers ever, the music I enjoyed the most was from a former stripper whose music wasn’t even played on the show. We saw a wholly unnecessary and is-there-a-state-of-whelming-below-underwhelming-because-it-was-that performance from Bum Broads on Deck when I could have seen my Queen Cardi work at her craft! I blame DJ Self and his insistence on overloading his camera time with women whose names start with Y instead of playing "Foreva" on the radio like the streets needed. I hope Mona heeds my advice and lets us listen to Gangsta Bitch Vol 2 next season while shipping Self’s brown M&M doppelgΓ€nger face off to La Marina and away from the TV screen like we deserve.

*That said, whoever mixed this project should never work in music again. The vocal overlay is absolutely lacking, and I hope Vol 2 gets mixed and mastered by someone who hasn’t just been using Protools for 9 months

**Speaking of which - her two singles are bops as well. Money Gun is the jam.

Straight From The Root

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