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Almost Healed
Almost Healed
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Almost Healed
Studio album by
ReleasedMay 26, 2023 (2023-05-26)
Recorded2022 – April 2023
Genre
Length56:35
Label
Producer
Lil Durk chronology
Loyal Bros 2
(2022)
Almost Healed
(2023)
Nightmares in the Trenches
(2023)
Singles from Almost Healed
  1. "All My Life"
    Released: May 12, 2023
  2. "Pelle Coat"
    Released: May 25, 2023
  3. "Stand by Me"
    Released: July 14, 2023

Almost Healed is the eighth studio album by American rapper Lil Durk. It was released through Only the Family, Alamo Records, and Sony Music on May 26, 2023. The album features guest appearances from Alicia Keys, J. Cole, Chief Wuk, Future, 21 Savage, Kodak Black, Rob49, Morgan Wallen, and Juice WRLD. Production was handled by Alicia Keys herself, Chopsquad DJ, Dr. Luke, ATL Jacob, Hendrix Smoke, Ghostrage, Touch of Trent, Haze, Southside, Smatt Sertified, Looisey, Desro, Metro Boomin, T99, Ryderoncrack, LMC, Cloud, Zaytoven, Wheezy, Juke Wong, LilJuMadeDaBeat, Cubeatz, B3 Productions, 7ink, Square, Quis, Inuya, Major Seven, Emzy, Charlie Handsome, LowLowTurnThatUp, Paul Monstereal, Crevm Dian, Jusvibes, RunItUpNick, Indiyah, Yeahthismoh, John Lam, Lufye, and AK. Almost Healed is a drill album.[1][2][3]

Background and singles

[edit]

Up until May 2023, the album was known under the title The Voice 2.0, a sequel to Durk's sixth studio album, The Voice (2020), which he began teasing in January 2023.[4] In an interview with XXL, Durk shared that recording is part of what helps him cope with stress and the recent loss of his brother, also revealing that he goes to therapy.[5] In return, he wanted to give his fans "therapy" by releasing the album soon, as he revealed in an interview with Billboard. He referred to the record as "the biggest album ever" regarding all the things going on in his life at that point.[6] On April 13, 2023, he announced that he had just finished the album without "half the help" he had been asking for, alluding to the album title "almost healed". That same day, he asked his followers to reach out to SZA as he wanted her to be featured on the album.[7] During that time, the album was still titled The Voice 2.0, the "2.0" implying personal growth since the prequel.[8] On May 12, 2023, the lead single of the album, "All My Life", which features fellow American rapper J. Cole was released, and the two were spotted with a group of children filming the official music video exactly ten days before.[9] The song was released on May 12, the formerly announced release date of the album. Meanwhile, Almost Healed was pushed back to May 26.[10] On May 22, the production credits were revealed, followed by the full tracklist the next day.[11][12] The second single of the album, "Pelle Coat", was released on May 25, 2023, one day before the release of the album, alongside the official music video that stars Durk and Alicia Keys and is a combined video of that song and the collaboration with Keys, "Therapy Session", which appears as a promotional single and the song before on the album. The third and final single of the album, "Stand by Me", which features American country music singer Morgan Wallen, was sent to US radio crossover on July 14, 2023.[13]

Artwork

[edit]

On May 2, 2023, Durk promised to reveal the details about his next album if the post reached 100,000 comments. After having received said amount, the rapper posted the release date and cover,[14] the latter of which depicted a black and white photograph showing Durk surrounded by blurry figures.[15][16] Shortly afterwards, the cover was replaced by a picture of Durk with his head wrapped in a bandage and blood dripping out of his right eye with a white overlay.[17]

Critical reception

[edit]
Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
SourceRating
Metacritic60/100[22]
Review scores
SourceRating
Pitchfork6.3/10[2]
Clash7/10[18]
Slant MagazineStarStarStar[19]
Rolling Stone70/100[1]
HipHopDX60/100[20]
AllMusicStarStarHalf star[21]

