Review: Diddy Dirty Money: “Last Train to Paris”

Rating: 8.5 / 10 “10 years from now we’ll still be on top” – Fourteen years ago Puff Daddy, now named Diddy, spoke this over the classic track “Mo Money Mo Problems”.  With his latest release, Last Train to Paris, he is reinventing himself yet again with his new group entitled, Diddy Dirty Money. The […]

Rating: 8.5 / 10

“10 years from now we’ll still

be on top” – Fourteen years ago Puff Daddy, now named Diddy, spoke

this over the classic track “Mo Money Mo Problems”.  With his

latest release, Last Train to Paris,

he is reinventing himself yet again with his new group entitled, Diddy

Dirty Money. The group consists of Dawn Richard and Kalenna Harper. 

Last Train to Paris

is technically a Hip-Hop album – however if

you are expecting it to sound like one prepare to shocked to reality.

With the #1 release of his last album,

Press Play

, Diddy is clearly taking bigger chances with LT2P

The album succeeds in creating a new sound unlike many being heard nowadays. 

From first listen of the “Intro” it is apparent that the journey

of the next 16 tracks will be unlike much you’ve listened to this

year.  LT2P won’t likely appeal the average backpacker Hip-

Hop fan, but if will probably please the casual music listener. 

The album can almost be classified in its own genre –the way Diddy

integrates Hip Hop, Techno, and Pop influences into a cohesive compilation

is admirable  – but falls short slightly on certain tracks.

LT2P

containd songs that captivate and create chaos that Diddy relishes in.  Songs like “Yea Yea You Would” and “Coming Home”

discuss the turbulent love life of a music mogul. Diddy and crew sonically explore everything from talking

to his children about life to being unlovable. 

While he is Diddy the majority of the album, Sean Combs appears on many

tracks – opening a door into his personal life.  “Looking for

Love” one of the brightest tracks on the album. Usher carries the

song forward while Diddy supplies the backup well.  Many of the

features on LT2P  boast the featured artists more than

Diddy – possibly calculated, but often poorly executed.  Songs such

as the aforementioned “Looking for Love” and “Yesterday” featuring

Chris Brown seem as if they were created for the featured artists’

albums but placed on Diddy’s instead.  This is surely a pitfall;

taking away from what Diddy Dirty Money created causing the tracks feel

“borrowed” rather than organically grown.

While Dirty Money is indeed a group,

Diddy is the only member that seems significant.  Dawn Richard

and Kalenna Harper’s voices compliment every track, however Diddy

is the absolute nucleus.  If LT2P

could be compared to a recent movie, its counterpart would be this years

release, The Town.  Both succeed in explaining  the

main character/proprietor of the project (Diddy and Ben Affleck respectively),

but failed to showcase the other major and relevant pieces in its creation. 

Songs such as “Hate You Now” and “I Know” feature Dawn and Kalenna, but they feel underused and slightly insignificant to the overall piece. More Dawn and Kalenna would have boded well for LT2P.

 “Shades” and “Strobe

Lights” feature a pre-jail Lil Wayne – obviously verses

recorded a year in advance to this release.   The topic surrounding

“Shades” still escapes this reviewer, however as a club track

it works greatly.  “Your Love” seems to be one

of the few tracks, with a feature, that sounds like it is Dirty Money’s

song.  The final song on the album, “Loving You No More” featuring

Drake, feels as if it was just thrown on for the Young Money feature. “Coming

Home” would’ve been a more fitting final track.

Diddy Dirty Money managed to create

a solid, entertaining album in LT2P. 

It cannot be considered a great Hip-Hop album, rather a musically fusion

from all the top genres of music today.  Diddy compiles a lot of

great voices and visionaries on this LP to create something which

will still be played months later.  Many Hip-Hop fans will scoff

at this album so everybody won’t be aboard the last train. Diddy should have sufficient passengers on his caravan to lead him to another opus.