Dirty Dike Produces Sleazy F Baby’s Sophomore Effort “Blaxploitation” (Album Review)

Sophomore effort from Manchester, England, United Kingdom emcee/producer Sleazy F Baby. A member of the Cult of the Damned collective, he would sign to Blah Records in 2015 & make his full-length debut that year with All Blahk Tracksuit. He would also form the Super Sag Bros with Black Josh in the summer of 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic, enlisting Cambridge producer Dirty Dike from Contact Play to solely handle all the production for Sleazy’s equivalent to an audio Blaxploitation film.
“Lethal Weapon 5 (Swine)” aggressively begins with this secondary electronic influence to the beat talking about being mentally sick & not taking his meds whereas “S.W.M.D. (Sex, Weed, Money & Drugs)” dabbles with trap instrumentally breaking down those 4 subjects. “Sleaze” takes the boom bap route talking about part of his strength including him fucking up shit just before “Get Fucked Up” keeps it rugged sending a straightforward message to any lyrical opponent who dares to step against him.
As for “Pot to Piss”, we have Dirty Dike getting back in his trap bag behind the boards & Sleazy F talking about taking everything except counterfeits leading into “Pussy Whip” ends the 1st half portraying a more lustful side to the Cult’s sleaziest link. “Dip” kicks off Blaxploiation’s other act explore more themes of sexuality except there’s a more energetic approach to it than the previous track while “Bludclart” angrily talks about the gangsta lifestyle.
“Oscar” spends 86 seconds back in the basement hitting more uppercuts than Sugar Ray Leonard while “Big Pippen” references Scottie Pippen whilst putting himself inside the shoes of a pimp. After the “Jesus” interlude, “LA LA LA” takes a few minutes to tell us a “True Love Story” accompanied by a sully boom bap beat & “She Ain’t Yours” finishes Sleazy’s long-awaited 2nd album on a funkier note talking about people acting like they’re officially in relationships when that couldn’t be any more false.
Being a fan of Dirty Dike since his time with High Focus Records a decade earlier, hearing that he was fully producing Blaxploitation gave me the impression of it reaching the same bar Sleazy F Baby’s debut had set & I’d say that goal has been achieved. The production balances boom bap & trap for a great deal of the 38 minutes you get out of Sleazy’s return, handling the verses by solely himself rather than having some of his Cult brethren joining him with all respect to the Damned of course.
Score: 8/10



