Blank Face LP
Blank Face LP is the fourth studio album by American rapper ScHoolboy Q, released on July 8, 2016, through Top Dawg Entertainment and Interscope Records.[1][2] The project, recorded over two years, presents a narrative-driven examination of Q's past involvement in gang activity, drug addiction, and the tensions of fatherhood amid street life, framed through a "blank face" motif symbolizing emotional detachment.[3][4][5] Featuring guest appearances from artists including Kanye West, Kendrick Lamar, and Anderson .Paak, alongside production from Mike WiLL Made-It and Metro Boomin, the 19-track effort blends traditional gangsta rap with experimental sonic elements.[6] Commercially, it debuted at number two on the US Billboard 200, accumulating 74,000 album-equivalent units in its opening week, with 52,000 from pure album sales.[7][8] The album achieved gold certification from the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) on June 8, 2018, reflecting combined sales and streaming equivalents of 500,000 units.[7] Critics praised its cohesive storytelling, raw lyricism, and production diversity, positioning it as ScHoolboy Q's most artistically mature release to date.[6][9]Development
Conception
Following the success of his major-label debut Oxymoron in early 2014, Schoolboy Q contemplated retiring from rap to prioritize time with his young daughter, having grown weary from extensive touring and promotional demands. He took an extended break, to the point of effectively quitting music temporarily. Ultimately, installing a home studio reignited his creative process, as he noted, "I just put the studio in the crib and it was like, I’d rather just do it that way," prompting him to begin developing what became Blank Face LP.[10][11] The project's initial concept centered on an introspective self-portrait, drawing from Q's South Central Los Angeles upbringing, gang affiliations, and transition to fatherhood and sobriety. At age 29, he aimed to depict the "real side of gangbanging" while acknowledging his distance from that lifestyle: "I’m not really a gangbanger no more, but I also wanted to touch on that." This narrative framed the album as a mature evolution, blending personal history with broader social reflections on survival and adaptation in street culture.[12][10] Originally titled Ghost Face as a nod to Wu-Tang Clan's Ghostface Killah, the name evolved to Blank Face LP to avoid perceived corniness: "I wanted to name the album Ghost Face, but I thought it would be a little too corny." The final title evoked emotional numbness from repeated exposure to violence and hardship, symbolizing a conditioned, expressionless facade amid life's traumas. Recording commenced in this post-Oxymoron period, incorporating beats dating back to 2013–2014, such as one from Kendrick Lamar repurposed for "By Any Means."[10]Recording
Recording for Blank Face LP began in 2014, shortly after the release of Schoolboy Q's previous album Oxymoron, with initial sessions taking place in Los Angeles and New York.[13] During this early phase, Schoolboy Q experienced significant personal challenges, including depression stemming from the disorienting effects of sudden fame and success, which influenced the tone of the material produced.[13] He later described these tracks as "depressed rap," reflecting a confessional style that captured his temporary mindset but ultimately failed to align with his desired artistic output.[13] Dissatisfied with the results, Schoolboy Q scrapped an entire album's worth of recordings, stating, "I scrapped a whole album… I didn’t feel like that was me no more," as the content no longer represented his recovered sense of self after overcoming the depressive period.[13] This decision prolonged the recording timeline, extending into 2016, during which he reworked the project to incorporate a broader, more dynamic range of themes and sounds.[13] The process nearly led him to abandon music altogether, amid struggles with the music industry's demands and his reluctance to continue as a "reluctant rap star."[13] Final sessions were conducted at facilities including Paramount Recording Studios in Hollywood, California, and Art Dealer Chic Studios.[14] Production involved collaborations with multiple contributors, such as Metro Boomin and the Alchemist (who worked on tracks like "JoHn Muir"), alongside frequent Top Dawg Entertainment affiliates Tae Beast, Sounwave, Cardo, and Nez & Rio, who handled several beats.[13][15] Additional high-profile producers like Swizz Beatz and Southside contributed to specific songs, emphasizing the album's varied sonic palette.[16]Content
