As it stands right now, the West Coast is dominating the hip-hop scene nationally and internationally. Whether it be Game signing with Cash Money records, Kendrick Lamar destroying every rapper in a single verse, Nipsey Hussle selling mixtapes for $100 apiece or the rest of Top Dawg Entertainment gaining the interest of rap enthusiasts everywhere, nothing seems to be able to top the West Coast movement. The next domino to fall in the Westside invasion of 2010âs hip-hop is Dom Kennedyâs newest independent LP, Get Home Safely.
Dominic Hunn grew up in a neighborhood encompassing the Crenshaw district of South Los Angeles called Leimert Park. As a kid, he got involved in sports like baseball and basketball to escape the turmoil of the inner city. After high school, Dom enrolled at a two-year junior college to major in business management. Eventually, Domâs passion for the music of Biggie, Outkast and LL Cool J kick-started his musical career.
Listening to his music, one gets a sense of Domâs upbringing. Get Home Safely puts you in a nostalgic dream state of summer days that passed as a child. One can almost imagine the entire concept of the album as a ride home your parents once gave you: the sun hiding behind the other side of the world as the car resonates with the sounds of yesteryear. Dom Kennedy isnât trying to wow you with his wordplay. Thatâs not his style. Get Home Safely wants to bring you to a place, a time, a moment in your life.
Get Home Safely is a quasi-concept album with the message of getting home free from danger. It takes the listener back to better days in âAfter School,â in which Dom speaks about people he once knew, the bus ride after school and his take on the future as he saw it as a child. On this downbeat track, Dom raps, âThe L.A. niggas I knew, some no longer exist / And they got moms just like me, if I could grant them one wish / But thatâs a dream deferred, they donât always come true / Four minutes to four, on the bus ride after school / If I make it to heaven, I hope it comes with a view / If I make it to heavenâŚâ
âErica Part 2â comes off like the memory of a girl who Dom once had a one night stand with as he drives through an old neighborhood of his. Dom explains how things were done back in his day when he delivers a description of past experiences: âRollinâ up tight reefer sticks twist with both hands / Iâm from the era of freakinâ on the floor to the slow jams / Wake up, do a song, smoke, thatâs the program / Put a nug in nigga we can smoke more strands.â This song makes it easy to picture a typical Friday night for Dom in his younger days.
What would a great album be without a love story? âTryna Find My Wayâ couples a jazzy instrumental with a slow jam beat to the thoughts of Dom speaking on a past love. âI know itâs overdue / Just hope it ainât too late / So letâs stay up all night / The day might come, we canât / Iâm always here for you / I wonât forget your face / When I first saw you / I didnât know what to say / I didnât know what to do / Tryna find my way.â His lyrics evoke not only his memories but also the listenerâs memories.
As a whole, Get Home Safely has the power to transport the listener to a time when your parents told you, âGet home safely,â before you left the house. The dreamlike instrumentals combined with Domâs stories of old haunts and harks back to the early â90s in South Central L.A. Dom doesnât do this in the âeveryone was in a gang in my neighborhoodâ type of way; he does it through common themes and relatable lyrics. This isnât music that you show your friends at a party. Get Home Safely is more personal. This is the type of music you keep for yourself when youâre on a run, a drive or just lost in thought.
4 out of 5 stars