‘Baby, I want you to
take me serious’ is the hook on the fifth track of this album, which
basically sums up Big Sean’s intentions here.
He’s done spitting about how many dollars he has and the size of
his dick. The Detroit rapper has now decided that he wants to be introspective.
I.e. no more of this shit:
Ass anthems behind him, Dark
Sky Paradise sees Big Sean tackling more cerebral subject matter. He contemplates
his own successes and failures on the track ‘Win Some, Lose Some’ and he
attempts to get deep on the track ‘deep’. Some of it feels genuinely sincere
such as the former track ‘Win Some, Lose Some’. Tracks like ‘Deep’ meanwhile miss
the mark and end up, well, a little corny.
The harsh reality is that Big Sean is no philosopher or
wordsmith. He’s a competent rapper who can definitely ride a beat, but lyrics
aren’t his forte as evident through silly stacked rhymes such as: ‘two girls is breast to breast to breast to
breast’. By far the best anthem on here I thought was ‘I Don’t Fuck With You' simply because it feels like the rapper’s
comfort zone.
However, this isn’t to say that the whole album should have
made up of similarly-themed dumbed-down numbers. In fact, I’m almost glad Big
Sean has tried to do some serious stuff here, as it’s revealed his personality.
Before now, Big Sean seemed like a big nobody. He rapped
about the same materialistic junk as every other wannabe-Kanye, and consequently he always
struck me as a bore. Here, he comes across
as a unique and likeable human being for most of the tracks, even if he is conveying
a lot of his thoughts in basic and sometimes corny terms.
Sadly, I think Big Sean still has some work to do before he
can really find his niche. By far the greatest and most memorable parts on the
album are parts which Big Sean has no involvement in, for instance several of
the instrumentals, particularly the beat on ‘Paradise’ produced by Mike Will
Made It. It’s a menacing instrumental that makes me picture Godzilla stomping round the city. The
guest musicians meanwhile all contribute solid performances. Even Lil Wayne manages
to keep on beat during his verse in ‘Deep’.
Altogether, Big Sean’s willingness to show his personality
and a handful of decent beats and features make this an okay album. Most of
the thrills come in the first half. In the second part, Big Sean’s attempts to philosophise
turn hackneyed and the beats turn stale.
Oh well, at least there are no more dumb tracks about
asses. Or any Nicki Minaj collaborations for that matter.
★★☆☆☆
TRACK TASTER: