This tangled romance is the crux of A Forsaken Lover’s Plea, Chuck’s most comprehensive solo
project since Consumers Park, his 2018 debut. The five years that have made up the interim
time, not unlike the four years he spent making unheard beats, were teeming with hard-learned
lessons, even if not all of those lessons are available on streaming. For one, he found that if he
applied himself with patience and discipline, he’d be surprised at what he could accomplish: “It’s
cliche,” he says, “but if you put in a bunch of reps, you’re going to get brolic.” Like muscle mass
on a body, the reps manifest themselves in a distinctive bulkening, adding compelling new
layers to his singular sound. Where Consumers Park remained steadfast in the 90s-borne,
boom-bap ethos that forged him, A Forsaken Lover’s Plea sounds markedly lush, candid rhymes
bolstered by a slew of guest producers — including The Alchemist, Animoss, and NV. Chuck’s
own production feels current without ditching its previous homeliness, a seamless compliment to
his honest, lived-in raps.
Yet there’s also the quotidian, sometimes grueling, up-and-down of a committed relationship to
something like hip-hop — cathartic at best, and unforgiving at worst. Though rap-as-girlfriend is
another cliche he’s wary of, his lasting affair with the music has taught him rough lessons, not
unlike real-life courtships, of humility, patience, and
process. “I’m grateful for everything I’ve done,” he says; but as would be true for any long-term
partner, “I’ve got much more to offer.”
For Chuck, that process has beginnings in New York City’s public high school system, where
over time, he connected with members of his former collective, the Capital STEEZ-founded Pro
Era. As an in-house producer for the group, he conjured distinctly gritty soundscapes
reminiscent of an East-Coast legacy, but simultaneously suggestive of its potential future. 2018
found him eager to reckon between these prongs as a solo artist; on his debut record, he balanced lush production with searing storytelling, somewhere between witty prophet and well-
studied student-turned-teacher. But as the years went by and his involvement with Pro Era waned, he found himself collaborating with a fresher crop of New York MCs, less infatuated with
East-Coast yesterdays than newer-sounding tomorrows. Features consulted for 2020’s Too
Afraid to Dance, a 15-minute EP, tell a dual story about each of these narrative stems:
coexisting with Ka, a long-tenured soldier of New York’s hip-hop underground, are Navy Blue
and Caleb Giles, among the region’s newest torchbearers.
On A Forsaken Lover’s Plea, Chuck taps a number of longtime collaborators, each sharing a
familiar 90s-New-York backdrop — Remy Banks, Joey Bada$$, Erick the Architect — without
sounding like he’s trapped in the past. After all, the record is
less about yearning for history than reckoning with it, the weight of time being more of an engine
than an anchor. With examining yesterday comes examining oneself; after a decade spent
eulogizing New York’s golden age, he’s turning that focus inward, eulogizing the version of
himself he’s steadily learning to outgrow. On the title track, a Graymatter-produced conversation
with hip-hop about shortcomings and tensions, he admits to being “Too G to take a knee” — less
about ignorant pride, and more about the patient resolve that’s not only brought him to his
current standing, but is poised to pave the way for both his, and New York rap’s, future. “I’m not
giving up,” he says. “All these niggas are like ‘I love so and so,’ or ‘he’s my favorite rapper,’ but
not me. I’ve gotta keep going.”
Veranstalter: Greyzone