Fmb Dz and Sada Baby dropped the “Dripple Dragons” video today. It features the best of decades of visual tropes, from ’70s psychedelia, ’00s grime, and ’90s commercialism. Everything pulls together to make a banging video. The delivery of both Detroit artists may be hard for the uninitiated ear to grow accustomed to, but Detroit still spits. If you want bars, “Dripple Dragon” has bars flying until the last measure of the song.
“Make a Hundred Thousands off Rappin I Ain Average”
Fmb Dz is the definition of underrated Detroit talent. “Dripple Dragons” is another addition to a long list of tracks that make up his discography. Like most people out of the city, his lyrics are arguably more important than his delivery. His songwriting sticks in your head, and it’s not hard to find yourself repeating his lines. That’s how Detroit does it.
The atmosphere of Detroit music is visceral, dangerous, and weathered. “Dripple Dragons” is more of that straight banging music, if you’ve never sold drugs, it might seem a little distasteful. Fmb Dz isn’t the type to pull punches. He raps what he knows, and Detroit ain’t where corn grows.
Scuba Steve Flows
Detroit’s Sada Baby drops another verse on “Dripple Dragons” which proves his energy, versatility, and talent. Sada is the king of dribbling bars, keeping the timing of a track better than a metronome could. Calling his music drinking music don’t even approach it. Get fucked up whenever he’s on the mic. It’s what makes sense.
The aesthetics and moves in the video are tight. Sada’s fit is on point as always, Fmb Dz got that drip, and the whole scene is smooth. Minimal editing which isn’t gaudy keeps the video for “Dripple Dragons” sexy and smart. In Detroit, winter is still for partying. It ain’t even cold yet, bruh.