unstoppablefade
Rookie
Breh, I appreciate the effort he put in on this album. I'm glad he's redeemed himself. With that said, I just haven't gotten into the album yet. I've played it a bunch of times now, and I still don't understand it. I'm not hating on Lupe as a lyricist at all; I'm just stating that I'm struggling to find meaning in his songs, and that is detracting from my ability to appreciate the music.
True but still we live in the information age man, that shouldn't be a excuse. Nowadays when nikkas body starts actin funny first thing they do is go on google, not hit up their doctor like the s'pose to be doing. There's a shytload of resources that can help you. One of the reasons rap genius blew up is because Lupe stans were constantly annotating shyt.
I knw imma sound like those lame fukk lupe stans but fukk its the truth. The very fact that we have to spend effort and time deciperhing Lupe's lyrics is a testament to how good he is at his craft. All great works of art take time and thought to fully process. In highschool when you read that gay shakespeare shyt nobody fukkin knew what they were talking about. But if you actulaly study it you realize there are several motifs/themes and even more underlying themes. It's the same with Lupe. You just can't expect to understand his shyt from listening it to several times. I think lupe said it best in SLR2.
It's hard being a Lupe fan, go to Harvard to be a Lupe stan
I ain't sayin' that I'm harder, it's just harder when it's in Lupe's hands




Lupe manages to connect inflexible moral codes of love and marriage to the absurdity of time-specific divisions of meals, and the hypocrisy of puritannical values as well as fast food industry practices. "is it slippin' like permission? Am I trippin' like field." Lupe had me feeling like a child again, connecting his confusion over love, religion, and politics to those childhood recollections of school that wash over us like a fever-dream.






