• Wale Shine

    Wale Shine

    Coming off, a smash that took his conceptual fancy to the hilt, and the birth of his daughter - for whom he wants to amass a fleet of luxury vehicles - reasonably takes a free, easy, more commercially minded approach for album five. Acronymic for 'still here ignoring negative energy,', loosely constructed with the rapper rarely in battle or even sparring mode, has no overarching theme beyond soundtracking good times. If anything, the program is maximized for streaming with numerous cross-cultural stylistic switch-ups and a lengthy register of producers and guest artists that might exceed that of. There's a dancehall-flavored track co-produced by, a low-profile victory lap with Colombian star, and a clutch of streamlined pop-oriented material led by 'My PYT' (with bed springs less rusty and distracting than the ones heard throughout 'Bad'). 'Fine Girl,' a romantic Afro-pop-laced club track featuring and, is warmest of all, enhanced with an atmospheric assist from via 'Can You Stand the Rain.' At its most frustrating, the album's lightness results in the wasting of an exceptional production on the vapid 'Fashion Week.' Also sits out a sharp beat change that plays out toward the end of 'CC White,' which tweaks the 'white woman as cocaine' (and vice versa) metaphor with high-quality wordplay.

    All free apps for android

    Shine

    Shine is the studio/Mixtape Album by artist/Rapper/DJ Wale, and Album has highlight a Hip Hop sound. It was released/out on 2017 in English dialect, by some Music Recording Company, as the follow-up to last studio/Mixtape Album. Wale – Shine Album (Zip Download) Out now, stream Wale’s 5th studio album “SHiNE” featuring Lil Wayne, Travis Scott, Chris Brown and more. Wale is finally ready to get his Shine on. After a couple set backs & delays, the MMG rapper’s fifth studio LP was officially released on iTunes tonight, a week ahead of its original scheduled date.

    Shine

    After 'DNA,' where sounds like he's on the brink of nodding off during an almost interminable chorus, the album dramatically lifts. Sounding revitalized, projecting a mix of gratitude and disgust, breathes new life into an old breakbeat (and a sample from 's version of 'I Wanna Be Where You Are') for a defiantly proud pro-black finale. It should be enough to retain the listeners who strongly prefer the more lyrical, less hedonistic aspects of the discography.

    Wale Shine