Skitzo’s 8th Album “Tre-Von” is His Most Personal (Album Review)

Kalamazoo, Michigan emcee Skitzo releasing his 8th studio LP & MonStar Entertainment debut. Introducing himself in the underground through his 2010 debut The Ghetto Democrat, he subsequently gained more exposure with The Sumerian Tablet as well as Political Avatar & Deities. The next 3 albums The Butterfly EffectBlack Wolf & Lucid Dreams further strengthened his status to the point where Flint emcee & one of the last artists Psychopathic Records put on Lyte signed Skitzo to MonStar Entertainment in the summer of 2022. I even had the pleasure of meeting him at Astronomicon 3 right before the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic, so I knew Tre-Von was gonna be the most important entry of his discography yet.

“F.A.F.O. (Fuck Around Find Out)” is a piano trap opener talking about those tryna test him whereas “Wild Things” featuring Frank Nitty works in an eerier atmosphere keeping the hi-hats in tact cautioning not to look far if you’re looking for bullshit. “Don’t Make Me” continues the trap vibes warning that they’ll act a fool if you keep pissin’ ‘em off, but then “Blqck Boy Lost” has to be one of the most personal moments addressing family issues.

The soulful trap vibes on “Power” are joyous & motivational looking to protect his peace leading into “Run It” featuring G-Mo Skee going full-blown boom bap putting the ski masks on their faces getting on their battle shit lyrically. “The God Butcher” is a rock/trap crossover paying tribute to all the homies he’s lost in the last year while the drearier “Picking Up the Pieces” discussing that you can tell when life gets messy.

“Pure Michigan” fuses soul & trap again paying homage to the state that raised him while “Pagne” brings a delicate trap flare to the table so Skitzo can talk about everyone seeing him shine. “Carousel” featuring Str8jaket keeps the same energy finding MonStar’s very first signees venting the thoughts that’ve been spinning in their heads & “Fast Lane” featuring Lil’ Polk & Lyte finishes the LP aggressively reminding that the MonStar Clique don’t play.

Coming fresh off his autobiography Water from Cactus over a year ago at this point, Skitzo’s first album in 6 years happens to be the most personal of his entire discography & the finest example of what’s to come from him through MonStar Entertainment going forward. The K-Zoo bred MC sounds rejuvenated, G-Mo alongside the rest of the MonStar roster match his energy & Mr. K.A.’s trap-heavy production has some sincerely interesting ideas.

Score: 8/10