
Goldfish brings together two of Hip Hop’s most respected producers, Hit-Boy and The Alchemist, for an album that feels patient, deliberate, and fully confident in its craft. Both artists are producers first and rappers second, but on this record, they hold their own on the mic with surprising ease. The concept—each rapping over the other’s beats—is straightforward but sharp, recalling the spirit of Jaylib’s Champion Sound without trying to copy it. What makes Goldfish work is the contrast in their instincts: Hit-Boy’s clean, structured polish meets Alchemist’s dusty minimalism. Somehow, they meet right in the middle.
We’ve never been the biggest fans of Hit-Boy’s slicker approach. His production often leans toward radio polish, the kind that can feel too glossy when placed beside the underground’s rough textures. But on Goldfish, he locks in with Alchemist’s unhurried, soulful grit in a way that feels natural. There’s balance here—the warmth of analog drums, the hum of basslines that sit deep in the pocket, and the precision of high-end engineering that keeps everything tight without losing texture. It’s refined, but not sterile. Gritty, but never muddy.
Across fifteen tracks, the two trade verses and instrumentals with a confidence that comes from decades in the game. The beats are lush but focused, with plenty of room for the verses to breathe. Alchemist’s contributions—those warm, hypnotic loops and patient grooves—create a calm center. Hit-Boy’s beats carry a bit more snap, leaning on bounce and structure. When those energies meet, the result is steady and grounded. The album doesn’t rush for hooks or chase singles; it moves with purpose, track by track.
“Business Merger,” the lead single, is a fitting opener for their concept. The song’s rhythm is tight and businesslike—layered drums, clipped vocal chops, and measured flows that underline the theme of collaboration as transaction and art form. “Mick & Cooley,” featuring Conway The Machine, brings that East Coast grit to the surface, the kind of track that sounds like it was recorded in the middle of a smoke-filled studio session. Conway’s verse cuts through the haze with sharpness, and both producers sound energized trading bars beside him.
The production throughout Goldfish is what you’d expect from these two: detailed, soulful, and deeply musical. “Ricky” is the standout track. Over one of the album’s simplest beats—a looping piano line and crisp drums—Hit-Boy dives into vivid storytelling, tracing moments of memory and regret with precision. The writing is personal without drifting into sentimentality. It’s the kind of song that makes you realize both artists have more to say than their usual placements ever reveal. The lyricism across the project is thoughtful, focused on legacy, patience, and the cost of staying consistent in an industry obsessed with trends.
Alchemist’s rapping has always been a little off-kilter—dry in tone, conversational, almost like he’s thinking out loud. That quality gives his verses a grounded, human rhythm. Hit-Boy, in contrast, is more assertive, his flow crisp and confident. He raps like someone used to being behind the boards, now stepping forward to say: I can do this too. Together, they balance one another’s energy. Their verses aren’t about dominance or competition; they sound like two craftsmen sharpening ideas in real time.
Guest features are well-placed and unobtrusive. Havoc appears on “Celebration Moments,” a slow, eerie track that feels like an after-hours toast to survival. Boldy James slides through “Not Much” with his usual calm precision, fitting naturally into Alchemist’s slow-burn production. Big Hit and Jay Worthy bring West Coast flavor to “All Gas No Brakes,” the album’s liveliest cut—a head-nodder with a sense of ease and humor. Each feature adds flavor without breaking the album’s pace or tone.

Lyrically, Goldfish lives in reflection. The writing isn’t about proving lyrical supremacy; it’s about endurance. Lines about success, aging, family, and craft hit harder than punchlines. There’s no forced nostalgia or grand statements about the state of Hip Hop—just two veterans rapping with calm control, aware of who they are and what they’ve built. When they talk about longevity or legacy, it’s not bragging; it’s inventory. These are men taking stock, not posing for the camera.
Musically, the record sits in that sweet spot between high-grade polish and soulful imperfection. The mix is clean but textured; every snare has weight, every sample has breath. Tracks like “Show Me The Way” and “Recent Memory” have a looseness that invites replay, while others like “Home Improvement” and “Walk in Faith” carry a quiet introspection. You can hear the joy of making music without pressure—the pleasure of craft for its own sake.
The short film Goldfish—released alongside the album—extends the same aesthetic: sharp visuals, patient storytelling, and a noir-like calm. It connects loosely to the music without over-explaining it. The story of hitmen disguised as carpet cleaners mirrors the project’s tone: quiet professionals handling business with style and control.
If there’s a critique, it’s that the album tapers slightly toward the end. A few tracks blur together rhythmically, and some verses feel lighter than the production deserves. But even then, nothing feels wasted. The beats carry enough character to sustain interest, and the chemistry between Hit-Boy and Alchemist never dips into novelty. Goldfish isn’t built to shock or redefine anything. It’s a record about precision, patience, and mutual respect. Two producers who’ve shaped entire eras of Hip Hop deciding to rap on each other’s beats and proving they can hold their own. The music is warm, grounded, and confident—Hip Hop made by craftsmen who know exactly what they’re doing.
For all the polish Hit-Boy usually brings, he sounds freer inside Alchemist’s dusty loops. For all the restraint Alchemist usually keeps, he sounds energized by Hit-Boy’s structure. The result is a project that’s as listenable as it is thoughtful. No filler, no grandstanding—just two masters doing what they love.
Goldfish doesn’t shout for attention. It moves quietly but with presence, like a low hum in a well-tuned studio. The production is top-tier, the rapping confident and personal, and the overall experience is grounded in the kind of maturity few artists reach without losing their spark. Nothing genre-breaking—just two legends having fun and making genuinely good music.
7.5/10
Also read: The Best Hip Hop Albums Of 2025
