Almost Famous, Almost Broke - Kyle Lucas

Almost Famous, Almost Broke

Kyle Lucas

  • Genre: Hip-Hop/Rap
  • Release Date: 2017-01-13
  • Explicitness: explicit
  • Country: USA
  • Track Count: 7
  • Album Price: 6.93
  • ℗ 2017 Kyle Lucas
Listen on Apple Music

Tracks

Title Artist Time
1
Cellar Door Kyle Lucas 3:07
2
Vice (feat. Camm Hunter & STS) Kyle Lucas 4:04
3
Good Intentions (feat. Jonny C Kyle Lucas 3:52
4
With You (feat. Julius) Kyle Lucas 3:53
5
All My Rich Friends Are Sad Kyle Lucas 5:39
6
Be Remembered (feat. Will Pugh Kyle Lucas 4:24
7
Bullshit (Bonus) Kyle Lucas 3:27

Reviews

  • Kyle Lucas is moving, powerful in 'Almost Famous, Almost Broke'

    4
    By Alex Dionisio
    A Marietta, GA native, Vonnegutt member, and past signee with Outkast emcee Big Boi’s Purple Ribbon Records, Kyle Lucas is so true to his background and where he comes from that he named his debut album from 2015 after his very hometown. Marietta, Georgia: The Album boasts advanced lyricism, brilliant consciousness and contemporary production and the same is true for Kyle’s new EP, Almost Famous Almost Broke, with just a little more bite than the former. A.F.A.B. has only seven tracks but is completely explored in topics. In “Cellar Door,” Kyle is hurt by a traitorous girlfriend but harbors the thought of a reckless response thinking, “I’ma go f--- all your friends, get revenge, now we’re even.” That might be the most controversial inner-kerfuffle and temptation on the disc, but the point of the line is not that he recommends the reaction but rather it is to convey how upset he is. Onward, Kyle grieves over-reliance on mind-altering substances, spits venom at his critics and an ex-girl, backstabs backstabbers, pulls a chick from the spot and gets political in “All My Rich Friends Are Sad,” pinning down bad police, faulty clergy people, war hawks and still those critical of him there. This album is perhaps a moment of venting like never before for Kyle, and just to let you know, the last two songs are even more loaded than those at the top. It’s there that Kyle reaffirms his stance in favor of great notes over bank rolls and brain food over fake news.

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