It was this unorthodox style of delivery that had many listening to him even before the 1017 Thug series, myself included. Recording Industry Association of America.Where to begin, well let me begin by saying this album/mixtape or whatever you want to call it, is not bad at all.
CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) ( link) "Young Thug Rises Above the Drama on 'Barter 6 '".
"Review: Young Thug Interrupts His MVP Status With a Bunt on 'Barter 6′". ^ a b Garvey, Meaghan (April 24, 2015)."Review: Young Thug's Quirky Debut, 'Barter 6,' Ain't Got No Hits". ^ a b Charity, Justin (April 17, 2015)."Album Review: Young Thug Exists In His Own Weird World On 'Barter 6 '". ^ a b "Barter 6 by Young Thug reviews".^ "Young Thug Chart History: Hot 100"."Young Thug '90 Percent of My Closet Is Women's Clothing '". ^ Schaeffer, Amy (September 27, 2015).^ a b c "Reviews for Barter 6 by Young Thug".^ "Young Thug Threatens Lil Wayne Over Carter 6 Album".^ "Here's Why Young Thug Just Changed The Title Of 'Carter 6 '"."Lil Wayne Blasts Cash Money: 'I Want Off This Label '". Lil Wayne: A Timeline Of The Rapper's 'Carter 6' Beef : Entertainment : Design & Trend".
Consequence stated that " Barter 6 feels like a step in the right direction rather than a destination, proof that Thugger can put together a complete package even if it's less than adventurous". Billboard stated that the album "offers cohesion and unity, though maybe at the expense of the exciting, what-will-happen next feel of past mixtapes". Rolling Stone critic Joe Levy said most of the songs sound "boastful and sad in the same moment", abandoning the frenzied tunefulness of Young Thug's past work in favor of indistinctly "syrupy tracks". In a less enthusiastic review, Spin magazine's Dan Weiss felt Young Thug sounded lazy on Barter 6, "sitting around waiting to ascend to the next level of his sound, for inspiration to strike, though with such a laid-back, inscrutable flow, he might have to activate that change himself". HipHopDX called Barter 6 "the definitive mainstream strip club album of the modern era". Pitchfork later named Barter 6 the 14th best record of 2015 while ranking the mixtape's opening track "Constantly Hating" as the year's sixth best song. Meaghan Garvey of Pitchfork stated that " Barter 6 feels like a 50-minute performance of what rap, as a form, can do: rap that need not transcend itself, towards High Art on one hand or commercial art on the other, in order to succeed in 2015". Ĭomplex said "on Barter 6, a rapper frequently dismissed as a druggie dance trapper inverts himself, yielding a passionate and personal record", adding that his "visceral illustrations are one-of-a-kind, and he communicates joy, frustration, and dread with unique clarity". Aggregator AnyDecentMusic? gave it 6.5 out of 10, based on their assessment of the critical consensus.
#YOUNG THUG BARTER 6 RELEASE DATE PROFESSIONAL#
At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from professional publications, the mixtape received an average score of 72, based on 13 reviews. Critical reception Professional ratings Aggregate scoresīarter 6 was met with generally positive reviews. The mixtape's lead single, " Check", was released on April 1, 2015, as well an accompanying music video, the song peaked at number 100 on the US Billboard Hot 100. Marketing and sales īarter 6 was released by 300 Entertainment on April 17, 2015, and charted at number 22 on the US Billboard 200, selling 17,000 copies in its first week. He furthered the ill feeling by announcing his first show to promote the project in Hollygrove, New Orleans, one of the neighborhoods in which Wayne was raised. įollowing a threat of legal action, Thug announced days prior to the release that the project was to be re-titled Barter 6, in line with the typical Blood gang practice of replacing the letter "C" with "B". Despite this, Thug claimed that he was not trying to be disrespectful, and that Wayne was his "idol". Wayne subsequently became involved in legal proceedings against Cash Money and publicly criticized the label's owner (and Thug's mentor) Birdman, as well as responding negatively to Thug's decision to name the album after him. This created controversy, as Wayne's scheduled album Tha Carter V was repeatedly delayed amid a dispute between himself and Cash Money Records, who had reportedly refused to release the album. The mixtape was initially titled Carter 6, in continuation of the naming sequence of Lil Wayne's successful Tha Carter album series.