Having said that, it’s free to download and another interesting release from hip-hop’s most idiosyncratic talent. Still raucous and raw, these eight tracks capture the slippery, percussive delivery for which the Atlantan is known, complete with barks, wails, woos, and dribbled verses as on the delirious, equally maniacal Drippin’ and Digits. Good as they are, there’s nothing like Calling Your Name or Don’t Know here, and its shorter tracklist means you’re just getting teed up for the back nine when time is called. The final installment in the mixtape series that helped launch his career, Young Thugs Slime Season 3 marks the end of an era. Problem and Drippin are typical of Young Thug’s staple diet – trap tracks involving sex boasts and croaky falsetto – while Worth It is probably the most interesting lyrically as he tries to untie the knot of a difficult relationship. The opener, With Them, is arguably the standout track with its squelching synth and bass that serves as ballast as he goes off on an expositional exploration about “racist black diamonds”. Musically, things are in a similar place to the first two instalments, with Thugger rattling off variations of trap with his signature squark. ![]() They have nine tracks each, which is paltry compared with the 40 served up on the first two mixtapes, but combined, it makes more sense. In all likelihood, they are part one and part two of the same project. It comes after February’s I’m Up, a mixtape originally titled Slime Season 3 before it was changed at the last minute. ![]() Young Thug’s third instalment of his Slime Season series is curious.
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