Detroit veteran & Bars Over B.S. Records founder Ty Farris dropping off a physical exclusive 4th EP a week before Thanksgiving. Originally going under the moniker T-Flame being featuring on a lot of projects throughout the mid-2000’s until the very end of the decade, it was at that point where he started to put out solo stuff at a prolific rate by dropping 11 mixtapes, 11 full-lengths & his last 3 EPs. Standouts include the Room 39 duology & the No Cosign Just Cocaine series, the Machacha-produced Malice at the Palace & the Graymatter produced Sounds That Never Left My Soul. He just put out Enigma with an Attitude over the summer & is back with the Timing of a Tarantula.

“Gawd Mode Activated” is this drumless rap rock opener giving y’all the pain, the glory & everything that comes with it whereas “Trendsetter” gives off a mafioso vibe instrumentally talking about mixing longevity & high quality in addition to those tryna copy him when he’s building a monopoly. “Glass Joes” has a cloudy boom bap flare expressing his only concern now being the cash flow while the sample-driven “Venom in My Veins” talks his visions of living in flames.

Flames Dot Malik joins Ty on the piano boom bap joint “8 Eyes on the Paper” tryna maintain with 1 foot in the game each as they try to get paid just before a personal favorite of mine “Eat What You Kill” produced by Denny LaFlare keeps it in the basement suggesting that those thinking they better than him be mixing PCP in their blunts. “Top Rank” featuring Estee Nack aggressively reaffirms both of their statuses as lyricists & “Web of Lies” protects what’s his refusing to get involved with a network of deceit.

“You Bleed, I Bleed” featuring Rome Streetz reaches the final moments of Timing of a Tarantula with both of them hopping on top this crooning, drumless beat from Apollo Brown letting y’all know that it doesn’t even have to be this hard at all & asking why you can’t even see their stars while the closer “Heart of a Champion” finishes the EP by keeping the soul sampling in tact 1 last time flexing that he can simply email himself if he needs a raise.

For anyone who happens to love the conceptual street hip hop like some of Ty Farris’ previous releases, you’re gonna love Timing a Tarantula without question & it really might be my new favorite EP in his discography. His imagery makes sharp comparisons to the aptly named Theraphosidae family of arthropods & Divine Crime reveals himself as a future A&R that’ll be a force to be reckoned with over production balancing boom bap & drumless.

Score: 8/10