“Royal Terms” Delightfully Collides Royal Flush & Termanology’s Styles (EP Review)

Royal Terms is an east coast superduo consisting of Queens, New York emcee Royal Flush alongside Lawrence, Massachusetts emcee/producer Termanology. One of whom became the de facto leader of the ST. da Squad collective & the other’s debut Ghetto Millionaire became amongst the most underrated albums of the 90s. Neither of them have crossed paths with each other musically up until this point, so an eponymous full-length debut of their own as a fan of each artist only seemed fitting enough.
“Terms of Royalty” produced by Statik Selektah begins with this inspiring boom bap intro talking about the legendary statuses they’ve earned for themselves whereas “Baby Don’t Leave” soulfully explains how the trunk & rap games are both the same. “Legendary Blocks” featuring Tek & UFO Fev finds the quartet talking about growing up in their respective home states while “Crack Era Survivors” looks back at when cocaine flooded the streets in the 80s.
Dru Hoffa joins Royal Terms on “Angel Whispers” talking about them getting it out the gravel over an araabMUZIK beat leading into “Problem” describing hotel parties where the room gets turned upside down. “Bedtime” hops over a gritty Cartune Beatz instrumental to talk about protecting what’s theirs & the closing track “Impossible” takes up the last few minutes of the EP chopping up a soul sample discussing not needing a globe to show the world is theirs’.
Similarly to Teknology’s self-titled album a year & a half earlier, Royal Terms unites 2 veterans who’ve spent decades making names for themselves in their own separate lanes to make an introductory opus that’s guaranteed to satisfy fans of both Royal Flush & Termanology. Outside of a couple guests, they spend a majority of the EP trading hardcore verses over quality boom bap production & honing in on their artistic chemistry.
Score: 8/10



