B+

Freddie Gibbs: Cold Day In Hell 

Freddie Gibbs: Cold Day In Hell 

When Gary, Indiana’s Freddie Gibbs signed to Young Jeezy’s CTE imprint earlier this year, it was hard to ignore the irony: Jeezy seemed like a poor choice to put out an album from the famously label-stymied rapper, given his recent struggles to release his own album. (Thug Motivation 103 has been delayed for a full two years now, for those keeping track.) It may be a while, then, before Gibbs finally releases his proper full-length debut, but at this point, that no longer seems like such a bad thing. It was not being able to release an album, after all, that allowed Gibbs to begin making free mix-tapes that played like albums. In the three years since Interscope Records dropped him, he’s issued five substantial mix-tapes, and his latest, Cold Day In Hell, is his most dynamic yet.

Though it isn’t a drastic departure from the steely gangsta rap of Gibbs’ past releases, Hell is quicker on its feet, darting from one in-the-moment street tale to the next. Its production is flashier, too. Several tracks are built around the slick choruses and hard-bounce synthesizers of ’90s G-funk, while others thunder with the heaviness expected from beats constructed by Jeezy’s inner circle.

Rapping, as always, in the deep growl and emotionless cadence of a death-row inmate twice his age, Gibbs colors his rhymes with the usual grim details from his deprived home city, but this time, he allows his storytelling to take on a more sensational edge. In a solemn twist on the rap tradition of bragging about bedding taken women, Gibbs remorsefully chronicles a tryst with a friend’s lover on the Sade-sampling “My Homeboy’s Girlfriend.” He spends verses hinting at the affair’s dire aftermath, which he only reveals at the song’s end: a murder-suicide. On “Rob Me A Nigga,” Gibbs is driven by compounding debts and an empty stomach to plot a potentially lethal assault. He announces this song’s twist up front: His mark is an old friend. Gibbs doesn’t glamorize criminal acts, but he doesn’t apologize for them, either. Instead, he details the circumstances that spur such desperate measures.

 
Join the discussion...