According to the review aggregator Metacritic, Almost Healed received "mixed or average reviews" based on a weighted average score of 60 out of 100 from 6 critic scores. Dylan Green of Pitchfork felt that Almost Healed lacked cohesiveness, explaining that "it never knows what kind of experience it wants to deliver" and "Durk's presence is strong and his endurance is inspiring, but his intentions are as muddied as ever".[2] Writing for Clash, Robin Murray praised the album's themes writing: "Music, as ever, became a point of solace – new album 'Almost Healed' is explicitly dubbed an act of therapy, and it's the sound of someone getting a lot off their chest."[18] Paul Attard, of Slant Magazine, also praised the album's themes but criticized a lack of consistency throughout the album stating: "It's admirable that an artist of Durk's popularity is willing to rap about topics such as generational trauma and structural violence on tracks like the well-meaning, if suffocatingly sappy, "All My Life." And while the authenticity of his verses is bolstered by the vivid details he peppers throughout, like seeing blood from a miscarriage in the toilet on "Sad Songs," it's also a little off-putting to then hear him threatening to "pull up with a stick" on "Big Dawg." Humans are complicated, contradictory beings, but there's an almost jarring disconnect on Almost Healed given how quickly and brazenly Durk flips the script."[19] HipHopDX's Louis Pavlakos criticized the guest features on the album stating, "Durk's insistence on making radio friendly tracks includes another lackluster team up for pop crossover. The Morgan Wallen-assisted 'Stand by Me' reeks of desperation from a man seeking approval from people who don't respect Hip Hop."[20]

Commercial performance

[edit]

Almost Healed debuted at number three on US Billboard 200 chart, earning 125,000 album-equivalent units (including 2,000 in pure album sales) in its first week. This became Lil Durk's sixth top ten album on the chart. The album also accumulated a total of 167.82 million on-demand streams of the album's songs.[23] In its second week, the album dropped to number six on the chart, earning an additional 67,000 units.[24] In its third week, the album dropped to number seven on the chart, earning 50,000 more units.[25] In its fourth week, the album dropped to number eight on the chart, earning 41,000 units, bringing its four-week total to 283,000 units.[26] On March 27, 2025, the album was certified platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) for combined sales and album-equivalent units of over one million units in the United States.[27]

Track listing

[edit]
Almost Healed track listing
No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."Therapy Session" (with Alicia Keys)Alicia CookAlicia Keys1:27
2."Pelle Coat"Chopsquad DJ4:13
3."All My Life" (featuring J. Cole)Dr. Luke3:43
4."Never Again"
  • Banks
  • Jackson
Chopsquad DJ2:19
5."Put Em on Ice"
  • Banks
  • Jackson
Chopsquad DJ2:03
6."Big Dawg" (with Chief Wuk)
2:40
7."Never Imagined" (featuring Future)
  • Chopsquad DJ
  • Ghostrage
3:12
8."Sad Songs"
  • Banks
  • Darontez Mayo
  • Trenton Turner
  • Ethan Hayes
  • Touch of Trent
  • Haze
2:36
9."Before Fajr"
2:00
10."War Bout It" (featuring 21 Savage)Metro Boomin2:40
11."You Got Em"
  • Banks
  • Ryder Bucaro
  • Liam McAlister
  • Aaron Tanarasoo
  • Indyah McAlister
  • Marian Pfaff
  • T99
  • Ryderoncrack
  • LMC
  • Cloud
  • Indyah
2:22
12."Grandson" (featuring Kodak Black)
2:20
13."300 Urus"
3:24
14."Same Side" (featuring Rob49)
2:33
15."B12"
  • Banks
  • Bucaro
  • Marquise Williams
  • Joaquin Bergalo
  • Ryderoncrack
  • Quis
  • Inuya
2:43
16."At This Point We Stuck"
  • Banks
  • Canady
  • Omar Walker
  • Kester Wakahenya Githaiga
  • ATL Jacob
  • Major Seven
  • Emzy
1:54
17."Cross the Globe" (featuring Juice WRLD)2:04
18."Dru Hill"
  • Banks
  • John Balan
  • Virga Paul-Emanuel
  • Yoosno Bin Jafar Siddik
  • Justin Gibson
  • William Ramos
  • LowLowTurnThatUp
  • Paul Monstereal
  • Crevm Dian
  • Aye Peewee
  • Jusvibes
2:55
19."Belt2Ass"
  • Banks
  • I. McAlister
  • L. McAlister
  • Mohammed Al-Khuzahi
  • Nicholas Morris
  • RunItUpNick
  • Indyah
  • LMC
  • Yeahthismoh
2:39
20."Stand by Me" (featuring Morgan Wallen)
Dr. Luke3:39
21."Moment of Truth"
  • Banks
  • John Lam
  • Andreas Krivic
  • Luca Steinkirchner
  • Lam
  • Lufye
  • AK
2:59
Total length:56:25

Notes

  • "Sad Songs" features additional vocals from Booka600

Charts

[edit]

Certifications

[edit]
Certifications for "Almost Healed"
Region Certification Certified units/sales
Canada (Music Canada)[50] Gold 40,000
United States (RIAA)[27] Platinum 1,000,000

Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone.

