Those same talents are used to darker effect on 03' Adolescence, as he strikes an honest emotional tone in rapping from the perspective of a despondent friend urging him to stay focused on his career. Ironically, that's right about the point on Forest where Cole could use a friend. Not including any guest artists and insisting on singing every chorus may seem like a brave choice, but the album's second half exposes the fact that, talented though he might be, Cole is not as singularly compelling as he thinks he is. Fire Squad offers lukewarm battle raps over what sounds like a reheated '90s Wu-Tang beat, just as A Tale of 2 Citiez echoes a tepid rehash of Kendrick Lamar's m.A.A.d.
Continuing on through St. Tropez, G.O.M.D. And No Role Modelz, Cole constructs lumbering tracks weighed down by extended instrumental bridges, choir vocals and over-elaboration. They become so bloated and desperate to be taken seriously they stop being fun, diminishing the pleasure of noticing the right balance is finally achieved on penultimate track Love Yourz. Forest confirms that Cole dreams bigger than most major-label rappers, but he has yet to realize that vision in LP format. Download: Wet Dreamz, January 28th, Love Yourz.