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Albums Reviews

Lil Wayne

I Am Not a Human Being
Cash Money/Young Money
[Four stars]

Nov 10, 2010

What’d you expect, At Folsom Prison? Lil Wayne has released his eighth studio album while still incarcerated on New York’s Rikers Island, serving the final weeks of a sentence for attempted criminal possession of a weapon. But gritty jailhouse music this ain’t.
I Am Not a Human Being, which Wayne cut before leaving for prison, is a party from the start. The record opens with Wayne and Drake dropping raunchy boasts (and STD-themed insults) over a jittery synth-swathed beat. “I am not a human/Shout to all my moon men,” Weezy raps. You can lock up Lil Wayne, but his wacked-out spirit remains somewhere way out there in the Milky Way.

The album has the loose-limbed feel of the rapper’s many mixtapes. There are spirited guest appearances by Wayne’s Young Money protégés Nicki Minaj and Lil Twist, and beats that range from the power-chord-packed rock rap of the title track to the sultry hip-hop/doo-wop of ”˜With You.’ In Wayne’s patented way, the songs feel tossed-off: He has a gift for making virtuosity sound casual, while delivering laugh-out-loud punch lines every few seconds. He coins a new verb (“Bill Gatin’”) and rhymes “fornicate” with “pajamas say,” “pronunciate,” “ovulate” and “time of day.” You won’t hear a funnier record all year. Jailbird or civilian, human or moon man, Lil Wayne is pop’s most reliable deliverer of unadulterated fun. He’s also the greatest rapper alive.

Key Tracks: ”˜Gonorrhea,’ ”˜Popular,’ ”˜Bill Gates’

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