Description
Some albums try to climb the mountain. Golden Parachute is already at the summit, sipping something ridiculous out of a crystal glass and wondering why everyone else looks so tired. Sonnyjim and Morriarchi don’t ascend — they descend, slowly, elegantly, like two men who’d rather not crease their jackets.
The Prince reference at its conceptual core isn’t just clever; it’s petty in the best way. It carries that energy of a man who knows you can’t fire him because technically he already resigned. The golden parachute here isn’t comfort — it’s leverage with a side of malice.
Morriarchi’s beats float with the confidence of someone who refuses to turn the volume past 3. The drums barely acknowledge your presence. Everything sounds expensive – the kind of expensive where all the samples were sourced from a millionaire’s estate sale.
Sonnyjim thrives in that environment rapping like a man giving a TED Talk on racketeering, politely reminding the listener that authenticity can’t be bought, but if it could, it wouldn’t be on sale.
This one is about landing — calmly, smugly, silk parachute deployed, pockets still full, drink unspilled.






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