Yo, the sheer idea of Forever is inspiring. In memory of, putting a white boy from PA on a track with the Harlem MC he was inspired by. What a tribute. From the grave, showing that rap will never die. We keep going, we keep creating. With one of our greatest teachers reminding us that hip-hop is forever. Return of the boom bap. The return of the forgotten king from a fading era. On the eve of Halloween. The symmetry of Big L being nice in life and death is not lost on me. The culture and the art being forever feels like quite a statement amid rap not being on the Top 40 of the Billboard 100 for the first time since 1990. Which, correct me if I’m wrong, was the first time Big L started rapping. And before hip hop ventured into a climate concerned too heavily about record sales. And even though I think the core of hip hop is not about that at all it’s been a testament to its staying power and cultural influence. Could be where I’m at in life or what’s going on in a world that is falling apart but this is a welcomed reminder that there’s something in this life that I care about that will always be even as we take one step closer to the inevitable. I typically feel some kind of way about posthumous releases but I think this is dope. Good to hear L rapping again even if nothing is new. Production sounds good to me. Dope collabs. Great installment in the Legend Has It campaign.