Open your mind. It's a simple concept and a message that Flatbush Zombies share during every show as a reminder for fans to expand their beliefs. On Wednesday (May 25), Meechy Darko, Zombie Juice and Erick The Architect continued to spread their motto during the final stop of their 3001: A Laced Odyssey Tour at Webster Hall in New York.

Before even getting into the venue, the air outside was thick with the smell of weed -- a sign that the fans inside were already high on their own supply and lighting up in honor of the rappers' favorite pastime. The sold-out show, which also featured Queens rapper Remy Banks and A$AP Mob member A$AP Twelvyy, was an amalgamation of tie-dye T-shirt-wearing teens and beer-wielding twenty-somethings waiting to hear the sounds of Brooklyn's very own Zombies. 

Shortly after 9:15 p.m., Webster Hall's Grand Ballroom grew dim and a booming voice introduced the rap trio, whose debut album, 3001: A Laced Odyssey, racked up sales of 35,340 in its first week of release in March. "In a world full of haters stands a single group who clearly separate themselves from the rest," a pre-recorded voice announced before Flatbush Zombies entered the stage to flashing lights and a backdrop of kaleidoscopic colors.

They kicked things off with the fitting A Laced Odyssey album opener "The Odyssey" and continued on with the mellow groove "Good Grief" before paying their respects to a few fallen fellow MCs. "R.I.P., Steez, R.I.P., ODB, R.I.P., B.I.G.," they chanted. Then their Biggie-inspired ode "Glorious Thugs" shook the room in a decidedly apropos manner, sending the crowd into a roar. 

After Meechy asked those in the audience who copped their new LP (and acknowledged he knew others downloaded it illegally), the Zombies continued raging on with new cuts including "R.I.P.C.D.," "Trade-Off" and "New Phone, Who Dis?" To the surprise of those in the room, Meechy, Erick and Juice debuted two new tracks, throwing a nod to their sticky green cyphers over one of the guitar-laden bangers. "We are patiently waiting but I don't really give a fuck if we ain't in a rotation," Juice spit.

And it wouldn't be a Zombies show without performing some oldies but goodies off their BetterOFFDead tape. Erick got some solo shine onstage with "222," Meech encouraged everyone (even the cats and dogs) to throw their lighters up for "Palm Trees" and the entire building felt like it shook as the IDGAF ode "Bliss" rang off.

Plus fan favorite "Thug Waffle," "Your Favorite Rap Song" and The Underachievers collabo "Luam" all got play before the show came to an end, proving Flatbush Zombies cater to their supporters old and new.

While the music is what kept the people intrigued and crowd surfing throughout the night on the last date of their tour (60,000 tickets sold in total), it's the food for thought Meech and Juice shared before bidding farewell that hit as hard as their lyrics.

"I know I'm very comfortable," Meech stated. "I'm at home right now. You lucky I ain't got my socks off and shit. Here's the message we spread at every fuckin' show. If you've been going to our shows from the beginning you should know this message. It should be embedded in your fuckin' brain. You should never fuckin' forget this shit. Y'all still fuckin' listening right?"

"This message goes for everybody. The n---a doin' the lights, the n---a doin' the screen, the n---a djing, the n---a up top that never put his hands up one time even though we asked him 100 times, the bitch in the bathroom throwing up, the n---a that left 20 minutes ago tryna avoid traffic, the fuckin' security that every time I stage dive they try to cradle me like I'm some little ass baby -- I hate that shit. Y'all still listening right? I gotta check. I'm just making sure. Here's the fuckin' message. Open your fuckin' mind. The end. Peace and love and all that bullshit if you believe in it."

When it came time for all eyes to be on Juice, he took the political route. "I ain't gonna tell y'all n---as what to do but I'ma tell you what, Hillary Clinton is an old fuck," he shared. "And I'ma tell you guys, do not, I repeat, do not vote for Donald Trump. Take back the world. The world is yours. Let's make the world great again. It's lit."  

The journey to Flatbush Zombies taking over the rap world is just beginning. 

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