Musical style and production
Blank Face LP features production primarily handled by Top Dawg Entertainment's in-house team, including frequent collaborators Sounwave, Tae Beast, Cardo Got Wings, and Nez & Rio, who contributed to multiple tracks.[17] High-profile external producers such as Metro Boomin and Southside (on "Dope Dealer"), DJ Dahi, The Alchemist, Swizz Beatz, and Dem Jointz also participated, blending trap elements with West Coast funk and soul samples.[15][18] The album's double-disc format, spanning 72 minutes across 19 tracks, incorporates live instrumentation like vocoders by Terrace Martin and vocal production by Sam Hook on select cuts.[17] Musically, the album roots itself in West Coast hip-hop and gangsta rap, reviving 1990s influences through grimy, groovy beats and narrative-driven sequencing that evokes cinematic storytelling.[19] Tracks like "Groovy Tony" draw from masked personas akin to Ghostface Killah's style, while eclectic production ranges from hard trap percussion to soulful, down-tempo keys reminiscent of East Coast sampling techniques.[20] Critics noted its matured gangsta rap aesthetic, balancing raw aggression with lavish, experimental flourishes that distinguish it from predecessors.[21][22] The overall sound prioritizes thematic cohesion over commercial polish, with beats often featuring record scratches, jazz undertones, and powerful bass lines to underscore Schoolboy Q's street narratives.[23]Lyrical themes
The lyrics on Blank Face LP predominantly explore Schoolboy Q's personal history of gang affiliation, drug addiction, and familial shortcomings, framing the album as an introspective narrative of a "divided man" caught between his criminal past and attempts at redemption.[3] Tracks like "Cash Out" and "By Any Means" detail initiation into gang life around 1996, including violence and hustling, while emphasizing the loss of innocence through references to family financial struggles and an uncle's substance abuse.[4] This autobiographical approach contrasts with glorification, instead portraying the cyclical entrapment of street existence, as in "Groovy Tony," where Q admits to being a "gangbanger, deadbeat father and drug dealer."[24] Drug dependency emerges as a central motif, particularly prescription pill abuse, with "Prescription" chronicling a descent into Percocets, Adderall, and Xanax, underscoring the addictive pull and emotional toll rather than mere bravado.[25] Songs such as "Dope Dealer" and "Black Thoughts" extend this to broader commentary on inner-city drug trade, violence, and systemic issues like police brutality, reflecting Q's shift from active participation to reflective critique.[26] Fatherhood and family dynamics provide counterpoints of vulnerability, influenced by Q's relationship with his daughter, which tempers the aggression of earlier gangsta rap tropes and highlights internal conflict over legacy and regret.[5] Overall, the lyrical content prioritizes raw confession over escapism, sequencing tracks to mimic life's progression from youthful recklessness to sober hindsight, distinguishing Blank Face LP as a confessional work amid West Coast hip-hop traditions.[24]Release and promotion
Marketing strategies
