I’m pretty sure this is Tha God Fahim’s 23rd full-length studio record. Starting out as an affiliate of Griselda Records and becoming 1/3 of the Dump Gawds along with Mach-Hommy & Your Old Droog, we can’t ignore the vast amount of records he has made for himself, some of his standouts include Breaking Through the Van Allen Belt and Dumping Assassins. But this guy is putting out a crazy EP in 2023, the standouts being Dark Shogunn Assassin produced by Camoflauge Monk, Iron Bull backed by Nature Sounds and Nicholas Craven produced Dump Gawd: Shot Clock King 4, Oh No- Berserko producer of Fahim’s last EP Dump Gawd: Rhyme Pays (produced by Mike Shabb), Tha Supreme Hoarder of All Pristine Wealth and a few weeks ago Supreme Dump Legend: Soul Cook Saga produced by Cookin’ Soul. Dump Goat II is a mix of 9 new songs and 10 previously released songs, as well as some guests on the Cartune Beatz produced Machine Gun Vocabulary that caught my attention.
The title track starts with a reverse sample mixed with kick and snare so he can eviscerate any MC who wants to fight him, while “Volatile Vernacular” featuring RJ Payne is another hot boo The instrumental talks about haters meeting various types of death. “Detonate” features some ghostly sampled tunes and his name sounds like Biggie kicking down the door, until the piano-driven “Prolific Pen” featuring Cormega finds the pair chatting about their long-awaited collaboration advantages.
“Brilliance” grittyly promises that this is the start of something big, leading up to hardcore “Audible Ammunity” where Skyzoo talks about how nothing can control them. ‘What You Wanna Say’ Starring Lørd Skø Finds New Poor Lørd in a Jazzy Way It didn’t slow down because he had a family to support. “Cleanse” comes toward the end of the album, comparing itself to Errol Spence Jr., while “Damages” ends with a dusty final track that keeps the streak alive.
Since this is Fahim’s third LP this year, I’d place “Machine Gun Vocabulary” above “Dump Goat II” and after “Supreme Dump Legend: Soul Cook Saga”. Cartune Beatz’s Boom Bap production is remarkably consistent over the course of the 27-minute listening experience, and even though it’s no surprise that all the guests kill it with their contributions, the god of dumps makes it all live up to his name, mixing his lexicon with Tommy Gun’s that.
Rating: 9/10

