Hi everyone! Just to say that they'll be no review today, and I won't be writing any reviews for a few weeks: I have a wrist operation next week so I'll be busy recovering from that and with PhD work. But I'll be back after a few weeks – see you then!
Trapped and Screwed reviews the legacy and future of Southern hip-hop. Reviewing Trap, Chopped and Screwed rap, Melodic rap, Drill, and others.
Friday, 27 February 2026
Friday, 20 February 2026
Review 7: Future – Save Me (2019)
Rating: 7.7
Future has two personas: 'Future' and 'Hndrxx'. The Future persona is characterised by high octane, braggadocious rap about money, sex, gangs and drugs, typically on a hard trap beat, and the latter is his Hndrxx one, where he sings about heartbreak, on softer R&B beats. The contrast was clearly created when Future released two albums with those two titles (Future, then Hndrxx), in two consecutive weeks in 2017, with those two different lyrical and production focuses: traditional trap vs R&B loneliness. This dichotomy creates a sense where displays of wealth, drugs, sex and mutually toxic (and destructive) relationships rapped about are presented as the cover, the drug to cover up the desire, at least in part of him, for a wholesome and fulfilling romantic relationship. This dichotomy is most strongly presented in his 2014 song 'Throwaway', and encapsulates most of Future's discography from the moments of weakness on I Never Liked You (2022), his underrated 2018 mixtape, Beast Mode 2, or his mixtape that started it all and totally revamped his career, Monster (2014). This dichotomy is well known and written about, although I'm not sure if it's penetrated through to someone who only has a casual familiarity with Future and his discography. I plan on writing much more about Future and his worldview in many more blog entries, but here I will focus on this particular EP.
Future's earlier 2019 album, Future Hndrxx Presents: The Wizrd, combined both sides, but erred more towards the Future persona. Save Me, Future's first and only EP, is a similar effort in that regard, again combining both, but errs much more towards the Hndrxx side. He begins with this with his crooning on the first song, 'XanaX Damage' where he sings about how he only wants a particular partner when he's struggling mentally:
Baby, if I want you, then I know there's somethin' wrong
I don't mean to ruin all the times we had alone
But I'm not my best with you, I'm so depressed with you
But it's so hard, I don't think I can exist without you
The song's production creates an effect which characterises the whole EP, which is that Future is sinking underwater somewhat. Not literally, or in a Chopped and Screwed-esque way, but the muddy, low-key production stands out from amongst his discography. The same is true in the next song, St. Lucia, where he errs to the Future persona. But even when bragging about his wealth, the women he's with and the exotic places he's visiting, he doesn't sound very happy or satisfied. The first lyric is 'Save Me', which is repeated in the introduction, and whilst I'm not sure, I think that he may be asking a girl to save him from his lifestyle, which may seem fun, but isn't ultimately satisfying. Amongst his most toxic lines in his discography can be found on this song (which is saying something) he raps 'Found out I cheated on her, she'll still feed me grapes'.
The next song, Please Tell Me has Future rapping about wanting to spend money on, and spoil his partner. This seems romantic in itself, but within the context of his discography and worldview, I think that this is part of his broader worldview of a mutually toxic relationship: he uses his partners for sex and status, and they use him for status and wealth.
The middle song returns to the Hndrxx POV, and is perhaps the best song on the EP, 'Shotgun', which has Future singing about how he wants a girl to ride shotgun with him, presumably representing being with him more broadly. It's a great song! The R&B-Trap production is a perfect fit, and Future really sings his heart out in the chorus. You can really tell attention to detail in the production, via small things like the sparkly piano notes dispersed throughout the song. The song also samples the 2006 Ciara song, 'Promise', which of course is notable due to her being his ex, having previously heavily inspired his breakup project Monster (2014) and HNDRXX (2017) as well as aspects of DS2 (2015). I can't help but feel that this likely isn't a coincidence: this wouldn't be the first time Future has used Ciara as a muse for his work, and is a touching callback to a previous relationship.
