Black Josh’s 8th Album “YSL Bootleg” Prod. by Lee Scott is More Sonically Varied Than “Today’s the Day” (Album Review)

This is the 8th studio LP from Manchester, England, United Kingdom emcee/producer Black Josh. Known for being a member of the Cult of the Damned & LEVELZ collectives as well as 1/2 of the B-Movie Millionaires & the Super Sag Bros, he would make debut over a decade ago off an eponymous EP & the full-length debut Blick Flair’s Ape Mountain until signing to Blah Records. He went on to drop 6 more albums & 3 EPs under the London label, coming off Today’s the Day a couple years earlier with YSL Bootleg.

“Aw, Here It Goes” by the B-Movie Millionaires starts with them trading verses with each other over a Lee Scott beat fusing g-funk & boom bap whereas “CBA” co-produced by Sumgii talks about refusing to be assed when he tries hard replacing the g-funk elements with hints of cloud rap. “Flu Game” featuring Sly Moon maintains the boom bap vibes speaking of feeling themselves when they’re not exactly feeling themselves while “Drink Champs” featuring Stinkin’ Slumrok shouts out the mishaps making money.

King Grubb appears on the sinisterly dusty “Gutter” talking about good things coming to those who pull the weight just before “Mossy Tree” luxuriously talks about being ready whenever shit pops off, calling back to one of my all-time favorite Cypress Hill tracks. “Council Pop” featuring Sly Moon finds the 2 lyrically going back-&-forth with each other just before “Garfield” heads for a lo-fi direction instrumentally talking his bars wrapping his doubters up in a weed joint to light up, reserving the last 55 seconds for a jazzy synthesizer breakdown.

“Who’s on What” begins the final act hopping over a psychedelic boom bap beat talking about partying until the sun rises while the cavernously hardcore “Don Julio” likens himself to playing the role of a villain in a theatrical film & dismissing rappers who aren’t on Blah’s level of lyricism. “Yes, Man” featuring Sniff has this uncanny boom bap tone talking about getting whatever it is they ask while the closer “Tiger Blood” by the Super Sag Bros drumlessly makes a reference to Charlie Sheen’s infamous 2011 meltdown except they’re drinking Hennessy instead of a tiger’s actual blood.

The only complaint I have regarding YSL Bootleg was it being marketed as an extended play when it’s a dozen tracks & over a half hour long but nonetheless, I’d have to put it above Mannyfornia when it comes down to the greatest entry in Black Josh’s solo discography. Lee Scott’s production here captures Josh’s versatility better than Today’s the Day since it largely stuck to 1 unified sound & the latter sharpens his skills after opening for Danny Brown during the UK leg of the Quaranta tour for this next chapter of a career spanning over an entire decade.

Score: 8/10

Subscribe To Our Weekly Newsletter

Stay Updated With Exclusive Content, News, & Events Straight To Your Inbox!

Legends Will Never Die

Just a 29 year old guy from Detroit, Michigan who passionately loves hip hop culture & music as a whole

Related Articles