The marketing campaign for Blank Face LP centered on visual intrigue, narrative filmmaking, and selective media engagement to align with the album's themes of emotional numbness and street introspection, rather than aggressive traditional advertising. Schoolboy Q initiated buzz through deliberate trolling, teasing fake album covers—including a "Crying Jordan" meme adaptation—before unveiling the official artwork on June 16, 2016, depicting a featureless, blank-faced figure against a stark background, intended to evoke anonymity and provoke fan speculation.[27][28] Pre-release singles served as entry points: "Groovy Tony" dropped on May 3, 2016, introducing the project's West Coast funk; "THat Part" featuring Kanye West followed on June 27, 2016, amplifying mainstream appeal via West's involvement; and "Dope Dealer" with E-40 arrived in June, reinforcing gangsta rap roots. A cinematic trailer released on June 22, 2016, showcased raw South Central Los Angeles footage with Q in inmate garb, foreshadowing the album's dualities of fame and peril.[29] A cornerstone was a trilogy of interconnected short films doubling as music videos for album cuts "By Any Means," "Tookie Knows II," and "Black THougHts," directed by Jack Begert and Dave Free of The Little Homies. Released sequentially in late June and early July 2016, these formed a fictionalized narrative drawn from Q's life experiences, blending gritty drama with subtle track previews to immerse viewers in the "blank face" mindset without overt sales pitches.[30][31] Targeted previews built anticipation, including a New York City listening party on June 29, 2016, where Q played the full 17-track project for attendees and fielded questions from Hot 97's Peter Rosenberg, fostering word-of-mouth among industry and fans. On release day, July 8, 2016, an additional short film installation was announced, extending the cinematic rollout. This restrained, artistry-focused strategy—leveraging Top Dawg Entertainment's cult following over mass-market blitzes—drew mixed perceptions, with some attributing the album's 52,000 first-week pure sales to subdued promotion amid a competitive summer landscape.[32][33][34]Singles and music videos
"Groovy Tony" was released as the lead promotional single on April 5, 2016.[17] This was followed by "THat Part", featuring Kanye West, issued as the lead single on May 13, 2016.[35] [36] "Overtime", featuring Miguel and Justine Skye, served as the third single.[17] An official music video for "THat Part" premiered on June 2, 2016, depicting Schoolboy Q and Kanye West in various surreal scenarios amid urban settings.[37] A video for "Groovy Tony" was also produced, aligning with the album's thematic visuals.[38] The promotion included a narrative video trilogy of short films directed by Jack Begert and Dave Free of The Little Homies, functioning as music videos for tracks such as "By Any Means" and "Black THougHts". These interconnected pieces explored themes of street life and introspection, released in the lead-up to the album's July 8, 2016, launch.[30]Commercial performance
Chart positions
Blank Face LP debuted at number 2 on the US Billboard 200 chart on July 16, 2016, with 74,000 album-equivalent units.[39] It simultaneously topped the US Top Album Sales chart.[40] The album also reached number 1 on the US Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart.[41] Internationally, it peaked at number 2 on the Canadian Albums Chart.[42] In the United Kingdom, the album entered the Official Albums Chart at number 36 and spent two weeks in the top 200.[43] It performed modestly in France, peaking at number 120 on the Top Albums chart.[44]| Chart (2016) | Peak position |
|---|---|
| US Billboard 200 | 2[39] |
| US Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums | 1[41] |
| US Top Album Sales | 1[40] |
| Canadian Albums (Billboard) | 2[42] |
| UK Albums (OCC) | 36[43] |
| France (SNEP) | 120[44] |
Sales figures and certifications
Blank Face LP debuted at number two on the US Billboard 200 chart, accumulating 74,000 album-equivalent units in its first week, including 52,000 traditional album sales and approximately 27 million streams.[45] On June 8, 2018, the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) certified the album gold for combined sales and streaming-equivalent units of 500,000 in the United States. No higher certifications or international equivalents have been reported as of 2025.[46]Reception
Contemporary critical reviews