The following song, 'Government Official', largely returning to the Future persona, rapping about models, money and lavish living. Sensing a theme? He combines both on this project so that one can't help but notice both, even to one totally new to his discography. Returning to the name of the EP, it really does seem probable that this is really an appeal to a woman to save him from the hedonistic lifestyle he claims to enjoy. Note the contrast from the chorus and the final verse:
[Chorus]
I just went out to Morocco to do some recruitin' (Yeah, yeah)
Fuck the government official, we plugged with Putin (Yeah, yeah)
Got two twin sisters, yeah, they squirt, they be shootin' (Yeah, yeah)
Don't get the squirt-squirt on the shirt-shirt, be a fool (Yeah, yeah)
[Verse 3]
When I drink codeine, I get in my feelings (My-my feelings)
All I wanna see you in the same place as I'm in (I'm-I'm in)
I like takin' ecstasy, it made me a millionaire (Made me a millionaire)
It made me get emotional with the bitches (Emotional with the bitches)
This contrast is part of the reason why I began my reviewing of Future's discography with Save Me, despite it being easily one of his least known projects: the dichotomy is so clear and needs so little legwork for me to explain from the rest of his discography.
The next and penultimate song is a curious one: here's the chorus:
My bitch asked me why I always stay extra-d out
All my whips got extras now
Why so many hoes on the low? You know
Why my niggas extras? (Extra, extra, extra)
Why my bitch so extra?
I'm always on extra
From the production and Future's singing, it's clearly a sad song, but one could read the lyrics and be forgiven for thinking that it was an upbeat, high energy bragging song. I think (with help from the Genius annotations) that he's saying that his everything that he has in excess/extra (women, cars, money, and friends) aren't bringing him to happiness. But for me the beat isn't amazing: it sounds like it belongs on a Drake album, and is a little too.. loose.
This leads to the final song, 'Love Thy Enemies' which is a brilliant song, and if you listen to one song from this EP, I recommend this one. There's a soft guitar that provides a gentle backdrop from his singing, where he sings about an ex-partner. He sings:
I've been possessed, they wanna take my soul
Save my flesh, I’m in need of your love
Tracin' back to orbit is where we met, met
You wasn't considerate to how I was feelin', yeah
How am I explain this to my children?
I need to find the words without soundin' foolish
Caught in temporary illusions, yeah
Treat me like property, but you pursuin'
I need angels, I need angels, yeah
I need answers, who I can't trust?
Fighting through breakups, revelation
Complicated obligations
This again returns to what I wrote earlier about how not only does Future objectify his partners, but they also objectify him. He sings about loving his enemies (in this case, ex-partners) and how roses he sent have died, and it ends the EP on a tender note. It's not a perfect EP: due to the lack of songs, even one or two songs being comparatively weak mean that the quality as a whole is shaken. The beat for 'Extra' is particularly lacking in my opinion Some of the songs are just a bit too short, particularly the first and final ones, and his bragging songs in 'St. Lucia' and 'Government Official' are blunted by his generally murky approach, meaning they have less intensity and energy. Whilst that might have been his intent, he simply has better ones from other projects, like 'Thought It Was a Drought' from DS2(2015) or '712PM' from I Never Liked You (2022).
But why review this album? As mentioned before, this wasn't the first or last time when Future made an R&B project, and neither is it the only time he has engaged in heartbreak, romantic sorrow or drug abuse: there are elements of it on every project of his, and like I said, this is not the first project where he has combined the Future and Hndrxx angles. The answer is that this is simply is his most experimental project, and it led to brilliant results. On the surface level, it's unique in a range of factual measures: it's his shortest project, coming in at just over 20 minutes, and it's his only EP, in contrast to his ocean of mixtapes and albums.
But more importantly, he takes risks: whether its his sad rapping about 'Big booty from my city' on 'Extra' or the vocal effects on 'Love Thy Enemies'. He and his producer even left in a cough in the verse I pasted above from 'Love Thy Enemies', in between 'Caught in temporary illusions, yeah/Treat me like property, but you pursuin'''. Furthermore, it's heartfelt, and has a lo-fi sense of capturing a specific mood. His avant-garde, high fashion, more 'artistic' approach is on full display in the music videos for five of the seven songs on the project, which I recommend. Its closest comparison is HNDRXX, but whilst that album was polished, radio-friendly and took you on a full journey, Save Me is murky, has distorted production, and gives us a snapshot of a range of moods, quite possibly concerning the same girl at different times. This EP gives the sense that, as the title implies, Future is in an emotional crisis.
