Stoney Point is an MC/producer duo from Los Angeles, California consisting of Demrick & DJ Hoppa. One of whom came to my attention after linking up with Ca$his who was on Shady Records at the time for a collab mixtape called Homeland Security & the other for being a former in-house producer for Funk Volume up until the label tragically imploded on itself. They first teamed up as Stoney Point for a self-titled debut in 2015 followed by the 2018 sequel & the 2021 trilogy chapter. Another 3 years later, they’re continuing the tradition releasing their 4th album together almost a decade after the eponymous debut.
Starting us off, “Keep Moving” hops over a piano/boom bap instrumental to admit that a lot’s changed in Demrick’s life over the course of the last year & striving to push forward whereas the psychedelic “Golden” works in more kicks & snares to talk about doing just fine these days. “Look for the Smoke” has a jazzier flare to the beat knowing it’s time to re-up when the bag’s starting to feel light just before “Taking Chances” lavishly talks about being careful for what he wishes for reflecting on simpler days.
“Nothing Stays the Same” picks up further from there with it’s symphonic boom bap production discussing that change is always constant leading into “That’s How It Goes” featuring Kail Problems with co-production from Moo Latte fuses acoustics with kicks & snares so they can set the trends instead of following them. “What’s Left of Me” soulfully talks about being giving a duck less what they think of him after going through a lot, but then “Safety Pins & Soda Cans” jazzily admits to doing drugs as much as the common man.
“Hotbox the Room” marks an eerier approach to the beat asking who got the weed & shrooms while the piano-driven “Keep Building” talks about taking it day by day & brick by brick so you can build up to what you want in life stacking higher than the ceiling. “Forever Faded” brings the keys, kicks & snares back to stay lifted all day every day while “The Recipe” has the LP’s best feature from K.A.A.N. over a soul sample never letting the game get the best of them.
Beginning the 4th quarter, “About a Bag” instrumentally feels reminiscent to Zapp explaining that’s exactly what it’s gotta be this day in age while “MVP” refers to himself as the Most Valuable Poet” over an orchestral boom bap beat. The penultimate track “Purple Peak in the Air” has a classy trap vibe generally getting higher than a bitch up in the slot & lastly, “The Plan” ends the album doing everything he can while he’s still here.
DJ Hoppa’s just produced Kail Problems & Marley B.’s latest collab EP Shot Clock from a few weeks ago, but the 4th installment of the Stoney Point saga sure enough joins Delusions of Grandeur back from May in being another consistently great project in the Broken Complex canon this year. The production varies from boom bap to trap, jazz rap, soul music, classical, pianos & acoustics providing the soundscape for De to put a current twist to the duo’s titular lifestyle.
Score: 8/10