Reason First: Max B Released From Prison After 16 Years
How will the singer-rapper adjust to being unfettered?

For all the Coke Wave, Jim Jones feuding, wavy nonsense, Charley Wingate, better known as Max B has been released from prison. After serving a sixteen-year stretch on what was supposed to be a seventy-five year bid, the beast took off the cuffs and unlocked the gate. Once a rising star affiliated with both French Montana and The Diplomats, his situation is steeped in irony. Everyone in the game stole his whole sing-songy flow but probably don’t know from where it became even more popularized than say Bone Thugs-n-Harmony, Ja Rule, or 50 Cent among others.
The Harlem New York native seemed to be in hyper mode showing off a pristine Louis Vuitton ensemble at a Jets and Browns game.
So what does this all mean for hip hop? A promising figure sat down for over a decade now wishes to enter the arena. It is a space populated by drill rappers who don’t care about what happened five years ago.

Max B is going to have to find a niche of supporters who remember his schtick. The flow, the swag, all of that pertains to a certain audience of a certain age.
The reality of Max B returning to the bubbling street rap that he’s used to may seem passé in today’s rap realm.
For him to come out swinging, he must just get cold cocked by a single that features more fire and adaptability in this era of streaming. Questions abound relating to whether Biggaveli will bounce back and be able to climb the charts. There is a sneaky suspicion that he and once enemy Jim Jones will work on projects together.
While it has yet to be seen, there is a strong chance that Frenchy will pick up the ball and pass it to wide receiver, Max B. Once they figure out how they’re going to best traverse through the sludge of hip hop, it will be up to these parties to figure out a plan.
The Silver Surfer could’ve been imprisoned for a good chunk of his life. At this point, he should be grateful that he’s not being wheeled out in a bodybag after being killed behind the wall or passing from old age or illness.
His reputation had been built on coke rap and melodic notes. He ushered in a wave of artists who rocked his blueprint and applied it to their multiplatinum and diamond success stories.
Max B will have to contend with favorites like Stove God Cooks. In the time he has to gather up enough lyrical ammunition, he will most likely be relegated to mixtapes again before any credible full-length extended play projects surface.

To consider him to be past tense in the rap game may be a mistake. He has lived life on the outside and inside and served the time that had been knocked down in the long run. For him to become the superstar he had positioned himself to be before his incarceration, he will have to see if his whole style can stand out amongst the fray.
Max B was not supposed to get out of prison. The reason why he is currently a free man is because of some serious legalizing and a focus on justice. His days should be filled with writing and studying how the drillers move in these digital streets.
If he is cunning enough and knows how to advance his “wavy” philosophy, he just might prosper in a world that is brimming with disposable heroes, wannabes, and tired acts who can’t get their money right.
Wavy Crockett will taste freedom once more. The only question is what will he do with such sweet liberty?
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Skyler Saunders
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Comments (1)
Need to look him up too!