Friday, 13 February 2026
Review 6: Kid Cudi – Entergalactic (2022)
Rating: 7.8
Finally got my head right, it's a new me
It's like I got heaven in my sights now, beauty I see
When it seems it's all too much
And your soul, it can't be rushed, no, no (Yeah, yo)
When the going's gettin' tough
And you know you can't give up, no way (Yeah, ooh-woah)
[Chorus]
And I'm in a new mode (Been searchin' for so long now lately)
Another level (I found some peace within)
And I'm in a new mode (I pray for so, so long now lately)
Another level (Oh, let's begin)
Friday, 6 February 2026
Review 5: Bun B – II Trill (2008)
The rap duo Underground Kingz (1987-2007) represented Port Arthur, Texas, but are often associated with Houston, where they were affiliated with the Screwed Up Click. The duo, which had the straight shooter Bun B alongside the more idiosyncratic Pimp C, have a legendary status in Southern rap. After a series of successful albums, Pimp C was imprisoned from 2002-5 for violation of probation for a weapons charge, and during this time, Bun B released Trill in 2005. After they reunited, they released their self-titled album, Underground Kingz (2007). However, Pimp C passed away four months later in December 2007 from drug complications, bringing a tragic end to the duo, notwithstanding a posthumous UGK album in 2009, UGK 4 Life.
Pimp C's passing dominates this album. Constantly referenced and tributed by Bun B and his collaborators, one can immediately tell the impact Pimp C had on Southern hip-hop, and how keenly his loss was felt. But don't make the mistake of thinking that his passing leads to a sorrowful tone of the album: the pace for much of it is fast, hard hitting, and aggressive. Also, don't make the mistake of thinking that this topic dominates the lyrics either: other key themes involve social and political commentary, love for and his representation of the South, braggadocio, and his origins and how far he's come.
There's nothing wrong with wallowing in despair, especially when mourning a friend, but Bun B wastes no time making it clear that he (mostly) doesn't plan on doing that. He immediately begins the album, with a tribute to Pimp C but then follows up with rapping about his success and prowess. The next two songs are not dissimilar: Bun reps his authenticity on 'That's Gangsta' and on the 3rd, 'Damn I'm Cold', he more than keeps pace with an in-prime Lil Wayne. The fourth song, 'You're Everything' is perhaps the strongest, and is all about the South, which is reflected in the song's features: Rick Ross from Florida, David Banner from Mississippi, 8Ball & MJG from Tennessee, and of course Bun B from Texas are all represented. More broadly, across the whole album, Louisiana with Lil Wayne, and Georgia with Jazze Pha, are also represented.
Even the songs which I don't necessarily love the beat for, like the 5th song, 'I Luv That', are held up by Bun's rapping: he enunciates clearly, and his rapping style is the opposite of chaotic. Songs 8 and 9 are perhaps the most interesting ones on the project, though for very different reasons. Song 8, 'Get Cha Issue' has Bun rapping solo (with spoken word interludes), critiquing in the first verse priests/preachers, in the second, the police, and in the third, politicians. He isn't dissing them without qualification, but in regard to their faults. Having to restrain the impulse to copy the lyrics to the entire song, here's the first verse and interlude:
Hey, Mr. Preacher Man, what do you say?
See you out here tryin to save yourself some people today
You got the good book in your hand and the robe on your back
Steppin out your 2008 Escalade Cadillac
You standin up in the pulpit, lookin out at the pew
Preachin the good word and tellin Christian folks what to do
You talkin 'bout the sinners are sinnin, but let's keep it true
Ain't nobody in this church a bigger sinner than you
It's chapter this, verse that, pass the plate, pay your tithes
Puttin rings on your fingers (fingers) and rims on your ride
You don't need yourself a thousand dollar suit, just to pray in
(Just to pray in) Or a million dollar house for you to stay in (nope)
Marriage counselin, but cheatin on ya own wife
Undercover pedophile, a heathen in ya own right
Let the do'knob hit ya where the good Lord split ya
You's a dirty motherfucker (so) it's time to get'cha issue, c'mon
The good book say, that he who is without sin cast the first stone
Mayne every time I walk inside the church house
The preacher cuttin his eyes at me
But I know he can't throw nothin my way
He dirtier than I am, ridin down the street shinin, ballin
Hollerin at broads, hollerin at dudes on the cool
That's why niggas don't go to church now
It ain't the message, it's the motherfuckin messenger
Let us move on
I love my brother Pimp C and man I miss him every day
Yeah my heart still hurts (hurts) and the pain's still fresh (fresh)
But I'mma put God first, to keep that pressure off my chest
And remind me that I'm blessed to have had him, as a friend (friend)
A ride or die homie that was with me 'til the end ('til the end)
Real talk, man we was closer than kin
And I know, that I'll never have a partner like that again (like that again)
So Chad Butler I just want you to know
I keep ya memory close, I'm never lettin it go (lettin it go)
And they gon' always remember that you was here mayne (mayne)
Cause I'mma make 'em remember, that's why I'm here mayne (mayne)
Yeah it's still hard (hard) and I still cry (cry)
But you and God keep me strong so I'mma still try (try)
Reppin this UGK now won't I (huh)
Cause through your music you live forever so Trill (Trill) don't die
Sunday, 1 February 2026
What is Chopped and Screwed Music?
