Big Sean: Mixtape Mode Versus Album Mode


We examine Big Sean two ways: album mode and mixtape mode.

Big Sean has a talent turning his Ls to Ws. While the Detroit rapper does not typically enter the “top five” discussion, and the quality his bars have come under scrutiny in the past, he’s always found a way to bounce back (!) with an undeniable song. He’s a successful rapper – Grammy nominations, multiple hit songs, and several platinum albums. He’s a goy, charming guy who can still be corny, shameless, and unafraid to commit to the dumbest puns. And we love him for it.

This is the start a new feature at HotNewHipHop where we’ll break down a rapper’s discography in two different mediums: their mixtapes versus their albums. Some rappers work better in the mixtape medium and vice versa. Kicking it f, we’ll look to break down how Big Sean operates as an artist when in mixtape mode versus album mode.

Get your keyboards at the ready for the comment section debate.


The Highs & Lows

Big Sean: Mixtape Mode Versus Album Mode

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While the distinction between mixtapes and albums have become blurred in recent years, the general idea mixtapes acting as a building ground for a new or upcoming artist hasn’t changed. For the rapper, the mixtape can represent a no-frills vehicle for their work. Meanwhile, the phrase ‘album mode’ can come with enough baggage to cripple even the most hardened artists. In the case Big Sean, his early mixtapes, a mix original music and freestyles, were adeptly used to further develop his rap persona and establish a growing fanbase.

Big Sean meeting Kanye West at a Detroit radio station, which would lead to his signing on G.O.O.D. Music, played a big role in the narrative for his Finally Famous series mixtapes, which would eventually culminate in his debut album the same name. His breakout for the wider mainstream audience would arrive on the Cruel Summer single “Clique,” a posse track built from Sean’s own demo. “Clique” and “Mercy” are the two tracks that showcased a Big Sean in full bloom, ready to seize his moment. But those tracks were, in fact, the culmination seven years artist development documented in the Finally Famous mixtapeseries.

Big Sean came up in the era Internet blog rap, when indie and alternative rappers built fanbases entirely online. The sound blog rap was amorphous, with rappers like Mac Miller, Lil B, Kid Cudi, Curren$y and the Cool Kids all fitting under one umbrella. Around this time, mixtapes were making a shift from rappers simply riffing over popular beats to an artistic showcase that used original production, Sean was caught somewhere in the middle. He played this to his advantage and the sound the Finally Famous series reflected this too: diverse and looking to please just about everyone. For the fans G.O.O.D. Music, Sean worked in the overt Kanye influences and allusions: goy wordplay built on a bedrock Chicago soul. There were the freestyles for ‘heads looking to hear Sean’s rapping ability and technique. His choice in collaborators ran the gamut too; you could expect to see indie-leaning acts such as Curren$y, Wiz Khalifa, Dom Kennedy and Chuck Inglish the Cool Kids but also guys like Drake, YG, Bun B and Tyga.

The Finally Famous series was Sean’s sandbox to explore – there was no idea worth discarding. It’s what made hearing Finally Famous, the debut album that his mixtapes were leading up to, ultimately so disappointing for fans. Released in 2011, you could blame it on the major label machinations that sought to make debut rap albums blockbuster events – it sank albums like Thank Me Later and Attention Deficit by ignoring the rapper at the center it all. Finally Famous is a world away from the mixtapes past; it’s streamlined, uneven, and it magnified the worst aspects Big Sean’s charisma by tenfold, even if it did spawn several hits such as “Marvin & Chardonnay” and “Dance (A$$).”

In comparison, Detroit felt a lot more refined. Released on the heels Finally Famous (the album), Detroit marked another step in Big Sean’s growth as a rapper, embracing the concept a mixtape that felt like an album by enlisting rappers to record narrative voiceovers and using a smaller selection producers to give it a cohesive feel. More importantly, it diverged from the bubblegum-esque sound explored on Finally Famous, in favour seeking new vistas. In retrospect, Detroit would later serve as a blueprint for future albums in Sean’s discography. Its laser focus has been something Sean has sought to maintain with his later releases. You can see its conceptual approach in I Decided., with voiceovers and skits helping to bridge the songs together.

Dark Sky Paradise would break away from that, kicking f a trend Big Sean full-length projects that attempt for “classic” status largely by their ambition, cohesion, and gravitas. In many ways, album mode for Big Sean can be both a blessing and a curse – his drive and ambition yields improvements each time. Dark Sky Paradise was leaps and bounds above Hall Fame in quality, while I Decided. set the bar even higher – but even with these improvements, do they hit the fan sweet-spot? Sean has shown he can step it up when he’s feeling the pressure, but perhaps that same pressure has a tendency sapping his albums in a way. It’s as though his vision gets clouded and confused; the rapper himself lost on the path towards a “bulletpro” album. When Hall Fame got tepid reviews and stalled commercially, Sean would later tell NPR that Detroit succeeded by focusing on his own ideas, while Hall Fame was influenced by outlier advice.


