Vince Staples
Big Fish Theory


4.7
superb

Review

by Jordan M. EMERITUS
June 27th, 2017 | 498 replies


Release Date: 2017 | Tracklist

Review Summary: I used to look up to the sky, now I'm over shit.

There’s one word that seems unavoidable when writing about Vince Staples, one word that always seems to circle the paragraphs, the criticisms, prefacing every passage and every thought: Nihilism. If you’ve had the pleasure of reading his interviews or prose, it is evident that he is well-read, literary, and self-aware to an envious degree. Where writers pontificate around him, he’s often one step ahead, commenting on their own clichés before they have enough time to disown them. Consider his interview with Trevor Noah, where he readily admitted that he likes, ‘saying stuff about black people to white people,’ on the subject of whether or not Big Fish Theory was, in fact, ‘Afrofuturism’ (it isn’t.)

In his music, though, Staples invokes pointlessness as a reason to ignore bloat, grandeur, or hubris. On Summertime 06, Vince’s somewhat underrated debut, this manifested itself as a 50-minute recollection of Venice Beach; gunshots, sunshine, no sleeping, and no eating. He was guileless about the album, often admitting in interviews that music was work, and that, rather than having anything to say, his technical skills merely preceded his desire to rap. Or, to say it another way, Summertime 06 wasn’t about race politics as much as it was a rap album that happened to feature lyrics concerned with race politics, a topic Vince was merely familiar with. That commitment to musical substance over lyrical style made Staples such a compelling rapper back in 2015, and it continues to be the basis of his charm two years later. More than a nihilist, he embraces brevity and the economy of sound to communicate music that, whilst tacitly about things, isn’t inherently topical or otherwise. In those terms, it’s less easy to skirt around immediate thoughts and entertain lengthy missives about something nobody cares about. So, let it be said succinctly: Big Fish Theory is the best hip-hop album of 2017.

Crude summations aside, it’s worth asking: why would a narcissist and a critic want to write about Big Fish Theory when it appears resistant to the knotty projections of any one writer? Because it lacks the pretence of most other mainstream hip-hop albums; it’s concise; it pays attention to the music rather than servicing a theme, narrative, or convention, or, at least, it closes the desire to do so by being consistently compelling from a purely musical sense. It isn’t an album infatuated with its own reflection, and Staples isn’t Dorian Gray. He doesn’t kill the vibe by marching into empty spaces unannounced, and his penchant for prudence, both of sound and in words, services the songs rather than his own intentions. That means that the music precedes the intent, a la Wire’s Pink Flag, or Minutemen’s Double Nickels on the Dime, or, to use rap appropriate reference points, Nas’ Illmatic, or any number of Earl Sweatshirt’s songs, feature, and albums. In that regard, it’s easy enough to say that Big Fish Theory is good because it is precise. It renders Staples’ nihilism in the best possible sense. And it just might be the best rap album of the year, without having any apparent story to tell.

Truthfully, the success of these songs is as much attributable to the selection of producers than it is Vince alone, who slides in well between the sounds of Chicago, Detroit, and London’s East End. Some names, like Christian Rich, are familiar, having contributed to the rapid fire, Future-sampling “Senorita,” now delivering the funk to the album’s most accessible moment, “Big Fish.” Among other more familiar names is Zack Sekoff, who opens and closes the album with appropriate intensity on “Crabs in a Bucket” and “Rain Come Down,” and Flume, who offers his beefed-up trap to album standout “Yeah Right.” Otherwise, Big Fish Theory leans hard into its bareness, utilizing producers whose trademark sounds oft include sparse use of synths and repetitive bass grooves. GTA are the standouts of this production style, contributing to “Love Can Be…,” whilst PC Music associated SOPHIE steals the show with his gnarly need to pare back songs to stabs of modulated vocals and trebly beeps (“SAMO,” “Yeah Right”). The relative consistency of these producers and their attention to songs that are at once danceable and insistent provide Big Fish Theory with its best moments; obviously, when the album only barely skids past the 30-minute mark, they’re often instrumental in demonstrating the ability for Staples to effectively utilize fleeting moments.

Without enough time to waste on names or boasts, Big Fish Theory accommodates brief time for guests and asserts an authority over their own contributions. Essentially, every moment that Vince isn’t on record is a moment that feels like it needs to prove itself, lest Vince get back on the beat and break your neck for wasting his time. “Yeah Right,” the only song to feature an honest rap verse not from Staples, makes brilliant use of a self-effacing and top notch Kendrick Lamar rap, where, among others, he admits he can sometimes be, ‘only for conversation,’ before knocking the song on its ass by just as quickly claiming the zeitgeist. Staples isn’t concerned, however; he gets his own words in when he casts doubt over every other rapper’s house, car, girl, and income. More importantly, though, Kendrick and Vince’s verses feel interdependent, necessary for the high impact wallop of Flume and SOPHIE’s sparing and intense beat. Compare that to “Love Can Be…,” where Ray-J and Damon Albarn are necessary ingredients to the smooth-tongued melody, or “Homage” and “SAMO,” where Rick Ross and A$AP Rocky’s contributions are in-name or for-hook only, and you get the sense that Vince isn’t making music for critics, or for sales, or for anyone else other than himself. He is precise with his intent, otherwise he wouldn’t have had Ty Dolla $ign to contribute a triple entendre (courtesy of Genius) to the bottom-end rattler “Rain Come Down.” Every note, every second, every feature is meaningful, and it serves as a prescriptive method for writing rap albums; nobody cares about the names between the brackets if they don’t take the song further or in a consequential direction. Vince gets that underlying point, and he might have just spearheaded its prevalence as a virtue in the rap mainstay by simply being himself.