Blank Face LP received generally positive reviews from music critics upon its July 8, 2016 release, with praise centered on ScHoolboy Q's charismatic delivery, thematic depth exploring gang life and addiction, and the album's ambitious production blending West Coast gangsta rap with experimental elements.[47] Aggregated review site Metacritic reported an average score of 81 out of 100 based on 18 reviews, classified as "universal acclaim," with 16 positive, 2 mixed, and none negative.[48] Pitchfork's Jonah Weiner rated the album 8.3 out of 10 on July 14, 2016, describing it as "a collection of catchy, urgent gangsta rap songs" that highlighted Q's "gallows humor and tough talk" while navigating the contradictions of street life and sobriety.[49] Rolling Stone's Kevin O'Donnell awarded 4 out of 5 stars in a July 11, 2016 review, commending the production's "mean breakbeat" loops and Q's vivid storytelling of South Central Los Angeles hardships, though noting occasional pacing issues in its 72-minute runtime.[50] Consequence of Sound gave it an A- (equivalent to 91/100) on July 12, 2016, lauding its "sprawling and even psychedelic" scope that distinguished it from conventional gangsta rap.[48] Some reviewers critiqued the album's length and occasional filler tracks amid its narrative ambition. Entertainment Weekly's Kyle Anderson scored it B+ on July 8, 2016, appreciating Q's "impressive array of moods" but observing that the extended duration caused it to "sag under its own ambition" at times.[48] Despite these notes, the consensus affirmed Blank Face LP as a high point in Q's discography, elevating his status within Top Dawg Entertainment's roster through raw authenticity over polished commercialism.[49][50]Retrospective assessments
In the years following its release, Blank Face LP has been reassessed as a pinnacle of Schoolboy Q's discography, often lauded for its conceptual ambition and unflinching exploration of gang life, addiction, and duality. A 2021 retrospective by FM Hip Hop rated the album platinum, praising its 17-track structure as a cinematic self-portrait that evolves beyond Q's prior work like Oxymoron, with standout sequences such as the dual "Groovy Tony / Eddie Kane" and the innovative "THat Part" remix featuring Black Hippy members.[51] The review highlighted Q's versatility across gangsta anthems, atmospheric introspection, and party tracks, attributing its enduring strength to raw honesty about his identity as an ex-convict, Black father, and rapper, though it critiqued "Overtime" as a weaker, label-influenced inclusion.[51] One year post-release in 2017, Uproxx affirmed its staying power, calling it an "indisputable classic" that surpassed 2016 peers like Beyoncé's Lemonade, Kanye West's The Life of Pablo, and Drake's Views in replay value and thematic density.[52] The album's bleak, shadowy aesthetic—evoking midnight voids and vivid demons of survival—was credited with transforming initial skeptics through immersive production and Q's emotive flow, positioning it as potentially second only to Kendrick Lamar's good kid, m.A.A.d city among Top Dawg Entertainment outputs.[52] The project has secured placements in decade-end compilations, reflecting its influence on West Coast gangsta rap narratives. Genius's community-curated list of the 100 best albums of the 2010s commended its grim immersion via tracks like "Kno Ya Wrong," emphasizing Q's descent into personal voids.[53] Hip Hop Golden Age ranked it #120 among the top 150 hip-hop albums of the 2010s, valuing its cohesiveness and replay amid broader genre shifts.[54] While some fan discussions note uneven pacing in re-listens, its reputation endures for prioritizing narrative grit over mainstream polish, solidifying Q's legacy in conscious street rap.[7]Artist's self-critique
In a 2019 interview, ScHoolboy Q expressed regret over the tonal uniformity of Blank Face LP, stating, "That’s my biggest regret with Blank Face. Besides a couple songs, I just made the whole album pretty dark. I regret that so much. Why did I do that?"[55] He contrasted this with his follow-up album CrasH Talk, which he described as more balanced to avoid similar limitations.[55] Q further critiqued the album's replay value, labeling it a "one-listen album," which he attributed to its lack of variety and resulting lower commercial performance compared to his prior release Oxymoron (2014), which debuted at number one on the Billboard 200 while Blank Face LP peaked at number two.[55][56] This assessment reflected his view that the project, recorded amid personal struggles including depression and substance issues, prioritized raw introspection over broader accessibility.[55] Despite these reservations, Q later ranked Blank Face LP highly in personal retrospectives, indicating evolving appreciation for its artistic risks even as he acknowledged its structural flaws.[56]Impact and controversies
