Debut album for Rudolph Johnson, an Atlanta trapper passed away in July 2020, who chose to make music under the name of Lil Marlo or Marlo (Quality Control).
His moniker isn't easy to keep, Marlo [Stanfield] is one of the best characters and one of the most ruthless villains ever seen in a television series. Here his name has nothing to do with it. Johnson pulls out a generic album with an excessive length of 40 minutes, 14 pieces, and lots of guests to keep the hype up and give the effort a little visual. I don't care what he says and cheap production doesn't help, the record is full of the annoying trap rhythms typical of Quality Control Music — Twysted Genius takes care of most of the music, especially the second part — completely unlistenable.
Overall, the entire tape struggles to stand out from the works of its competitors and even from those of his own label, Johnson himself struggles to attract the listener's attention and stand out from his own guests, they sound virtually the same on different tracks. The guests are Lil Baby, Future, Young Dolph, Young Thug, Gunna, Blac Youngsta, MoneyBagg Yo and Gucci Mane. The first two stand out in the title track, the others I can't tell you what they did and when. Not recommended, 1.5/10.

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