Young Thug UY SCUTI
Review coming soon...
Critics' Top Tracks
The standout songs that made critics take notice
Dreams Rarely Do Come True
1 mention
"Mariah the Scientist warmly declaring her love for Thug"— Rolling Stone
Sad Spider
3 mentions
"“I’ve been crying all day/I seen my brother turn rat right in my face," he says on "Sad Spider,""— Rolling Stone
On The News (feat. Cardi B)
1 mention
""Do you know how it feels to see your face on the news?""— AllMusic
Mariah the Scientist warmly declaring her love for Thug
Track Ratings
How critics rated each track, relative to this album (0-100). Only tracks that made critics feel something are rated.
Ninja
Yuck (feat. Ken Carson)
On The News (feat. Cardi B)
Catch Me I’m Falling
Fucking Told U
Whoopty Doo
Blaming Jesus
Sad Spider
RIP Big & Mack (feat. T.I.)
Invest Into You (feat. Mariah The Scientist)
I’m So Dope
Pardon My Back (feat. Lil Baby)
Mami (feat. Sexyy Red)
Whaddup Jesus (feat. YFN Lucci)
Walk Down (feat. 21 Savage)
Pipe Down (feat. Travis Scott)
Spider or Jeffery (feat. Quavo)
Revenge (feat. Lil Gotit & 1300SAINT)
Money On Money (feat. Future)
Dreams Rarely Do Come True (feat. Mariah The Scientist)
Miss My Dogs
What Critics Are Saying
Deep insights from 4 critics who reviewed this album
Critic's Take
UY SCUTI’s best songs are the emotionally raw moments — the review points to “Sad Spider” and the powerful closer “Miss My Dogs” as the strongest work here. The critic hears Young Thug’s vulnerability most vividly in these tracks, calling them the album’s most effective moments. By contrast, the review singles out the weaker bangers like “Yuck” and “Ninja” as draggers, which helps answer who delivers the best tracks on UY SCUTI. Overall, the album’s highs (Sad Spider, Miss My Dogs) show Thug’s real feeling, even as other songs dilute his signature touch.
Key Points
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The best song is the album closer 'Miss My Dogs' for its powerful, dense emotional weight.
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The album’s strengths are raw vulnerability and moments of introspection, contrasted with weaker, unnecessary trap fillers.
Themes
Critic's Take
Garratt-Stanley finds the best moments on Uy Scuti to be the few tracks that actually feel truthful — notably “Sad Spider” and intermittent sparks in “Fucking Told U” and “Pipe Down” — but he writes with weary disappointment. The review emphasises how the album captures isolation and sadness from his incarceration yet delivers those feelings with lethargy and incoherence, so the best songs feel honest rather than triumphant. In short, the best songs on UY SCUTI are the ones that stop chasing viral stunts and show Thug’s vulnerability, but they’re too few and too muted to redeem the record.
Key Points
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“Sad Spider” is best because its pensive honesty conveys genuine anguish absent elsewhere.
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The album’s core strengths are its moments of vulnerability, but they’re undermined by lethargy, incoherence and commercial stunts.
Themes
Critic's Take
Pierre finds UY SCUTI suffused with manufactured virality rather than artistry, calling out tracks built to be clipped rather than felt. He singles out “Whoopty Doo” and “Miss My Dogs” as emblematic of that strategy — the former an ironic viral stunt, the latter a phony, seven-minute apology — and suggests they’re the most memorable but not the best in any meaningful musical sense. For readers searching for the best songs on UY SCUTI or best tracks on UY SCUTI, the review implies the album’s most-discussed moments are notable for spectacle, not substance. The tone is weary and dismissive: attention-grabbing hooks and viral stunts replace sincerity and style.
Key Points
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The best-discussed song, "Whoopty Doo," is notable for its viral intent rather than musical depth.
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UY SCUTI's core strengths are its attention-grabbing moments and topical provocation, though the reviewer finds them shallow.
Themes
Critic's Take
Mosi Reeves finds the best songs on UY Scuti to be the album-closing consolations — notably “Miss My Dogs” and the Mariah duet “Dreams Rarely Do Come True” — because they humanize Thug amid a sprawling, messy comeback. Reeves writes with a weary, exacting cadence, noting how “Miss My Dogs” works on its own as a meandering, wounded apology while the Mariah track warmly declares love and restores some grace. He argues that the rest of UY Scuti is a hot mess of conflicted emotions and poor sequencing, which makes identifying the best tracks feel like spotting rare, flickering beacons. The review reads like a plea: the best tracks on UY Scuti are the ones that let Thug’s vulnerability register instead of getting lost in bloated tropes.
Key Points
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“Miss My Dogs” is the best song because it channels Thug’s wounded apology into a working, emotional centerpiece.
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The album’s core strengths are moments of raw vulnerability and strong guest chemistry, but they’re undermined by poor sequencing and messy execution.