"Lasers" suffered its share of setbacks prior to its release and has been in the making for the past three years.
Delays from Atlantic Records led Lupe's fans to petition to have the album released. Then shortly before the release of the album, in a February interview with Complex magazine, Fiasco said, "I love and hate this album," leaving fans and anxious listeners wondering what they would receive.
What they received was a 12-track album filled with pop-sounding hooks and uninspiring lyrics.
This album is a far cry from the rugged lyricism on his debut, "Food & Liquor," and the conceptualism of his second album, "The Cool."
The songs that featured Trey Songz and John Legend appeared appetizing on the tracklist, but turned out to be forced attempts at chart-topping singles.
Outside of the label- fueled tracks, Lupe did voice his opinion on songs such as "Words I Never Said," where he talks about politics and controversial current events. In his hit single, "The Show Goes On" he even stepped out of his comfort zone as he slickly threw jabs at his label.
Lupe Fiasco has some of the most dedicated fans in hip hop and it showed in album sales, as the album sold 204,000 copies in its first week, earning a spot at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 chart. May not seem like much, but that's stunningly great these days.
Could the monumental first week sales be a bad omen for his next album, "Food & Liquor 2"?
That remains to be seen.































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