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Wale the gifted cover
Wale the gifted cover













wale the gifted cover

“Bricks” discusses the topic of dealing drugs. “Gullible” is an accusatory tour de force where Wale asserts “TV killed the radio / and then the internet slit the television throat.” Ouch! Cee-Lo Green brilliantly complements Wale on a soulful hook. ‘Milly’ bites, but Wale holds things down: “We ain’t supposed to never have nothing… see the grown in my rhymes / see my focus on them.” “Golden Salvation” finds the MC brilliantly playing on words, specifically the ubiquitous Jesus piece: “Jesus piece, Jesus piece, Jesus piece / but don’t nobody want know Jesus peace….” The supporting music serves as a ‘tone poem’, evoking a churchy, gospel-sensible timbre to accentuate Wale’s ode.įrom Jesus pieces, Wale moves to “Vanity”, with the help of a Tears For Fears’ “Mad World”. While Wale may not have reached his ‘best’ yet, “Heaven’s Afternoon” is pretty great, where his Maybach Music Group compadre Meek Mill drops a verse. Optimistic about the future, Wale adapts a ‘best is yet to come’ attitude. On the consistent “Sunshine”, Wale places “the spotlight on my fans”, thanking them for their support of his music. Wale described the song via tweet as “…passive aggressive hate from those closest to u.” Anchored down by a Marvin Gaye sample, Wale delivers sharp one-liners eschewing detractors including “…my affinity grows, as the city gets cold / as you reaching your goals, you gon’ meet you some foes.” Two tracks in, Wale is on autopilot. “LoveHate Thing” proceeds in similar vein. Eliminating the ‘suckers’ filled with hate and envy, Wale keeps “…that circle small and never let no squares in there…” On the catchy, summative hook, Wale accepts the truism that ‘haters gonna hate’, but asserts they will respect his “hustle”. A consistent trend throughout the album, opener “The Curse of the Gifted” matches Wale with his ideal backdrop. Wale works best with lush, soulful production work. The Gifted is incredibly consistent and exemplarily executed like previous albums, never compromising quality. Wale always conveys an artistic, intellectualist mindset that is equally accessible.

wale the gifted cover

Flowing with utmost agility and moxie, he never settles for meaningless lyrics. Perhaps it’s Wale’s ‘trill’ approach to his rhymes that establishes him as one of the present day’s most gifted rappers. The lyric plays cleverly within his third album, The Gifted, as well as wisely within real life. “They gon’ love you a little different when you at the top,” Wale prudently asserts on “LoveHate Thing”.















Wale the gifted cover