Tha Carter V

Lil Wayne

Sale - Sale price $28.99 CAD Regular price
Regular price $28.99 CAD
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Sale - Sale price $54.99 CAD Regular price
Regular price $54.99 CAD
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Shipping calculated at checkout.
Description

Tha Carter V is Lil Wayne’s twelfth studio album and the fifth entry in his Carter series, released on September 27, 2018 after years of delays tied to label and legal disputes. It’s a long, 23‑track project that plays like both a new chapter and a retrospective self‑portrait: opened by a spoken message from his mother, it moves through collaborations with artists like XXXTentacion (“Don’t Cry”), Travis Scott (“Let It Fly”), Kendrick Lamar (“Mona Lisa”), Nicki Minaj (“Dark Side of the Moon”), and others, mixing high‑energy bangers (“Uproar”) with story‑rap, love songs, and more introspective cuts. The production and sequencing span trap, classic Southern rap, and moody, melodic material, giving the album a wide emotional and sonic range rather than a single, tightly focused concept.

Lyrically and thematically, Tha Carter V is often framed as Wayne’s most “grown” work: alongside his usual dense punchlines and braggadocio, he spends significant time on depression, addiction, family, his near‑death experiences, and the strain of industry battles. That makes the record feel like a broad survey of his life and career, culminating in a statement that he has survived and is still creatively active, even if the album’s length sometimes dilutes its impact. Commercially it was a major success, debuting at number one and posting huge streaming numbers, and many critics and fans treat it as his strongest studio release since Tha Carter III—an imperfect but important project that closes out the Carter saga on a note of resilience and self‑reflection.

Tha Carter V is Lil Wayne’s twelfth studio album and the fifth entry in his Carter series, released on September 27, 2018 after years of delays tied to label and legal disputes. It’s a long, 23‑track project that plays like both a new chapter and a retrospective self‑portrait: opened by a spoken message from his mother, it moves through collaborations with artists like XXXTentacion (“Don’t Cry”), Travis Scott (“Let It Fly”), Kendrick Lamar (“Mona Lisa”), Nicki Minaj (“Dark Side of the Moon”), and others, mixing high‑energy bangers (“Uproar”) with story‑rap, love songs, and more introspective cuts. The production and sequencing span trap, classic Southern rap, and moody, melodic material, giving the album a wide emotional and sonic range rather than a single, tightly focused concept.

Lyrically and thematically, Tha Carter V is often framed as Wayne’s most “grown” work: alongside his usual dense punchlines and braggadocio, he spends significant time on depression, addiction, family, his near‑death experiences, and the strain of industry battles. That makes the record feel like a broad survey of his life and career, culminating in a statement that he has survived and is still creatively active, even if the album’s length sometimes dilutes its impact. Commercially it was a major success, debuting at number one and posting huge streaming numbers, and many critics and fans treat it as his strongest studio release since Tha Carter III—an imperfect but important project that closes out the Carter saga on a note of resilience and self‑reflection.

Details
detail icon barcode
Barcode :
0602577112690 0602577153723
detail icon publisher
Publisher :
Universal Records Universal Records
detail icon genre
Genre :
Rap/Hip Hop
Product Dimensions
detail icon width
Length x Width x Height :
6 x 5.2 x 0.5 in 12.5 x 12.5 x 0.5 in
detail icon weight
Weight :
180 g 250 g

Tha Carter V

Lil Wayne

Sale - Sale price $28.99 CAD Regular price
Regular price $28.99 CAD
Sold Out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Sale - Sale price $54.99 CAD Regular price
Regular price $54.99 CAD
Sold Out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Description

Tha Carter V is Lil Wayne’s twelfth studio album and the fifth entry in his Carter series, released on September 27, 2018 after years of delays tied to label and legal disputes. It’s a long, 23‑track project that plays like both a new chapter and a retrospective self‑portrait: opened by a spoken message from his mother, it moves through collaborations with artists like XXXTentacion (“Don’t Cry”), Travis Scott (“Let It Fly”), Kendrick Lamar (“Mona Lisa”), Nicki Minaj (“Dark Side of the Moon”), and others, mixing high‑energy bangers (“Uproar”) with story‑rap, love songs, and more introspective cuts. The production and sequencing span trap, classic Southern rap, and moody, melodic material, giving the album a wide emotional and sonic range rather than a single, tightly focused concept.

Lyrically and thematically, Tha Carter V is often framed as Wayne’s most “grown” work: alongside his usual dense punchlines and braggadocio, he spends significant time on depression, addiction, family, his near‑death experiences, and the strain of industry battles. That makes the record feel like a broad survey of his life and career, culminating in a statement that he has survived and is still creatively active, even if the album’s length sometimes dilutes its impact. Commercially it was a major success, debuting at number one and posting huge streaming numbers, and many critics and fans treat it as his strongest studio release since Tha Carter III—an imperfect but important project that closes out the Carter saga on a note of resilience and self‑reflection.

Tha Carter V is Lil Wayne’s twelfth studio album and the fifth entry in his Carter series, released on September 27, 2018 after years of delays tied to label and legal disputes. It’s a long, 23‑track project that plays like both a new chapter and a retrospective self‑portrait: opened by a spoken message from his mother, it moves through collaborations with artists like XXXTentacion (“Don’t Cry”), Travis Scott (“Let It Fly”), Kendrick Lamar (“Mona Lisa”), Nicki Minaj (“Dark Side of the Moon”), and others, mixing high‑energy bangers (“Uproar”) with story‑rap, love songs, and more introspective cuts. The production and sequencing span trap, classic Southern rap, and moody, melodic material, giving the album a wide emotional and sonic range rather than a single, tightly focused concept.

Lyrically and thematically, Tha Carter V is often framed as Wayne’s most “grown” work: alongside his usual dense punchlines and braggadocio, he spends significant time on depression, addiction, family, his near‑death experiences, and the strain of industry battles. That makes the record feel like a broad survey of his life and career, culminating in a statement that he has survived and is still creatively active, even if the album’s length sometimes dilutes its impact. Commercially it was a major success, debuting at number one and posting huge streaming numbers, and many critics and fans treat it as his strongest studio release since Tha Carter III—an imperfect but important project that closes out the Carter saga on a note of resilience and self‑reflection.

  • CD
  • Vinyl