In another life, Monaleo is toting a fuchsia briefcase into a courtroom, ready to argue on behalf of a girl who ran over her ex—allegedly. At least, that’s what her mother envisioned for her: a career in criminal defense, starting by attending Houston’s High School for Law and Justice. “She thought I just had a way with my words,” Monaleo told Vulture in 2022. Her new mixtape still brings her familiar brash humor, but this time, she’s also grappling with mortality and legacy. If Who Did the Body was a case, it would be a class action suit on behalf of the fallen and forgotten, whose memories live on in its stories.
It’s the topic of conversation on opener “Life After Death,” where Monaleo imagines throwing hands with an opp in the afterlife over a theremin-like whine and a drum loop that could have been pulled from a YouTube beat pack. “Dignified” is more affecting, using narrative fiction to dramatize Monaleo’s anxieties. “Fox News saying I was just a troubled star,” she raps, predicting the headlines that might follow her hypothetical death in a car crash. “That should show you how you die might become just who you are.” But the song falters in its melodramatic sung chorus, where cheesy swells of electric guitar come across like the soundtrack for a PSA against drunk driving.
On her 2023 debut, Where the Flowers Don’t Die, Monaleo flexed her singing chops with piano and acoustic ballads. Though she has a beautiful voice, these tracks continue to be weak points. The Mad Libs lyrics of “Locked In”—“I was shooting in the gym, but what happens when I get sore”—distract from her R&B runs. “Diary of an OG” is a touching ode to the adultification of eldest daughters, but nothing in the song stands out from the abundant online discourse that already exists on the topic.
