This is the Philadelphia Commander’s 8th studio LP. He started his debut in 2016 after returning home from prison and putting down his debut single “Papercuts”, and his profile began growing from there after showing his skills on radio stations and discarding seven albums along with Mixtape and the last seven EPS. My favorite is Broken Glass, the third album produced by Heatmakerz, the third EP The Irishman & DJ Green Lantern, which dropped on my 25th birthday and Statik Selektah made Max. Anyway, December’s despair, it almost ended, and the red summer was shocked or missed by me until the Old Testament finally signed the Black Soprano Family Record and invited Araabmuzik to capture Zombie for good reviews. Preparing for war and pale horses is OK, following the mobile base’s eponymous debut shows progress, and so does the cost of living generated by nickel plating, so nickel returns to the devil you know, which only means.
The Goat starts sternly with this boom bap opener to watch the words around you because you may die because later at some point, while the Silverpoon morbidly keeps it in the basement and speaks it in its own way. The beat on the “Wall” gave me the feeling of Grizzelda, giving me praise for the plug, he helped him into his current position, while Countryfried features Smoke Dza, and DZA uses turkey as a cop in a low-key situation without knowing how much it costs.
As for “Highland”, we have mastered a musical instrument without primitives, and it is recommended to look at someone who is struggling with “eyes” and ask you to show him the products and bread. “Crazy” keeps the thriving voice, talking about staying outside of Trapine because his thing brings into “talez” involves a story of a liar and hopes that others support him, right or wrong.
“The Devil” actively unveils the last stop of the Devil you know, while the Old Testament spans his area during this rap rock/boom period, while “Friends” featuring Dun Dealy finds these 2 talks unable to enter Canada and courtship in Mexico. The song “DAMS” is a dull man who reflects on a relative who says he needs to talk to him, and “62” ends, explaining that his appearance is a dream come true.
You are all a dieter for your dining and LivingRemain’s quality work system, and it’s an impressive record unless you know the devil you know can now be included in the conversation. Nickel Plated is well produced, mainly based on Boom Bap lockdown, and Philly stands out to create another round of pressure.
Score: 8/10

