I'm pretty sure this is the 23rd full length studio LP from Tha God Fahim. Starting out as a subsidiary of Griselda Records as well as 1/3 of Dump Gawds along with Mach-Hommy & Your Old Droog, we also can't ignore the massive discography he's managed to build for himself which includes Breaking Through Th Van Allen Belts & Dump Assassins. But dude was on a CRAZY ass EP run in 2023, with the standout being Camoflauge Monk production Dark Shogun AssassinNature Sounds supported Iron Bull & the Nicholas Craven-prod Dump Gawd: Shot Clock King 4the Oh No-produced BerserkerFahim's latest EP Dump Gawd: Rhyme Pays Produced by Mike Shabb The Supreme Treasurer of All Virgin Wealth & more recently Supreme Dump Legend: Soul Cook Saga produced by Cookin' Soul a few weeks ago. Dump Goat II mixing 9 new songs with 10 previously released and some of the guests Machine gun vocabulary produced by Cartune Beatz caught my attention.
The title track opens with a reverse sample mixed with kicks and snares so he can get up and kiss all those MCs who want to fight him, while “Volatile Vernacular” featuring RJ Payne works on another boom bap instrumental talking for haters who meet all kinds of death. “Detonate” links some otherworldly name-ringing samples like Biggie kicking in the door to the piano-driven “Prolific Pen” with Cormega finding the 2 talking about their superiority on the long-awaited collab.
“Brilliance” promises it hard as the start of something big and important leading into the hard-hitting “Audible Ammunition” with Skyzoo talking about nothing that doesn't control them. “What You Wanna Say” with Lørd Skø jazzily finds new poor Lørd Jeff Hardy and Dump Gawd giving Stone Cold Stunners, but after “Prove & Show” it's back to boom bap talking without slowing down because he's got a family to feed. “Cleanse” closes the album by comparing himself to Errol Spence Jr.
Since this is Fahim's 3rd LP to be released this year, I would put Machine gun vocabulary above Dump Goat II & back Supreme Dump Legend: Soul Cook Saga. Cartune Beatz's boom bap production is incredibly consistent throughout the 27 minute listening experience and even if it's no surprise that all the guests killed it with their contributions, Dump God makes it all live up to the name by comparison its dictionary with that of an SMG.
Rating: 9/10