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Review Nov 14 2025 Written by

Apollo Brown & Ty Farris – Run Toward The Monster | Review

Apollo Brown & Ty Farris - Run Toward The Monster | Review

Run Toward the Monster arrives with the weight of two deep Detroit legacies behind it, and the result is an album that hits with intent, clarity, and a fully realized vision. Apollo Brown has spent more than a decade shaping the sound of modern boom-bap: dusty loops, soul-heavy chops, punchy drums, and a sense of emotional gravity that sets him apart. His catalog is packed with full-length collaborations with sharp writers—O.C., Skyzoo, Guilty Simpson, Joell Ortiz, Che Noir, and more—and his beats always provide enough texture for an MC to move with freedom while staying locked into the rhythm. His production rarely shifts course; the consistency is the point, and its strength lies in a long-honed instinct for what Hip Hop can sound like when the drums are heavy, the samples are weathered, and the mood sinks just below the surface.

Ty Farris enters the record as an artist with his own long history of sharp writing and Detroit grit. Coming up in the city’s battle circuit under the name T-Flame, trading verses around the era of Proof and the open-mic lineage that shaped so many Detroit MCs, he carved out a reputation for technical precision. Over the years, he built a large catalog: mixtapes, EPs, and albums that circle themes of survival, poverty, street tension, addiction, and self-discipline. His No Cosign Just Cocaine series earned real recognition, and projects like Room 39, Sounds That Never Left My Soul, and Malice at the Palace cemented his place in the modern underground. We’ve followed his work closely for years, and this new record feels like a fully sharpened version of everything he’s been building toward.

Apollo Brown & Ty Farris - Run Toward The Monster | Review

With that history behind them, Run Toward the Monster moves with purpose from the first seconds of the intro “Run.” Brown lays down a sparse, cold foundation—crackling textures, slow-moving melodic fragments—before the album opens into “Follow My Soul,” where Farris begins shaping the album’s central focus: discipline, intuition, and the weight of experience. His voice cuts through Brown’s drum work with a steady rhythm, shaping each verse around direct statements and internal checkpoints.

“No Celebrations” continues this approach with a focus on work, hunger, and the long grind. The production leans into Brown’s signature formula: thick bass, clipped vocal fragments, and a soul loop reduced to its most essential pieces. Farris’s delivery locks into that downtempo movement, creating a track that feels heavy without dragging.

“Details” digs into street narratives and the gap between real life and performance. Farris moves with confidence, using his tone and pacing to draw a clear line between lived reality and manufactured image. Brown’s loop rides in a tight circle, allowing Farris’s voice to stay at the front without being swallowed by instrumentation.

The first guest, Mickey Diamond, appears on “Authenticity.” Diamond’s cold Detroit poise pairs naturally with Farris’s clipped intensity. The track relies on a slow, grainy loop that gives the two MCs a dark, pressure-filled backdrop. There’s no attempt to lean into chemistry through contrast; instead, the two stay in the same lane and deliver grounded, concrete writing.

“Ctrl Alt Delete” changes the production palette slightly with a psychedelic edge. The drums remain rooted in boom-bap, but the sample work drifts into a hazier zone. Farris uses the shift to explore awareness, instinct, and mental vigilance, keeping his voice centered even as the beat opens up.

“Beautiful Struggle” pulls the energy inward without losing strength. The writing focuses on endurance and the long grind through adversity. Brown’s loop brings in a mournful melodic line, creating a sense of weight without leaning into melodrama. Farris avoids romanticizing struggle; instead, he acknowledges the path behind him in a plainspoken way.

On “Sacred,” the production tightens up again. Farris describes the pull of the mic and the space it creates for him. His delivery is sharp, controlled, and measured. Brown’s beat is built from chopped soul fragments, wrapped around a straightforward drum pattern that keeps everything grounded.

“Cold Is the Gun” maintains the album’s icy tone. The writing focuses on pressure, danger, and the discipline needed to survive. Farris’s voice stays steady through the entire track, never drifting into theatrics or overstatement. The strength of the song lies in its restraint.

The final section of the album begins with “Street Patriots,” which uses a vocal chop to anchor a track about daily tension, street loyalty, and the mental weight of constant vigilance. Farris treats each bar like a snapshot, building a picture of Detroit life through short, precise phrases.

“Traffic” continues the narrative with a look at progression, endurance, and the way time filters people out of the grind. Brown’s production gives the track a slow, almost meditative pacing, allowing the writing to hit with clarity.

Apollo Brown & Ty Farris - Run Toward The Monster | Review

“Flawless Victory” brings in Top Hooter for a sharp, aggressive performance. Brown uses a flute sample to create an eerie, floating hook, while the drums keep the track rooted. The energy rises without breaking the album’s internal logic.

The closer, “Young Rebels,” pulls the themes together. The tone is reflective without being sentimental, and Farris speaks directly about the younger generation trying to navigate the same storms, the same traps, the same cycles. It’s a grounded conclusion to an album centered on honesty, pressure, and resilience.

Run Toward the Monster is the most fully realized Ty Farris project we’ve heard. His writing is honed, his voice is steady, and his control over pacing and imagery is at a career peak. Apollo Brown provides the exact foundation needed: gritty soul loops, slow-burning drums, and a deep understanding of how to support an MC with a voice shaped by lived experience. We’ve long admired Brown’s stylistic boom-bap work, and the pairing with Farris delivers everything it promised. This album is a precise, cold-weather record built from discipline, patience, and focus—two Detroit artists working in absolute alignment.

8.5/10

Also read: The Best Hip Hop Albums Of 2025 & 25 Essential Detroit Hip Hop Albums

Apollo Brown & Ty Farris - Run Toward The Monster | Review

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