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  “Rooster In My Rari,” a song ostensibly about getting head in an expensive sports car, makes a pit stop for psychopharmacology: “Desperate needs for them Xans, where my Da-Da at?” Not too many other rappers need anti-anxiety meds to deal with road head. Waka’s is a sort of mechanistic universe fueled by raucous partying, the leaden foot of anxiety on the pedal. Or, to use another metaphor provided by the author himself, Waka’s life is a neat and savage simple process — “Let them guns blam./ This a .44 bulldog/ It cannot jam.”


Pretty happy with my review of Waka’s Triple F Life. The point where the text becomes subtext and then back again (don’t say palimpsest) — Promethazine and Xanax are medications first and foremost.

“Rooster In My Rari,” a song ostensibly about getting head in an expensive sports car, makes a pit stop for psychopharmacology: “Desperate needs for them Xans, where my Da-Da at?” Not too many other rappers need anti-anxiety meds to deal with road head. Waka’s is a sort of mechanistic universe fueled by raucous partying, the leaden foot of anxiety on the pedal. Or, to use another metaphor provided by the author himself, Waka’s life is a neat and savage simple process — “Let them guns blam./ This a .44 bulldog/ It cannot jam.”

Pretty happy with my review of Waka’s Triple F Life. The point where the text becomes subtext and then back again (don’t say palimpsest) — Promethazine and Xanax are medications first and foremost.

A sort of OK profile in VICE with some (unintentionally?) wince-inducing parts, and one really funny (to me) comment.


  The three of us spend a lot of time talking about Waka’s music, and how a rapper generates street cred. Here’s more or less how it works: You send your mixtapes to dudes locked up in jail. They play your stuff for their Jail Friends on their headphones, which can be turned into a pair of makeshift speakers by gutting them and turning the cup into an echo chamber. If the guys in jail think your music knocks, when they get back on the streets they’ll tell their friends about you. It’s kind of like when your big brother went to college and came back on Fall Break with a Replacements CD, only way more awesome.

A sort of OK profile in VICE with some (unintentionally?) wince-inducing parts, and one really funny (to me) comment.

The three of us spend a lot of time talking about Waka’s music, and how a rapper generates street cred. Here’s more or less how it works: You send your mixtapes to dudes locked up in jail. They play your stuff for their Jail Friends on their headphones, which can be turned into a pair of makeshift speakers by gutting them and turning the cup into an echo chamber. If the guys in jail think your music knocks, when they get back on the streets they’ll tell their friends about you. It’s kind of like when your big brother went to college and came back on Fall Break with a Replacements CD, only way more awesome.