“Villain” Sounds Darker Than O.T. the Real & Nicked Plated’s Previous Output Together (Album Review)

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania emcee O.T. the Real staying busy beyond Show No Mercy to hit us with this 10th solo LP. Getting his start in the underground nearly a decade ago after coming home from prison & releasing his debut single “Papercuts”, his profile began to grow from there after showcasing his skills on radio stations or dropping his last 9 albums as well as a mixtape & his 9 EPs. My favorites being the Heatmakerz-produced 3rd EP The Irishman & the DJ Green Lantern-produced 3rd album Broken Glass that dropped on my 25th birthday & the Statik Selektah produced Maxed Out. No Matter What, Desperation of December, It’s Almost Over & Red Summer were all hit or miss for me until O.T. finally signed to Black Soprano Family Records & enlisted araabMUZIK for Zombie to critical acclaim. Prepare for War & Pale Horse were ok, up Moving Base O.T.’s eponymous debut showed improvement as did the Nickel Plated-produced Cost of Living & The Devil You Know. Coming off 38 Spesh fully producing Possession with Intent & Chop-La-Rok flexing The Wars I’ve Won with Rare Scrilla, the Villain has come back.
“750” works in a synth-driven boom bap beat so he can talk about him being back whereas “Evil Eye” instrumentally turns up the suspense looking to deepen the odds although leaving an open verse during the backend of it makes it feel somewhat incomplete. “Sent Out” warns for everyone to get down when he trips out spitting nothing but killa shit leading into “Bad Guy” talks about his willingness of becoming the villain one wants him to.
Regarding the song “Silent”, we have O.T. over some prominent piano chords suggests to bring a fun if one so happens to walk inside the same room as him while “Gary V” featuring Flames Dot Malik angrily puts themselves inside the shoes of narcotic merchants to reach the halfway point. “Mint Leaves” gets the 2nd half going hopping over more keys to talk about shit getting shifty around his parts just before “Mr. Ozempic” boasts his nickname earned by getting the weight off.
“B.O.T.R.A. (Back On The Run Again)” featuring SKNJ finds the pair rounding out 3rd looking to even the score although O.T. had the better verse with all respect while “F.T.S. (Feed The Streets)” hungrily talks about his constant artistic hunger despite constantly putting out music at his prolific rate. “Strike” featuring Murkemz takes a couple minutes to spit gritty verses without the need of a hook while outro finishes the album talking about “The Last Time” we ever saw a Villain like him.
Admittedly: I wasn’t the biggest fan of Show No Mercy earlier this year, but Villain will certainly appeal to anyone who enjoyed You Are Who You Eat With or Cost of Living & The Devil You Know since O.T. the Real generally nails it whenever he locks in with Nickel Plated. It significantly darker than all of that previously mentioned output from the production to the antagonistic lyricism even if the guest list can be somewhat inconsistent.
Score: 7/10