It can be difficult to wholly evaluate any piece of pop music too hastily, especially when its commitment to the standards of which critical writing is often most attentive to- narrative, lyricism, context- is close to negligible. Big Fish Theory is a hip-hop album built around the utility of its sound, never indebted to anything outside of itself and constantly in service of its songs. Though that might make it sound underdeveloped or, rather, undeserving of high praise, it stands to reason that in 36-minutes, Staples never wastes a minute or overplays his hand. Humble, modest, unassuming, and attentive to its runtime and the need to make a better song; in a year where Migos, “Mask Off,” and DAMN. have dominated the conversation, Big Fish Theory sticks out as the most consistent and well-versed rap album of the year.



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Comments:Add a Comment 
verdant
Emeritus
June 27th 2017


2492 Comments


really informative review (: this album is growing on me

Prancer
June 27th 2017


1597 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

probably going to be my hiphop aoty



edit: nvm, this doesn't have much lasting power

Prancer
June 27th 2017


1597 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

Although I haven't heard Summertime 06 yet I wouldn't call it underrated as it has an overall score of 87 on metacritic, but maybe overlooked instead. I really like this review though. I feel like the instrumentals and production appropriately make you feel like you are metaphorically drowning.

RadicalEd
June 27th 2017


9546 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

I've only heard "Big Fish" so far but that thing bangz, so I'm stoked to see if I'll end up liking this better than Summertime.

anarchistfish
June 27th 2017


30298 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

let's just calm down a second here

PistolPete
June 27th 2017


5304 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5 | Sound Off

Really in-depth and informative review. I love this album so far and it's honestly only grown on me.



Just FYI....the first time you spell out "Summertime" (2nd pgh, second line), you're missing the "r".

Piglet
June 27th 2017


8474 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0 | Sound Off

rip my superior, more informative 16 bumps soundoff

Ebola
June 27th 2017


4511 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

Rap AOTY. Might be a 4.5

guitarded_chuck
June 27th 2017


18070 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

i get the feeling youre trying to make this something it isnt but regardless its a pretty great album

JigglyPDiddy
June 27th 2017


3721 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

This shite fire.

Conmaniac
June 27th 2017


27676 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

it's so solid

Conmaniac
June 27th 2017


27676 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

also this review is really well written and definitely one of your best. there was one lil awkward phrase in there that I noticed - "the only song to feature an honest rap verse not from Staples, makes brilliant use of a self-effacing and top notch Kendrick Lamar rap"

seeing rap as a noun just looks weird to me here but thats p nitpicky and it seems grammatically correct!

suppatime
June 27th 2017


1800 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

i get why people wouldn't like this, especially because it seems like vince takes a step back lyrically and thematically, but as arcade said it's all about the sounds. the production on this is insane and vince works the beats so well. i also love that it isn't overly long, which plagues so so many rap albums.

Rowan5215
Staff Reviewer
June 27th 2017


47584 Comments

Album Rating: 3.4

tbh Party People has some of Vince's finest ever lyrics so gotta disagree there



@chuck what makes you say that? this review is singing the praises of the effective of Vince's not-fucking-around mentality, and the main source of its praise is that the album doesn't pretend to be anything other than a really fuckin good album. what do you think arcade is tryina make it into that it's not?

suppatime
June 27th 2017


1800 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

yeah i'd agree but he does have some moments here on stuff like "yeah right" where the rhymes are more simplistic i guess. they're not bad in my opinion but i could see how someone who wants rappity stuff from him would dislike it. overall i just feel like the rhymes are more in service to the production on this album.

ZombieToyDuck
June 27th 2017


7203 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

Awh shit, ya beat me to having first review on this, but great review anyhow. Probably gunna post mine anyhow seeing as its my first and I definitely need to break the ice and get some feedback.

guitarded_chuck
June 27th 2017


18070 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

i got the impression that he was implying vince was consciously making a not fucking around style album akin if not inspired by the comparable he mentioned but on second thought maybe i was incorrect in that



thats just how guys like vince and earl (and a lot of rap artists in general actually) make music

Piglet
June 27th 2017


8474 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0 | Sound Off

boi yeh rite yeh rite yeh rite

(boi yeh rite yeh rite yeh rite)

bbdmittenz
June 27th 2017


249 Comments


Friggin great album. I knew once I first heard Vince on Earl Sweatshirt's "epaR" that he would refine his skills, but I had no idea he would grow to this level. He was quite a mystery back then.

Cygnatti
June 27th 2017


36017 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

Thot breaker >



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