Cultural influence
Blank Face LP played a role in the mid-2010s revival of gangsta rap aesthetics, integrating 1990s West Coast influences such as gritty storytelling and instrumental aggression with modern emotional vulnerability. Tracks like "Groovy Tony" evoked the raw persona of early Ice Cube and N.W.A., updating the genre's focus on street despondency and systemic entrapment rather than unchecked glorification.[19] This approach positioned the album as a bridge between classic gangsta rap's bravado and contemporary hip-hop's emphasis on personal reckoning, influencing portrayals of urban struggle within Top Dawg Entertainment's output.[57] The album's thematic structure, framing gang affiliation as a cycle of desensitization—symbolized by the "blank face" motif—highlighted psychological tolls of gang life, including addiction and loss, fostering a more nuanced discourse on these tropes in rap narratives.[19] Sociopolitical undertones, such as references to police violence in the "THat Part" remix addressing Alton Sterling's 2016 killing, aligned it with Black Lives Matter-era reflections, extending gangsta rap's legacy into broader cultural critiques of institutional failure.[19] By channeling despair from Compton's underbelly without romanticization, Blank Face LP reinforced gangsta rap's function as a raw document of socioeconomic realities, impacting subsequent West Coast artists' willingness to explore unfiltered authenticity over trap's formulaic excess.[57][58] Its production, led by in-house TDE collaborators, emphasized cinematic sequencing that mimicked life's inescapable loops, setting a template for narrative-driven gangsta rap albums in the late 2010s.[19]Debates on gangsta rap tropes
Blank Face LP prominently features gangsta rap tropes, including depictions of gang affiliation, drug dealing, interpersonal violence, and objectification of women, drawn from Schoolboy Q's self-reported experiences as a former member of the 52 Hoover Gangster Crips and involvement in OxyContin distribution during the 2000s.[4] Tracks like "Dope Dealer" and "Groovy Tony" detail narcotics transactions and street hustling, while "TorcH" and "Blank Face" evoke cycles of retaliation and desensitization to death, reflecting South Central Los Angeles environments.[49] These elements align with longstanding gangsta rap conventions originating in the 1980s and 1990s, such as those in N.W.A.'s Straight Outta Compton (1988), but updated with Q's "groovy gangsta" persona blending funk influences and humor.[25] Critics have debated whether the album glorifies these tropes or offers a nuanced portrayal. Some reviews argue it promotes violence and misogyny by embedding them without sufficient critique, noting lyrics that normalize aggression and reduce women to transactional roles, as in "Cash Out" or "JoHn Muir," where female characters serve narrative functions amid bravado.[59] This perspective echoes broader hip-hop discourse, where such content is seen as perpetuating harmful stereotypes, potentially desensitizing listeners to real-world consequences like incarceration rates among young Black men, which exceeded 1 in 9 for ages 20-34 in California during Q's formative years.[60] However, defenders contend the album avoids endorsement by emphasizing futility and personal toll, with Q recounting "both sides of the gun" to highlight contradictions rather than aspiration, as in reflective skits and tracks like "Black Thoughts" that underscore addiction's grip—Q himself battled codeine dependency, entering rehab in 2016 post-recording.[61][3] Authenticity bolsters arguments against glorification claims, given Q's verifiable history: he joined the Crips at age 12 in 1996 and dealt drugs until pursuing music around 2008, experiences he frames as cautionary rather than aspirational in interviews.