MUSIC

Review: Cardi B is a star on debut album 'Invasion of Privacy'

Maeve McDermott
USA TODAY
Rapper Cardi B at the Barclays Center in New York on Oct. 26, 2017.

At what point on Cardi B's new album can fans truly grasp that she's unstoppable?

Maybe it's when the beat goes double-time on Invasion of Privacy's opening track, Get Up 10. Or when Chance the Rapper shows up to declare she's living her Best Life. Or on her absolutely fuego bilingual duet with Bad Bunny and J. Balvin on I Like It. Or on any one of her previously released tracks — like Be Careful or Bartier Cardi or the immortal Bodak Yellow — that remind listeners exactly how long she's been dominating hip-hop since her unlikely-yet-completely welcome emergence last year.

And it likely won't take fans until the very end of the album to realize how good Invasion of Privacy really is, but in case they need convincing, the closing track I Do seems destined for status as a single, a surprise duet with the similarly-beloved singer SZA.

Yet, true Cardi B fans probably already knew their idol had a hit on her hands. Because, especially for such a new star, the rapper has come out of the gate since Bodak Yellow rarely making a misstep when it comes to her releases. On Invasion of Privacy, she shows an impressive range that stretches beyond her more worrisome impulses — like dedicating sizable chunks of her songs to her devotion to her fiancé, Offset, on tracks like Bartier Cardi and her appearance on Migos' Motorsport. Cardi and Offset's relationship ups-and-downs have been well documented on her social media and in interviews, and the dramas play out in vivid detail on tracks like the deliciously threatening Be Careful and the painfully relatable Thru Your Phone.

At 13 tracks, Invasion of Privacy isn't overstuffed with endless filler like many releases by the singer's rap peers. Leave it to Cardi, marketing queen, to know that fans get exhausted when performers overstay their welcome in attempts to rack up streaming numbers. The hip-hop star likely doesn't have to worry about that, considering her album seems destined for charts success, if Bodak Yellow's record-breaking last year was any indication. Even when Bodak was still scaling the Hot 100, however, there were questions whether Cardi was a one-hit wonder, whether she'd be able to follow the song's success with a proper album.

Luckily for fans, Invasion of Privacy is good enough to validate her status as one of hip-hop's most promising talents. It's the kind of debut that ensures her star isn't diminishing anytime soon.