References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Almost Healed is the eighth studio album by American rapper , released on May 26, 2023, through Only the Family Entertainment, Alamo Records, and . The project, which features collaborations with artists including , , , and , centers on themes of personal healing, introspection, and coping with trauma from violence and loss in Chicago's scene. drew from sessions to address fractured relationships, culture, and witnessing deaths, marking a vulnerable shift from his earlier work's street narratives. The album achieved significant commercial success, debuting at number three on the with 125,000 album-equivalent units in its first week and topping the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart, while spawning 15 entries on the Hot 100. "All My Life" featuring earned Durk his first Grammy Award for Best Melodic Rap Performance at the in 2024. Critical reception was mixed, with praise for its emotional depth and guest features but criticism for inconsistent execution and a bloated tracklist amid Durk's mainstream ambitions.

Development and background

Conceptual origins and personal context

The album Almost Healed originated from Lil Durk's efforts to process profound personal traumas, particularly the deaths of close associates in the Chicago rap scene, which he has described as fueling a raw, ongoing quest for emotional recovery rather than full resolution. , a protégé and frequent collaborator, was fatally shot on November 6, 2020, during an altercation outside an Atlanta nightclub, an event Durk has cited as a pivotal for amid persistent . This loss was compounded by the killing of Durk's older brother, Dontay "OTF DThang" Banks Jr., who was shot in the head outside Club O in , on June 5, 2021, dying at age 32 with no arrests made to date. Durk framed the album's concept around these irreplaceable voids, emphasizing that "healing" remains partial in the high-stakes environment of , where retaliation cycles and survival pressures hinder complete closure. Durk's self-reported path to sobriety further shaped the project's personal underpinnings, as he publicly committed to abstaining from lean—a codeine-based drink prevalent in hip-hop culture—shortly before the album's release, attributing clearer thinking and reduced impulsivity to the decision. In early 2023 statements, he explained quitting lean to avoid the "liquid heroin" effects that clouded judgment and perpetuated dependency, marking a shift toward accountability-driven change over excuses rooted in environment or circumstance. This aligned with therapeutic elements incorporated into the work, including sessions addressing grief and addiction, which Durk positioned as tools for rebuilding agency rather than passive coping. Such disclosures underscore causal ties between substance use, trauma from losses, and his artistic evolution, with Durk rejecting narratives that externalize personal failings in favor of direct self-confrontation. Building chronologically from his prior release 7220—a 2022 platinum-certified project named after his family's former Chicago address and focused on street-rooted resilience—Almost Healed represented a calculated deepening of vulnerability without severing ties to drill's gritty ethos. While 7220 achieved commercial peaks like a No. 1 Billboard 200 debut through hits reflecting survival amid adversity, Durk conceived Almost Healed as an extension emphasizing unfinished emotional labor, released on May 26, 2023, to channel unresolved pain into structured reflection. This progression highlights Durk's intent to evolve thematically while maintaining authenticity to Chicago's drill pressures, where introspection coexists with unyielding realities of loss and loyalty.

Recording process and collaborations

Lil Durk recorded Almost Healed over an extended period culminating in its release on May 26, 2023, maintaining an intensive studio routine as a self-described "studio rat" who frequently captured ideas spontaneously. Production involved key contributors such as Chopsquad DJ, Metro Boomin, Alicia Keys, Wheezy, ATL Jacob, Southside, and Zaytoven, who handled beats across the 21-track project, integrating drill foundations with melodic and introspective elements to support the album's therapeutic focus. Guest features were strategically curated by Durk to embody themes of resilience and transformation, including on "All My Life," and on multiple tracks, , , Chief Wuk, and a posthumous appearance on "What Happened to Virgil." The collaboration with country artist on "Switzerland" introduced a rare genre fusion, highlighting shared narratives of overcoming addiction and public scrutiny, though it sparked debate due to Wallen's prior controversies. ' production and feature on "Sad Songs" further diversified the sound, blending piano-driven introspection with Durk's rap delivery to underscore emotional recovery. Durk's direct involvement in selecting collaborators ensured alignment with the album's portrayal of from trauma, including losses like those of his brother and , while prioritizing authenticity through his imprint over purely commercial pairings. These sessions avoided rushed , allowing features to enhance lyrical depth—such as Black's raw street reflections complementing Durk's growth arc—resulting in a cohesive project that balanced OTF's gritty ethos with broader artistic evolution.

