
That's Hip-Hop
We're 3 high school friends who share a common passion for Hip Hop. Each of us have created our own albums, performed or started our own channels, but this time, we are collaborating together to share our common bond over our love for hip hop. We are taking a journey into the music. Going album by album to dissect and share our experiences with the tracks. We release a new episode every Monday. Check us out and let us know what albums we should review next!
That's Hip-Hop
#124 DARKNESS AND OTHER COLORS ALBUM REVIEW - CHINO XL
In episode #124 of That’s Hip Hop, the crew dives deep into Darkness and Other Colors, the final lyrical testament from the razor-tongued titan, Chino XL. This isn’t just an album review—it’s a eulogy, an autopsy, and a celebration all rolled into one. Straight from the 909, hosts Mark, Ali, and Isaiah peel back the layers of Chino’s bar-heavy brilliance, unpacking his haunting wordplay, cerebral punchlines, and the venomous poetry he’s built his name on. With comparisons to lyrical giants like Lupe Fiasco and Jay Electronica, they explore how Chino fused battle rap intensity with literary craftsmanship, crafting an album that’s equal parts brutal honesty and surgical rhyme precision. Even amid controversy over its early posthumous release, the album stands tall as a final offering from a hip-hop assassin whose pen bled raw truth and unfiltered genius.
The conversation takes a sobering turn as they reflect on the album’s chilling themes—suicidal ideation, mental warfare, and existential anguish—all woven into tracks named after colors of emotion and decay. The trio breaks down standout cuts like “Words in the Color of Death,” marveling at Chino’s ability to hit with philosophical depth and shock-value ferocity in equal measure. They recount their earliest memories of discovering his work, from ’90s mixtapes to infamous disses by Tupac, painting a picture of an MC who never bowed to the mainstream but instead carved out his own viciously complex lane. With references to seance collages, spacebar metaphors, and glaciers melting underfoot, Chino XL's final record isn’t just heard—it’s endured. This episode is a lyrical pilgrimage, a masterclass in storytelling, and a heartfelt farewell to one of the most dangerous pens hip-hop has ever known.