[4] Outlets like Pitchfork praise this "raw emotion" for humanizing tropes without sanitization, contrasting with more redemptive West Coast peers like Kendrick Lamar, while Vulture positions Q as preserving gangsta rap's "profound negativity" amid commercial pressures—Oxymoron (2014) went platinum without diluting narratives.[49][25] Yet, skepticism persists in some analyses, questioning if market-driven revival of 1990s-style gangsta rap, as in TDE's output, risks romanticizing decay despite introspective layers, especially as U.S. violent crime rates hovered around 386 per 100,000 in 2016.[19] These tensions reflect ongoing cultural divides, where empirical ties to lived trauma validate tropes for some, but others prioritize causal links to societal harms over artistic verisimilitude.[60][61]Accolades
Rankings in lists
Blank Face LP has appeared in various year-end and all-time rankings by music critics, reflecting its recognition within hip-hop. In Pitchfork's list of the 20 best rap albums of 2016, the album ranked 15th, praised for its exploration of gang life and survival in South Central Los Angeles.[62]| Publication | List Title | Year | Rank |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pitchfork | The 20 Best Rap Albums of 2016 | 2016 | 15 [62] |
| Rolling Stone | The 200 Greatest Hip-Hop Albums of All Time | 2022 | 164 [63] |
Industry recognitions
At the 59th Annual Grammy Awards on February 12, 2017, Blank Face LP received a nomination for Best Rap Album.[64] The album's lead single, "That Part" featuring Kanye West, earned a nomination for Best Rap Performance in the same category.[64] Neither nomination resulted in a win, with Dang! by Mac Miller taking Best Rap Album and "Humble" by Kendrick Lamar winning Best Rap Performance.[64] No additional major industry awards or nominations, such as from the BET Hip Hop Awards or MTV Video Music Awards, were conferred upon the album or its singles.[65]Credits and track listing
Production personnel
The production of Blank Face LP was primarily handled by Top Dawg Entertainment's in-house team, including frequent collaborators Tae Beast, Sounwave, Cardo, and the duo Nez & Rio, who contributed to multiple tracks across the album.[15] High-profile guest producers such as Swizz Beatz (on "Lord Have Mercy"), Metro Boomin and Southside (on "Dope Dealer"), DJ Dahi, The Alchemist, and Tyler, The Creator also provided beats, blending West Coast gangsta rap aesthetics with trap and experimental elements.[16] Executive production was overseen by Anthony "Top Dawg" Tiffith and ScHoolboy Q, with A&R direction from Kendrick Lamar and Manny Smith.[66] Mixing duties were primarily managed by Derek "MixedByAli" Ali, while mastering was completed by Mike Bozzi at Bernie Grundman Mastering.[66] Additional vocal production and recording involved figures like Sam Hook and James Hunt, supporting the album's layered sonic palette that incorporated live instrumentation from Terrace Martin on select tracks.[67] These credits reflect a collaborative effort emphasizing TDE's self-contained production ecosystem, supplemented by established hitmakers to elevate the project's commercial and artistic scope.[15]Track listing
All tracks are written by Quincy Hanley (ScHoolboy Q), except where noted, with production credits varying per track.[17]| No. | Title | Featuring artist(s) | Length |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | "TorcH" | Anderson .Paak | 5:34 |
| 2 | "Lord Have Mercy" | Swizz Beatz | 1:44 |
| 3 | "THat Part" | Kanye West | 5:13 |
| 4 | "Groovy Tony / Eddie Kane" | Jadakiss | 6:19 |
| 5 | "Kno Ya Wrong" | Lance Skiiiwalker | 4:07 |
| 6 | "Dope Dealer" | E-40 | 4:38 |
| 7 | "Black THougHts" | — | 3:24 |
| 8 | "JoHn Muir" | Anderson .Paak | 3:52 |
| 9 | "Cash Out" | PARTYNEXTDOOR | 4:23 |
| 10 | "Electric Chair" | Samuel L. Jackson | 4:42 |
| 11 | "Overtime" | Miguel, Justine Skye | 4:00 |
| 12 | "By Any Means" | — | 4:00 |
| 13 | "DeaD Pu$$y" | — | 2:24 |
| 14 | "Problems" | J. Cole | 3:31 |
| 15 | "Fake Loc" | — | 3:20 |
| 16 | "Groovy Tony" | — | 3:18 |
| 17 | "THat Part (Remix)" | Kanye West, PARTYNEXTDOOR | 5:01 |