Singles and promotion

Pre-release singles

"All My Life", featuring , served as the from Almost Healed, released on May 12, 2023, through OTF Entertainment, Alamo Records, and . The track, produced by Bizness Boi, DJ Bandz, and , debuted at number two on the , marking Lil Durk's highest-charting single as lead artist and driven by 32 million first-week streams alongside strong radio airplay. It also topped the chart, reflecting organic listener engagement amid Durk's public reflections on violence and loss in Chicago's scene, without relying on extensive pre-release campaigns. The song's , addressing Durk's brushes with death and against retaliatory feuds following associates' killings, generated for the album's therapeutic themes, evidenced by its rapid accumulation of over 500 million global streams by mid-2024. "" followed as the second pre-release single on May 25, 2023, one day prior to the album's launch, accompanied by an official emphasizing Durk's fashion and street resilience motifs. Produced by AXL Beats, it debuted at number 57 on the , supported by 6.2 million first-week U.S. streams, and contributed to early buzz through views exceeding 10 million within weeks of release. Unlike heavily promoted crossover hits, its performance stemmed from Durk's core fanbase loyalty, with radio adds on urban stations amplifying visibility without broader crossover tactics. This release underscored the album's raw, unpolished rollout, focusing on immediate availability to capitalize on momentum from "All My Life" rather than prolonged teasers.

Marketing and rollout

Lil Durk announced Almost Healed on May 5, 2023, via , where he pledged to unveil the album's , , and release details upon reaching comments on a teaser post, a threshold met within days. The black-and-white artwork depicted Durk centered among blurred-faced associates, symbolizing amid loss, with an initial release targeted for May 12, 2023, and an accompanying pre-save link promoted to fans. The rollout faced a postponement to May 26, 2023, allowing additional preparation amid competitive release scheduling. teasers highlighted themes of , over personal losses, and emotional vulnerability, diverging from drill rap's conventional aggression to cultivate a maturing image for wider resonance. Strategic partnerships with Alamo Records and supported physical formats like limited-edition vinyl, while branded merchandise—including hoodies and t-shirts linked to key tracks—extended promotional reach. Pre-release efforts incorporated digital service provider visits for prioritization and community initiatives, such as a scholarship fund, to reinforce the healing narrative and broaden demographic appeal beyond core hip-hop audiences.

Musical composition

Production techniques

The production of Almost Healed prominently features looped melodies as foundational elements in several tracks, creating emotive backdrops layered with sub-bass 808 kicks and trap percussion to balance introspection with rhythmic drive. Producers like utilized these loops—often simple, repetitive phrases in minor keys—to evoke , as heard in beats supporting melodic flows, while 808 bass provides the aggressive low-end punch typical of Chicago-influenced trap. For instance, "Sad Songs" employs such -driven production at 160 BPM, emphasizing sustained chords over sliding 808 patterns for emotional weight without overwhelming the vocal space. Track tempos generally range from 129 to 144 BPM across the , prioritizing accessibility for streaming and live performance over experimental variations, with examples including "Never Again" at 129 BPM and "" at 144 BPM. Mixing techniques stress vocal clarity to foreground Lil Durk's delivery, employing EQ to boost mid-range presence (around 2-5 kHz for intelligibility), compression for consistent dynamics, and minimal reverb on verses to maintain a dry, focused sound that cuts through the . The posthumous feature on "Cross The Globe" integrates Juice WRLD's archival vocals, pieced from prior sessions and blended seamlessly into the mix, though this practice has fueled broader hip-hop debates on authenticity and exploitation in posthumous releases, with critics arguing it risks diluting the artist's intent absent direct oversight.

