Isaiah Rashad shows what he does best on the smooth “Tity and Dolla”. Producer Crooklin comes through for Rashad by lending him a laid-back beat to spin his rhymes over, complete with driving snares and a catchy synth melody floating in the background. Despite the whimsical sound the song carries, Rashad uses the track to meditate on serious matters as he briefly touches on drug addiction and the inherent self-harm that comes along with it.

He adopts a stream-of-consciousness flow that lets him skate from topic to topic before opening the floor for his two guest MC’s. Both Hugh Augustine and fellow Top-Dog affiliate Jay Rock pull their own weight with their verses. Rashad impresses most though when he displays his knack for hooks.

Rashad’s mush-mouth delivery comes to the forefront with the chorus as Rashad blurts “I know that bitches gon’ be bitches but I love them hoes”, before making a quick reference back to Outkast’s Stankonia. If left in the wrong hands, the hook could have easily been worthy of an eye-roll. But Rashad’s playful delivery does a lot to make you sing along whether you really “love them hoes” or not.