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Pastor Troy - Feel Me Or Kill Me
Feel Me Or Kill Me

Pastor Troy

Feel Me Or Kill Me

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by Edwin Ortiz | 04.21.09
If you're a fan of the Atlanta underground, it's almost guaranteed that Pastor Troy has crossed your path. With an expansive catalog that dates back to his 1999 debut We Ready: I Declare War, Troy has dropped an album nearly every year since then, including last year's Attitude Adjuster [click to read]. Not one to break a streak, the Georgia-native delivers his 2009 offering with Feel Me or Kill Me.

Building on his resume of southern block rap, PT puts haters on blast with "I Want War." A track complete with background gun cocks and shots exploding, Troy makes it clear that nothing is holding him back from pulling the trigger. In similar fashion, "Who U Gonna Call" exhibits Troy's lyrical barrage of raw, uncut demeanor. Warning his foes, he raps, "It's gonna be a massacre, It's gonna be a shootin'/It's gonna be some robbin'/It's gonna be some lootin'."

In an attempt to make a more pop-friendly record, Pastor turns down the aggression and turns up the swag on "Is That Your Girl." Eyeing a girl in the club, Troy makes his move as her man leaves her side, and needless to say, walks away with the prize. Of course, while this story line has been told before, it serves as a better indicator to Troy's inherent confidence than "See That Swag on That Boy," a record that truly epitomizes the decay of anything swag-related.

Historically, Pastor Troy's rhyming skills have rarely been looked upon as his strongest asset, and with good reason. Take "Talkin' Shit" for instance, where PT rambles, "I do it cause I'm clean/I do it cause I'm fly/I do it cause I'm drunk/I do it cause I'm High." Or, in the case of his whip game on "Ridin' Big III," Troy harps, "Legend but I ain't John, I tote guns/Put some rims on the drop top and have some fun/Nigga I ain't done, and I ain't through/I buy another ride, I buy another shoe." With that said, he usually does a sufficient job in finding beats that support his lyrical direction. This is not evident on Feel Me or Kill Me, and consequently the aforementioned "Talkin' Shit" and "Who U Gonna Call" both suffer from weak synth-tinged beats that hardly set the mood for what Troy is rapping about. His most complete record comes on the album-ending "Heaven Is Below." Asking "can you picture [if] heaven was hell?" Troy displays a collage of possibilities that would result from a world turned upside down, however, this effort is too little too late to save face.

While gangster rap, with artists like 50 Cent at the forefront, has been replaced with artists who motivate their constituents, such as Young Jeezy, Pastor Troy's career seemingly falls in the middle of these camps. Subsequently, Feel Me or Kill Me carries this same bravado throughout. With over a decade of experience, PT has stood in his own position, unfiltered, unchanged, and regardless of who's listening, he'll likely keep it that way.

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