Style and influences

Almost Healed builds on the drill tradition, featuring auto-tuned flows over trap-influenced beats with accents and 808 bass, while integrating melodic R&B hooks to temper the genre's typical intensity. This fusion reflects Lil Durk's evolution within , a subgenre pioneered by artists like , whose raw, chaotic delivery Durk adapts into more tuneful and reflective expressions. Compared to the heightened aggression in Durk's prior album 7220 (2022), which emphasized diss tracks and confrontational energy, Almost Healed exhibits restrained dynamics, prioritizing emotive singing and layered harmonies for mainstream accessibility. Guest appearances further diversify the sound, as seen in the country-trap hybrid on "Hang Wit Me" with Morgan Wallen, blending twangy guitar riffs with drill percussion, and R&B-soul infusions via Alicia Keys on "In The Bible." These elements underscore Durk's pivot from street-anthem purity toward eclectic, guest-driven versatility.

Themes and lyrics

Trauma and personal growth

Lil Durk addresses the psychological toll of bereavement in tracks like "," dedicating verses to , fatally shot outside an nightclub on November 6, 2020, and his brother Dontay "DThang" Banks, killed in a , club shooting on June 6, 2021. These losses, compounded by his father's decades-long incarceration, form a sequence Durk describes as driving sequential phases of recovery, where grief spurs self-directed fortitude rather than passive endurance. The album's titular concept underscores healing as a protracted, non-linear endeavor, with Durk citing as a mechanism for dissecting pain's causal links to , initiated amid mounting personal tragedies by early 2023. In "Drankin N Smokin," he chronicles abstaining from substances to reclaim cognitive agency, portraying as a deliberate rupture from dependency patterns exacerbated by loss, a discipline he ties to broader emotional reclamation in contemporaneous discussions. Durk's narratives prioritize endogenous agency—iterative choices amid unresolved wounds—over deterministic interpretations of trauma, evident in his pre-release reflections on transforming isolation into structured following Von's 2020 and subsequent kin loss. This approach manifests in lyrical admissions of yielding to proactive rebuilding, without presuming full resolution.

Critiques of street life and responsibility

In the track "All My Life" featuring from Almost Healed, critiques the perpetuation of street feuds by reflecting on the self-destructive impulses tied to ongoing retaliatory violence, urging listeners—particularly youth—to cease harmful behaviors amid cycles of loss. Lyrics such as "I know some kids wanna hurt theyself / Stop tryna take drugs, I refer to myself" position personal accountability as an antidote to the normalized aggression in , where retaliation often stems from entrenched rivalries like those between Durk's OTF () collective—linked to BDK (Black Disciples Killers) affiliations—and opposing factions. These conflicts have correlated with spikes in Chicago's , where gang-related homicides accounted for a significant portion of the city's 617 total murders in 2023, down 13% from 2022 but still reflecting persistent patterns of feud-driven killings. Durk extends this critique by emphasizing fatherhood and as viable escapes from and street dependency, countering media narratives that romanticize perpetual victimhood in rap without addressing causal pathways to stability. In Almost Healed, lines advocating self-improvement—"trying to better myself"—underscore quitting drugs and prioritizing responsibilities over glorifying or vendettas, drawing from Durk's own experiences as a of multiple children who cite parental duties as motivators for reform. Empirical data supports this shift's potential efficacy: Chicago's South Side neighborhoods, epicenters of OTF-linked violence, show homicide rates up to 30 times higher than safer areas, with interventions promoting accountability linked to reduced in gang-involved youth. While some defenders of subgenres argue they offer realism by documenting unaltered urban conditions—potentially aiding —critics highlight how such portrayals can normalize , as evidenced by the genre's association with real-world escalations in feuds that contributed to over 2,000 victims annually in through the early . Durk's in Almost Healed lean toward the latter view, prioritizing verifiable outcomes like declining through personal responsibility over sentimental endorsements of "street authenticity," aligning with broader patterns where disengagement from retaliatory norms correlates with lower individual involvement in the city's 13% drop in s by 2023. This balanced framing avoids uncritical acceptance of 's self-justifications, favoring causal links between lyrical tropes and sustained high lethality rates, where 19% of s proved fatal in 2023 versus 13% in 2010.

