The-Dream - Love KingLast year, The-Dream released "Love Vs. Money" which I will proudly tout as the best r&b album since probably "Thriller". In a genre where albums don't really matter, and all money is made on single and radio play, it takes a lot of balls for The-Dream (who already makes a shit-ton of cash writing/producing every single hit on the radio) to go into the studio to create actual albums. Sometimes he overreaches, sure, but the audacity of creating a cohesive album is really astounding, especially considering how good that very album was.
So with "Love King", Terius Nash had a lot to live up to. "Love Vs. Money" an album that was played on the radio, was enjoyed by kids who only listened to really hard shit and perhaps strangest of all: had crossed over to be one of the most praised albums in the hipster community. So is "Love King" as good as "Love Vs. Money"? No, it's not. But it's still better than basically any other pop music being created.
There is a story here, of Nash bragging about his sexual prowess, losing a girl he cares about because of that, getting her back, letting her know he's the best, having an emotional breakdown remembering his ex, getting with another groupie, getting his own heart broken, showing a soft side and eventually saying "fuck it" and proceeding with his sexual escapades. Let me get this out of the way: the subject matter isn't original, lots of his lyrics are totally ridiculous (seems to be attempting to out R. Kelly R. Kelly), and a couple moments can even be uncomfortable. He definitely exposes himself on a lot of these tracks, but manages to continue his skill of deftly creating hilarious, outrageous lines you want to sing and laugh to as well.
"Love King" "Make Up Bag" and "F.I.L.A." open the album on a really strong note and each one could be found on The-Dream's previous two albums. He's not exactly exploring new sonic possibilities here, but why mess with a good thing? The songs are still great, "F.I.L.A." being one of my very favorite songs of the year, and just incredibly catchy.
When he mixes things up with the downtrodden "Sex Intelligent" and the accompanying remix, he's showing his bizarre artistic side. The songs fit together perfectly and are about as far from those first 3 songs as The-Dream can get. Slow, fitting a lot of words in, a laughable rap attempt, but they work. They break up the sound, they're still good and most importantly they lead into the next suite of songs - which might very well be at the top of The-Dream's accomplishments.
"Yamaha" sounds so much like Prince, it shouldn't work. What's more is that I hardly even know what the song is about, but it's just great. "Purple Rain" is one of my all time favorite albums for a reason and Dream does a great job copping that sound. That track fades seamlessly into "Nikki Pt. 2" - about his ex Nivea. The song is sad, slow, but has this underlying anger in it. And this leads into "Abyss" which is a total slow burner, the song on this album that took the longest to grow on me, but is now one of my favorites. These 3 songs just show why The-Dream is great. He's create real song cycles here, pretty spectacular.
"Panties To The Side" is a creepy track and I wish it wasn't on here. I understand why it's here, but I don't like it and it almost makes me uncomfortable. Total club/sex jam.
There's also a bunch of bonus tracks tacked onto the deluxe version of this album, which don't really fit the theme (which is why they're bonus cuts) but all are servicable songs. It's a great album, but not on the level of his last one. A couple duds and his lyrics are going a bit too far, but it's still a blast to listen to.
So here's what you need to know: if this is the last Dream album, then he's left us with 3 pop masterpieces. If he comes out with an album on 6-7-2011, then we have something to look forward to for sure.
In Summary: I imagine Borg and Splates would be the only people even interested in this, so I'm not trying to sell it to y'all, but it's pretty great.