Trust Fund Babies
| Lil Wayne, Rich the KidTrust Fund Babies
rust Fund Babies is a collaborative mixtape by American rappers Lil Wayne and Rich the Kid. It was released on October 1, 2021, by Young Money Entertainment, Republic Records, and Rostrum Records. It contains a sole guest appearance by American rapper YG. The mixtape's lead single, "Feelin' Like Tunechi", was released alongside the mixtape. -Wikipedia
Critic Reviews
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HipHop DX
LIL WAYNE & RICH THE KID TRUST FUND BABIES IS HELD BACK BY A DISPARITY IN TALENT.
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Pitchfork
The duo’s collaborative mixtape isn’t a complete disaster, and it’s nice to hear Lil Wayne rap adequately again.
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The Spectrum
The first collaborative album between the two shines at times, yet also disappoints.
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Fantastic HipHop
With a slew of fun Lil Wayne verses, this definitely isn’t the worst album of the year, but between Rich The Kid having no talent and the style being derived from sickening mainstream trends, this album is one of the most forgettable in Wayne’s massive catalog.
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Ratings Game Music
No one in the world expected a collaboration album with Lil Wayne and Rich The Kid… Surprisingly, their chemistry is pretty solid on Trust Fund Babies.
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Legends Will Never Die
Wayne’s verses are just ok by his standards, but I can’t say the same for Rich’s at all & there’s no real chemistry between them on here. On top of that, the production is astoundingly cut-rate.
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Exclaim!
With Trust Fund Babies, both artists can address the naysayers while having fun and focusing on the music. It's this visceral sense of relief and the quality of the bangers they cooked up that make this farfetched team-up much more than a throwaway mixtape.
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In Review Online
Notable about Lil Wayne and Rich the Kid’s collab on Trust Fund Babies is just how much fun they’re having here in a natural, impromptu kind of way.
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Hardwood and Hollywood
I also felt like the chemistry was a bit lacking on this album, as it didn’t feel like Rich the Kid and Weezy were always on the same page and meshing well. This album was by no means awful, but it’s not something I see myself coming back to a ton in the future.
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AllMusic
Given that the mixtape format was the domain where Wayne made some of his most exciting breakthroughs as he was developing his style early on, it's great to hear faint echoes of that excitement on the strongest moments of Trust Fund Babies.
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PFC Rico
After years of health worries, label issues, and terribly gruesome raps between I am not a human being II and Free Weezy Album, it’s just nice to hear Wayne rapping properly again. It might not be a throwback, or a throwback to its glory days, or whatever hype you’ll come across, but it’s good enough that this half-silly Rich the Kid business deal isn’t a disaster. full.
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