Stu Bangas Produces Wordsworth’s Best Album “2 Kings” (Album Review)

This is the 6th solo LP from Brooklyn, New York emcee Wordsworth. A member of the duo Punch n Words & the trio eMC, he officially made his solo debut 2 decades ago already with Mirror Music followed by The Photo Album & the Donel Smokes-produced New Beginning. After JSOUL went on to produce his debut EP Blame It on Music & later Sam Brown doing Our World Today respectively, the next EP Undivided Attention would be an improvement over Blame It on Music & the last album The Fragility of Life was overloaded with too many features. That said, hearing that Stu Bangas was lacing 2 Kings had me anticipating it in being Wordsworth’s magnum opus.

The title track kicks the door down with a warmongering boom bap instrumental & flag-planting territories & never giving up whereas “Day 1” by Punch n Words featuring Ali Vegas menacingly talking about being prepared for when your day comes. “Embarrassed” works in a soul sample with some kicks & snares suggesting your money ain’t enough to keep your habits leading into “Yearbook” talking about some people he knew becoming career crooks.

“Start the Madness” featuring Breeze Brewin’ keeps it in the basement altogether for both MCs to come together to deliver lyrical insanity for nearly 4 minutes just before “Mother of My Kids” featuring C-Red finds the pair over a somber boom bap beat talking about finding another way to happiness. “Oh!” has a funkily raw flare throughout addressing the alliance of 2 giants while “Which One Are You?” featuring eLZhi wants to know if one is either fake or true.

To begin the final leg, “Something Strange” has a classy piano flip noticing a problem when the ID didn’t have the same name at all prior to “Solidified” confidently talks about his status in the game. “Hard Times Don’t Last” provides optimism for those struggling right now promising that it will get better, but then “God’s Mailbox” finishes the LP talking about sending letters to the Higher Power.

The history this guy has with Punch n Words & eMC alongside his first couple solo albums has proven to me that he’s very much skilled on the mic, yet 2 Kings feels like something I’ve always wanted from him. Stu Bangas’ production from the moment you press play to the final moments is perfect, the guests are all well chosen & Wordsworth himself sounds passionate on the mic.

Score: 9/10

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Legends Will Never Die

Just a 27 year old guy from Detroit, Michigan who passionately loves hip hop culture & music as a whole

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