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My Turn

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Download links and information about My Turn by Baby Lil. This album was released in 2020 and it belongs to Hip Hop/R&B, Rap genres. It contains 20 tracks with total duration of 01:00:44 minutes.

Artist: Baby Lil
Release date: 2020
Genre: Hip Hop/R&B, Rap
Tracks: 20
Duration: 01:00:44
Buy on Songswave €1.71
Buy on Songswave €2.17
Buy on iTunes $27.99
Buy on iTunes $14.99
Buy on iTunes $13.99
Buy on iTunes $24.99
Buy on iTunes $11.99
Buy on iTunes $11.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Get Ugly 2:36
2. Heatin Up (featuring Gunna) 2:57
3. How 3:02
4. Grace (featuring 42 Dugg) 3:23
5. Woah 3:03
6. Live Off My Closet (featuring Future) 2:53
7. Same Thing 2:43
8. Emotionally Scarred 3:18
9. Commercial (featuring Lil Uzi Vert) 3:34
10. Forever (featuring Lil Wayne) 3:22
11. Can't Explain 3:01
12. No Sucker (featuring Moneybagg Yo) 3:09
13. Sum 2 Prove 3:26
14. We Should (featuring Young Thug) 2:57
15. Catch The Sun (From " Queen & Slim: The Soundtrack ") 3:02
16. Consistent 3:01
17. Gang Signs 2:50
18. Hurtin 2:44
19. Forget That (featuring Rylo Rodriguez) 2:47
20. Solid 3:06

Details

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If we’re comparing it to the year prior, 2019 was something of a quiet one for Atlanta MC Lil Baby. Sure, he featured on singles by DaBaby, Lykke Li and Yo Gotti, among others, but ever since 2018’s Street Gossip, Lil Baby seemed content simply to share the sauce with collaborators. With the release of My Turn, however, Baby has declared that he’s finished letting anyone else spread their wings and is ready to reclaim his spot atop hip-hop’s throne.
My Turn is of course built on Lil Baby’s verbose and ever formidable bar construction and under-heralded wordplay. Songs like “Grace” and “No Sucker” find him in fine form, rapping, as he admits outright on track 13, that he’s still got “Sum 2 Prove”. Guests on the project lean towards animated yet high-calibre MCs like Future, Lil Uzi Vert and Lil Wayne, while frequent collaborators Quay Global, Twysted Genius and Tay Keith hold down the production. Songs like “Emotionally Scarred” and “Hurtin” show a more vulnerable side of the MC, but their respective follow-ups “Commercial” and “Forget That” show us that the turn-up is never far. “Woah”, the 2019 hit that gave an already popular dance a proper anthem, is here, as is the Hit-Boy-produced “Catch the Sun”, which first appeared on Queen & Slim: The Soundtrack—two songs Lil Baby may have included to remind us that we’ve always gotten the best of him, even when we’ve wanted more.