Invented by DJ Screw in the 90s, and popularised by him and his collective, the Screwed Up Click (S.U.C). Put very basically, Chopped and Screwed music has two main sonic elements: the Chopped bit, whereby some parts of a song are repeated - a line or phrase usually - and the Screwed bit, which is slowed down. This in turn changes the sound of the artists voice. Chopped and Screwed rap is a key part of Houston hip-hop, and the subculture, DJ Screw, and the sound he invented is a strong source of pride in many Houstonians and Texans today. As part of this, despite the genre typically being known as Chopped and Screwed, it's best not to refer to a song or project as being Chopped and Screwed, unless it was actually worked on by DJ Screw. Rather, albums with this technique applied are sometimes called Chopped and Slowed, or Chopped not Slopped, or something else. Though most famous in the context of Houston, Texan and Southern rap more generally, this technique can be applied not only to hip-hop, but also to R&B, pop and other genres.
The most important project, from a historical point of view, is likely 'June 27th', a 37 minute legendary freestyle helmed by DJ Screw and rapped by members of the S.U.C. The album 3 'N The Mornin' Part Two was also a key project by DJ Screw and the S.U.C, and is often considered one of the greatest and most influential hip-hop albums of all time. Despite DJ Screw's tragic passing in 2000, at only 29, his incredible work ethic was such that he made hundreds of mixtapes, with some still being released. The S.U.C also released many projects, with key members include Fat Pat and his brother Big Hawk, who were both murdered in 1998 and 2006 respectively. Other notable members include Z-Ro, E.S.G and Lil' Keke.
The Chopped and Screwed genre has gone on to exert influence on various areas of hip-hop that you've probably listened to. Trap, Cloud rap, Psychedelic rap, the Slowed + Reverb sound, and others. But what about albums and mixtapes that have been fully Chopped and Slowed today? There are many albums that have received a Chopped and Slowed version from various DJs, some officially released with the original artist, which appear on streaming platforms. Big albums like this include Metro Boomin's Heroes and Villains (2022) and Don Toliver's Heaven Or Hell (2020).
But most Chopped and Slowed albums don't receive this treatment. The Chopstars, who did both of those two albums, release lots of Chopped and Slowed versions of albums and mixtapes on AudioMack here (good luck with navigating the website and app! Though the app is a little better). They do non hip-hop albums also: at the time of writing this, they recently did a Chopped not Slopped version of Olivia Dean's 2025 album The Art of Loving, a Neo-soul/R&B/Pop record. Other than them, there are individual DJs who do the same, like DJ Tramaine713, on a range of platforms. Sometimes on individual websites, YouTube, AudioMack, or other platforms. Each DJ has their own style of approaching a record: some mix up the order of the songs intentionally, and some make it so that each song blends into the next naturally. There are other differences: I recommend experimenting!
Chopped and Screwed is a really special genre, and a unique subculture: I like listening to the standard version of an album/mixtape, maybe during the day, then listen to the Chopped and Slowed version, perhaps at night, and ideally in one sitting. It suits a late night vibe well, with speakers with a solid bass. I think listening to an album normally, then the Chopped and Slowed version, allows one to appreciate the differences in tempo and which lines are repeated more than just listening to the Chopped and Slowed version. But it's up to you!
Finally, returning to my blog, the 'Screwed' in this blog’s name is a tribute to the legacy of DJ Screw and the genre he pioneered, but a song isn't Screwed if it wasn't by the Originator. Labelling the music with the precision it deserves, I therefore use ‘chopped and slowed’ to describe a particular song or album, reserving the term ‘Screwed’ for DJ Screw’s original work. But the genre as a whole is typically referred to as 'Chopped and Screwed' which I will still use to refer to the genre and subculture.