Artwork and visual elements

The cover art for Almost Healed depicts seated with a large white bandage wrapped around his head and face, exposing only his eyes and mouth, while dressed in a loose-fitting suggestive of a medical or therapeutic setting. This imagery directly literalizes the album's title, portraying a state of incomplete recovery from physical and emotional wounds. Photographed in a stark, clinical style, the composition emphasizes Durk's gaze conveying a mix of resolve and fragility, evoking the tension between enduring street-hardened toughness and admitting vulnerability. Symbolically, the represents Durk's self-described process of grappling with trauma, including losses of friends and personal hardships, positioning the visuals as a visual for partial rather than full resolution. Durk has framed the album's overarching concept around surmounting such difficulties, with the artwork extending this by illustrating exposure of inner pain amid outward strength. Critics have interpreted it as an attempt to humanize Durk's persona, though some note it aligns with broader rap tropes of and resilience without innovating beyond familiar motifs. Accompanying visual elements, such as lyric video graphics, incorporate motion designs echoing the cover's bandaged aesthetic, using overlaid text and subdued animations to reinforce motifs of without delving into narrative promotion. Fan receptions often emphasize the cover's raw authenticity, aligning with Durk's intended messaging of ongoing recovery, though empirical discussions on platforms highlight varied parses—some viewing it as emblematic of unyielding grit over therapeutic . This divergence underscores how the visuals invite projections of personal resilience, potentially diluting the artist's articulated focus on trauma's lingering effects.

Critical reception

Positive assessments

Rolling Stone praised Almost Healed for its successful navigation of "thrilling contradictions," blending Chicago drill's raw realism with polished pop sensibilities and high-profile features, ultimately rating the album 3.5 out of 5. Pitchfork highlighted the engaging storytelling on tracks like "Pelle Coat," which delivers visceral depictions of trauma with comic book vividness, and commended J. Cole's potent verse on "All My Life," addressing the exploitative "dead rapper media industrial complex," assigning an overall score of 6.3 out of 10. Reviewers noted the album's introspective core, particularly the therapeutic skit in opener "In It" with , which frames Durk's reflections on loss and healing, and tracks like "All My Life" that earned acclaim for emotional resonance and later secured a Grammy for Best Rap Song on February 4, 2024. Complex emphasized the project's focus on mental recovery as an extended process, crediting Durk's vulnerability in memorializing losses like those of his brother DThang and through . These elements contributed to Metacritic's aggregate score of 60/100, reflecting pockets of approval for Durk's artistic maturation despite broader inconsistencies.

Criticisms and mixed views

reviewer Dylan Green characterized Almost Healed as an "engaging, guest-heavy, but otherwise run-of-the-mill" effort, assigning it a score of 6.3 out of 10 and faulting its heavy dependence on high-profile features—which occupy nearly half the 21 tracks—for overshadowing Durk's solo presence and softening the raw intensity of drill rap in favor of broader radio appeal. This formulaic structure, critics argued, prioritized commercial accessibility over innovation, with melodic hooks and polished production diluting the gritty edge that defined Durk's earlier work. Other reviewers highlighted internal contradictions in the album's thematic pivot toward redemption and , noting a "jarring disconnect" between Durk's claims of personal growth and persistent glorification of street violence, which undermined the narrative coherence. critiqued this lack of focus, stating Durk "has no grasp on what he wants this album to be," resulting in a project that broadly courts mainstream acceptance but delivers inconsistent execution across its bloated 60-minute runtime. echoed these sentiments, pointing to sonic inconsistencies and an overlong tracklist that diluted standout moments of vulnerability. The album's "healing" motif faced scrutiny amid Durk's subsequent legal entanglements, including his October 24, 2024, arrest on federal charges of , use of interstate facilities in murder-for-hire, and obstruction of justice tied to a 2022 Los Angeles shooting targeting a rival's associate. These developments, occurring over a year after the album's May 26, 2023, release, empirically challenged the sincerity of its therapeutic claims, as ongoing affiliations with violence appeared to contradict declarations of reform. Debates also arose over Durk's alliances, such as his prior collaboration with on the 2021 track "," defended by Durk in May 2023 amid Wallen's lingering backlash from a 2021 racial slur incident; critics questioned the selective moral standards in rap circles, where partnerships with figures facing allegations coexist with intra-genre condemnations of disloyalty or violence.

