At any rate, here we stand, confronted with Welcome to the Soil Pt. 4, 5, and 6, which drop 45 new E-40 songs on the world. These arrive eighteen months after the first three volumes and a year after his double album, History, with Too $hort. Sometimes, contending with E-40's catalog can feel like cowering beneath the business end of a cement mixer. But unlike other prolific Internet-era data-dump rappers, E-40 releases albums without a single half-finished sketch on them, for full retail; his audience pays for this music, all of it, and screams the choruses of the new songs back at him at his shows. He is 46 years old. To say, then, that these volumes lag ever so slightly behind the first three in color and excitement feels a bit like observing that the 86-year-old man who climbed Mt. Kilimanjaro in his underwear wobbled just a bit before ascending the peak. Nevertheless, the tiny signs of thoughtlessness dotting the expanse of these Soils have to be duly noted: for the first time since he began this double- and triple-album blitzkrieg campaign, he repeats himself from installment to the next, recycling the excellent boast "I'm crispy like Panko" from Pt. 5's "Mister T." to Pt. 6's "Penetrate." Several of the beats on Pt. 4 sound like explicit attempts to recreate "Function", the IAMSU!-featuring breakout hit from from last year.
But that's about it: If you're plumbing for deeper quibbles with this project, stop here. 40's ability to elaborate on his decades-old subject matter hasn't slowed: On Pt. 6's "Project Building", he shows us "hundred round drums that look just like a curled-up snake," and on "Rep Yo District" he tells us the jewels on his neck "look like baby tongues." His details are so specific they nearly hurt your eyes: "Granny bedridden" are his two opening words on "Do What I Gotta Do", a song that also mentions needing to show up at your parole address. A character on "Off The Block" goes to jail "on purpose just so he can get a decent meal." In the middle of the hard-knock-life mob number "Throwed Like This", he throws in that his family uses "a broom, not a vacuum, for the carpet." Who else in rap currently scrutinizes the meaning of their environment that closely?
There are a lot of guests sitting across the huge banquet table, helping themselves to E-40's inexhaustible energy. Danny Brown and Schoolboy Q show up on "All My Ni**az"; Rick Ross (who offers the #peakRoss quote: "My jacket's expensive/ It's made out of lizards") and French Montana (who offers the #peakMontana: "Can't you see I'm high? Stop talking in my ear") on "Champagne". Houston legend Z-Ro drops in, sounding spectacular on "In Dat Cup". The spread of Bay Area artists half E-40's age or less is impressive, as always: Roach Gigz, J Stalin, Kool John, Young Bari, Decadez. They reinforce E-40's timelessness and his continued relevance; he might be one of the few rappers in the world with 12-year-old fans as fervent as his 40-year-old ones.
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