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Coi Leray is a rapper/singer that has a very strange mix of street music and rnb. She's a little hard for a female artist, but she's still feminine when she wants to be. Her style is very hood official as seen by her album cover. She's a likable person but she doesn't seem like a passionate musician. Her focus is the culture and this album hits the mark perfectly.
Denzel Curry is a Florida-born conscious rapper. His content is medium brow. It isn't directed toward any particular audience completely. He still seems like he's unsure where his primary support is coming from and why. His flow is non-eventful but it isn't bad. This album is consistent throughout but it's very difficult to explain why it is or should be relevant. He thinks he's deeper than he is, but he's deeper than most hip hop right now. What Denzel Curry needs is to specialize and really commit to a specific audience.
As of today, we will no longer be entertaining radical doctrine. Not even to argue it. Trait superiority mixed with trait jealousy isn't even rational. Keep your bananas.

Recently, Tyler, the Creator did a performance stream on Amazon. It's been a pretty slow year for hip hop and I know first hand how hard it is to get constructive feedback in a very salty, uninformed world.

Tyler has a lot of mechanical issues with his music right now. 

He's an indie artist that was so explicit, his initial fanbase was drawn to the humor of him being successful while being so obscene. He's got the popularity of a pop artist but the swag of a hipster (and hipster culture is over). Tyler sings, dances, and raps, but his branding and colorful persona were the focal point of Odd Future. 

His clean music is bland and never would have made him famous, but his explicit music isn't a good fit for his new, more casual audience.

Tyler has been so radical, that his audience didn't need to accept his culture. And while that's nice for initial success; in the long term, it invites a lot of on the fence haters to tolerate him instead of truly support him. Tyler, if you read this; keep making music. Keep performing. Being hated on is irrelevant when you're the furthest one out. Unify the intellectuals with your tours and let the haters keep buying tickets for whatever sabotage delusion they may have.

 We have deleted a lot of our previous articles, but will be creating more soon. Although the initial goal was to cultivate suburban based hip hop, the goal is now to bridge the gap between hood music and mainstream culture. There is intentional close-minded polarity between the two worlds, but thankfully, the internet blends the cultures seamlessly in the experiences of the youth.

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