Chris Webby’s 4th EP “88 Milligrams” Prod. by Scott Storch Comes Off the “Wednesday” Sequence with Chris’ Biggest Materials (EP Overview)
Norwalk, Connecticut emcee Chris Webby tapping in with The Roots’ unique keyboardist & former Aftermath Leisure in-house producer Scott Storch for his 4th EP. Getting launched to him throughout my senior yr of highschool when his full-length studio debut album Chemically Imbalanced underneath his personal label 80HD Music in tandem with MNRK Music Group, he would go on to spend the late 2010s & the 2020s up till final Christmas doing the Wednesday sequence of mixtapes. 88 Milligrams linking up with one in all my private favourite producers had me considering it was gonna be his most interesting prolonged play of his profession.
After the “ASMR” intro, “Excellent Storm” begins the EP by pushing the arms on the doomsday clock over an instrumental that Scott Storch would’ve made within the 2000s throughout & succeeding his time with Aftermath whereas “In My Baggie” works in some pianos to speak about taking tablets off the shelf at 12. “Put ‘Em Excessive” cinematically cautions that nobody needs to be a hero tonight whereas the trap-influenced “Operating Scared” talks about taking part in the playing cards till they hit.
“Pyro” nears the top of 88 Milligrams with a beat throwing it again to both “Sweet Store” or “Only a Lil Bit” off of 50 Cent’s sophomore effort The Bloodbath celebrating it’s 2 decade anniversary earlier this spring speaking about developing within the spot to burn the place down main into the cloudy “Rollercoaster” sending off the EP with Chris evaluating life to a journey the way in which it goes up & down for roughly 5 & a half minutes.
As any person who bought launched to him over a decade in the past, Chris Webby has come a great distance from his frat rap days previously 15 years & 88 Milligrams comes proper off the conclusion of the 80HD Music founder’s prolific Wednesday tapes with probably the most I’ve loved his music shortly & simply his most cohesive EP on my opinion. Scott Storch’s manufacturing takes a nostalgic flip to when he was everywhere in the airwaves as an against adapting to trendy sounds or strategies like having a producer tag on Dummy Boy & Chris will get in his baggie lyrically.
Rating: 9/10