Commercial performance

Chart achievements

Almost Healed debuted at number 3 on the US chart dated June 10, 2023. This marked Lil Durk's sixth top 10 entry on the ranking and his highest debut position to date as a lead artist. The album's chart entry was propelled by the performance of its "All My Life" featuring , which debuted at number 2 on the dated May 27, 2023, and held that peak position. Internationally, Almost Healed reached number 3 on the Canadian Albums chart. In , it entered the Albums Chart at number 32 for the week ending June 11, 2023, marking its sole week in the top 50. The album did not enter the top 100 of the but appeared on genre-specific tallies such as the Official Hip Hop and R&B Albums Chart. On year-end summaries, Almost Healed placed at number 62 on the 2023 , reflecting its longevity amid competition from and hip-hop releases, with sustained streaming contributing to over 20 weeks on the weekly chart.

Sales data and certifications

Almost Healed accumulated 125,000 album-equivalent units in its debut week ending June 1, 2023, of which 122,000 units derived from streaming equivalent albums generated by 167.82 million on-demand official streams, underscoring reliance on digital platforms over physical sales of 2,000 units. The project's longevity is evidenced by its attainment of RIAA platinum certification on March 27, 2025, for exceeding one million certified units in the United States through combined sales and streaming equivalents. No international certifications have been reported as of October 2025, with consumption metrics predominantly concentrated in the U.S. market.

Track listing

[Track listing - no content]

Impact and controversies

Cultural influence

Almost Healed played a pivotal role in advancing melodic drill by integrating introspective lyrics and autotune-driven melodies into traditional Chicago drill frameworks, a style Durk pioneered earlier but refined here with tracks emphasizing personal growth amid street narratives. This evolution helped mainstream emotional vulnerability within the subgenre, paving the way for newer Chicago rappers to adopt similar tuneful, reflective approaches over aggressive beats. Following the album's May 26, 2023 release, Durk's influence extended to subgenre shifts, as evidenced by his status as a drill ambassador whose blend of grit and melody inspired subsequent acts balancing local realism with broader appeal. The project bolstered Durk's career trajectory through measurable expansions, including a partnership with in May 2024 to relaunch his (OTF) label, which had been foundational since 2010 and grew via post- initiatives like OTF Gaming in 2021. It generated a career-best streaming week, with 35.4 million plays on its opening day—the largest for a rap in 2023—correlating with heightened visibility that supported arena tours starting summer 2023. This momentum carried into 2025 with Deep Thoughts, released March 28 amid Durk's incarceration, continuing thematic explorations of introspection and resilience built on Almost Healed's foundation. In rap's broader discourse, Almost Healed contributed to empirical discussions on by framing Durk's efforts to overcome drug addiction as central to its growth-oriented concept, contrasting persistent violence themes in . Durk's subsequent rehab stint and public reflections in underscored this legacy, positioning the album as a reference point for artists addressing amid genre pressures, though drill's violent motifs endured.

Debates on glorification versus realism

Critics and observers have debated whether Almost Healed provides a realistic portrayal of the psychological scars from Chicago's entrenched conflicts or inadvertently glorifies the very cycles of it claims to confront. Supporters argue that tracks like "All My Life" authentically unpack generational trauma tied to verifiable rivalries between Durk's (OTF) collective—affiliated with sets—and opposing factions such as those linked to the 2020 killing of FBG Duck, reflecting the structural realities of South Side neighborhoods without sanitization. This perspective positions the as therapeutic realism, with Durk himself framing it as a step toward processing unhealed wounds from personal losses, including the 2014 murder of his cousin and the 2020 death of protégé , rather than escapist fantasy. Opponents contend that the album's emphasis on street retribution and OTF risks perpetuating harmful behaviors, as subgenre conventions—including explicit references to "spinning blocks" and opps—correlate with real-world escalations in Chicago's rates, which surged over 50% from 2016 to amid 's rise. Empirical analyses highlight how such , even when rooted in , amplify labor for digital clout, potentially incentivizing further over resolution, as seen in federal prosecutors citing Durk's post-2022 song content as in his October 2024 arrest for a murder-for-hire plot tied to retaliatory motives. These polarized views underscore a tension between defenses of the as cathartic documentation—echoing broader arguments that chronicles rather than causes —and evidence favoring personal accountability, given Durk's ongoing legal entanglements, including the 2024 charges, which suggest persistent immersion in the dynamics depicted rather than transcendence. While some academic critiques caution against overattributing to lyrics amid deeper socioeconomic drivers, the 's failure to fully pivot from glorification to verifiable behavioral change invites scrutiny of whether such art prioritizes narrative authenticity over interrupting empirically linked cycles of retaliation.

References

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