With its macabre textures and sinister flows, the fifth installment of CEO Trayle’s Happy Halloween series unspools the rapper’s fears and sorrows into one of the most original rap albums of the year.
On the ninth track of CEO Trayle’s HH5, the rapper is at war with himself. The song, “Alter Ego 2,” pits the sensitive and reasonable Trayle against his twisted counterpart C4, a voice in his head that moves like he has a death wish. A 2013 home invasion that left Trayle with seven gunshot wounds is the center of this track, and it continues to haunt him, even though he wants to move on. Telling C4 that he has a son and a future in rap now, those days of fear and bitterness are gone. But C4 is set on dragging him back into the mud. “Nigga must think you Superman, them seven shots ain’t teach you nothin’,” he raps with a slithery inflection, a ghoulish echo lingering in the background. The pressure doesn’t go anywhere; the song ends anti-climatically with the promise of money snapping Trayle out of his daze, temporarily pushing C4 to the back of his mind. Most CEO Trayle songs aren’t structured this way, and it illustrates why HH5 is an adventurous and bonkers dissection of the thinking you normally try to bury.
Trayle is a nomadic rapper by definition. For the first 13 years of his life, he lived in the Bronx, eventually moved to Alabama, and then settled in Atlanta a couple of years later. His music doesn’t have roots in a specific city: You can hear traces of Gucci Mane, Lil Wayne, 50 Cent, Young Thug, No Limit, and Chief Keef, and the latter feels like the inspiration behind his insularity. Ultimately, the lyrics are so personal, the fast-switching flows so irreverent, and the tone so uniquely offbeat, that comparisons to other rappers can’t tell the whole story.
Across HH5, almost every track centers around a different one of his strengths. The album is effective because no single song is a perfect snapshot of his subtleties. On “Mathematician/Blackout,” his delivery gradually evolves over the eerie instrumental; he tiptoes at first, then eventually transforms into a possessed member of the Migos. With “Chainsmoking,” the mood skips all over the place: The hook sounds stressful, a few of the reflections are chilling, and a couple punchlines just sound sleek. He laments his drug dependency on “Chokehold,” running through all of his remedies to the point of hypnosis. “I Love You, But…” has the heartbroken lyrics of a mid-2010s Future mixtape cut (“Bitch, I love you, but we can’t keep doing this/If I don’t got these Percocets, might end up losing it”), but his creeping flow gives the song an uneasy bent.
Despite CEO Trayle’s range, HH5 does have a sense of cohesiveness. It’s mostly because of how he invites us into his psyche, a feeling rarely captured outside of a novel told in first person. Trayle doesn’t write ahead of time, an approach that produces a true stream of consciousness: Timelines converge, unrelated thoughts thread together, and the mood shifts drastically. That lyrical process can feel meandering if it’s not all clicking: For example, on “Craxk Flow,” Trayle’s whispery lilts doesn’t add any flavor to the track, and on “Unusual,” he’s drowned out by an 808-heavy beat that sounds like it’s been churned out by the Quality Control assembly line. But these problems don’t appear that often. The beats, crafted by a collection of familiar, if unheralded names (Stribb, Section 8, and Trauma Tone, who co-produced one of Chief Keef’s masterpieces, “Blew My High”), don’t jump out at you. But they do form the album’s anxious and sinister backbone.
The sound of HH5 brushes up against the melodies of the YSL orbit, the intensity of Chicago drill, and the soul cleansing of the Deep South, but it’s so specific and unconventional that he’s also slightly removed from those influences. Trayle’s nuances come through most clearly on “Pass It On”; he describes a woman who wants him, rapping, “She tryna eat my flesh and bone.” That should have been a throwaway line, but, instead, it’s instantly memorable, putting a freaky spin on an ordinary rap flex. That’s HH5, nothing is ordinary. Trayle unfurls new flows erratically, his fears threaten to oust his conscience, and somehow, like the best horror movies, it’s all deeply serious and darkly funny at the same time.
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