Beat Selection

Big Sean: Mixtape Mode Versus Album Mode

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When it comes to production choices, Big Sean in album mode tends to favour a little bit everything. You can expect trap (fun fact: one Metro Boomin’s earliest beat placements was on Finally Famous 3, flipping Adele for the sentimental “Hometown”) and given his G.O.O.D. Music affiliation, the retro-soul Kanye is renown for. “I Don’t Fuck With You” starts with a D.J. Rogers sample, a choice flip that only Kanye could have picked before the song dips into a DJ Mustard-finessed bounce. “Fire,” one the best songs on Hall Fame, was actually intended for Kanye and “I’m Gonna Be” could easily pass for a Late Registration-era production, drawing a tenderness and naivety out Sean rarely seen elsewhere.

Mixtape Sean, on the other hand, is a, well, mixed bag. When it came to beats, the Finally Famous tapes featured some the most disparate strands the blog rap era. It was a universe where songs like “Billionaire” could sit next to “Five Bucks (5 On It)” and “Home Town” with very little reasoning. There was no beat he’d say no to, and part his appeal at the time came from picking out–pocket beats to stunt on. Big Sean would go as far as rapping over beats like Kanye’s “Say You Will” and Santigold’s “Starstruck,” looking to appeal to anyone willing to listen. Detroit narrows the scope but gets away with including songs like “Do What I Gotta Do” and “Woke Up,” which function like throwbacks to the old Sean.  


Lyrical Approach

Big Sean: Mixtape Mode Versus Album Mode

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Big Sean infamously claimed to have the lyrical abilities Big L, Biggie Smalls and Jay-Z rolled in one. As the reaction to the infamous “Control” proved, Big Sean may not be in most people’s “Top 10’s” but the gap between Sean and his contemporaries, like Drake and J. Cole, is a lot closer than you think. For one thing, Big Sean deserves credit for popularizing one early 2010s rap flow: the hashtag flow. He didn’t invent it, but he definitely brought it to prominence, pairing it with his penchant for stringing witty one-liners to create something every popular rapper between 2009 and 2011 seemingly adopted. Listen to “Supa Dupa” for one the best examples hashtag flow in motion. Rather than sprinkle it in sparingly, Sean employs the flow for most the song, fully committing. If these bars were personified, they’d be wearing circa-2012 coloured snapbacks. Sean Don wasn’t kidding when he claimed he “could hear a little bit me in all your favourite rappers” in DJ Khaled’s “Holy Key.”

Big Sean’s mixtapes tend to be more freeform in content, the relaxed atmosphere allowing for more playful Sean. On the other hand, the albums could benefit from some levity – they tend to work in concepts and emphasize the main tenets his narrative: Big Sean cares about his family and loved ones, he’s worked harder than everyone, he’s going to be the best rapper and put on Detroit in the process, etc. Several albums into his career and Big Sean has made it clear he’s not going to rap about much more than the world outside his window but he’s calmed his approach, transforming from the wild, careening style past mixtapes to a careful, refined lyrical eye.

Yet if there’s one flaw that continues to persist in Big Sean’s writing, it’s his obsession with puns. Big Sean is a writer in love with great wordplay; who can forget his “ass shake/ass quake/ass-tate/ass tray” sequence that starts f his “Mercy” verse or when he told us he needed a “broad on the floor year ’round like season tickets” on Drake’s “All Me.” Yet, he’s also capable wrecking a song or performance with the right (or rather, wrong) pun. One notable example: “Imma want the beef, broccoli, and asparagus” Sean raps on “Fuck My Opponent” before later finishing with “Fuck you with a Ron Jeremy dick.” Sean has a hit-or-miss ratio when it comes to puns, and this is equally true whether it’s on an album or a mixtape.


Choice Cuts

Big Sean: Mixtape Mode Versus Album Mode

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MIXTAPE SEAN

“Supa Dupa Lemonade”

“Fat Raps (Remix”

“Mind Playing Tricks On Me”

“Higher”

ALBUM SEAN

“Voices In My Head/Stick to the Plan”

“All Your Fault”

“Fire”

“I Don’t Fuck With You”

“I Do It”

Shout out your favourite Mixtape versus Album Big Sean tracks in the comments, and let us know your assessment the rapper.