Norwalk, Connecticut Commander Chris Webby, made his fourth EP with Roots’ original keyboardist and former Aftermath Entertainment inthouse Producter Scott Storch. During my high school high school, his full-length studio album was introduced to him during the chemistry of 80hd music while recording the MNRK Music Group, and he will continue to spend the late 2020s in the late 2010s and late 2020s until last Christmas and until Wednesday’s Mixtapes series. 88mg is connected to my personal favorite producer, which makes me think it will be the best extended game of his career.
After the “ASMR” intro, “Perfect Storm” begins the EP by pushing the hands on the doomsday clock over an instrumental that Scott Storch would’ve made in the 2000s during & succeeding his time with Aftermath whereas “In My Baggie” works in some pianos to talk about taking pills off the shelf at 12. “Put ‘Em High” cinematically cautions that no one wants to be a hero tonight while the trap-influenced “Running Fear” talks about playing cards until they hit.
“Pyro” nears the end of 88 Milligrams with a beat throwing it back to either “Candy Shop” or “Just a Lil Bit” off of 50 Cent’s sophomore effort The Massacre celebrating it’s 2 decade anniversary earlier this spring talking about coming up in the spot to burn the place down leading into the cloudy “Rollercoaster” sending off the EP with Chris comparing life to a ride the way it goes up & down for roughly 5 & a half minutes.
Chris Webby introduced him to him a decade ago is far from the craziest rap era of the past 15 years, and the end of 88mg is the conclusion of the prolific Wednesday video of the founder of 80hd Music, and I, in my opinion, love his music the most, is my favorite EP. Scott Storch’s work, however, nostalgically turned to his full radio waves, opposing adaptation to modern sounds or techniques, such as having a producer tag on Fool Boy and Chris, lyrically bringing it into his bag.
Score: 9/10