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Never Better [10th Anniversary Edition]
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Never Better [10th Anniversary Edition]
Current price: $27.99
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Barnes and Noble
Never Better [10th Anniversary Edition]
Current price: $27.99
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It almost feels mean-spirited to call
P.O.S.
rap-rock, so sullied is that name from millennial mook-rock, but as he proudly interpolates
Fugazi
and
Notorious B.I.G.
on
Never Better
, it becomes obvious that this term is one he's determined to redefine. Track titles like
"Drumroll (We're All Thirsty)"
"Terrorish"
don't disappoint, all churlish guitar thuds, chest-thumping choruses and rapid-fire rhymes; it feels like the
Linkin Park
aesthetic done right, which is, really, a strange artistic achievement, but one handily accomplished. These hot flashes of intensity are nicely contrasted by neighbors like the darkly soothing
"Optimist (We Are Not for Them)"
and the satisfying boom-bap of
"Savion Glover,"
giving the album some assured ebbs in intensity. Better still is the bombastically chintzy
"Goodbye,"
which sounds like the type of beat
Just Blaze
would save for his very favorite client. But this is staunchly
' show, and as an MC he's eager to dazzle. While his big emphatic Midwestern enunciation recalls
Eminem
, his emo-rap fixations are more in line with
El-P
or
Cadence Weapon
. He's fixated, obsessed even, with his friends, particularly those who've abused his trust, and constructs his record from the pensive moments of solitude between vainglorious barnburners. Between this brutal bleating and the general anger of the production, the record is dank and punishing on the ears -- probably just as
intended, but still a step or two shy of the sonic maturity he so yearns to lend the subgenre. ~ Clayton Purdom
P.O.S.
rap-rock, so sullied is that name from millennial mook-rock, but as he proudly interpolates
Fugazi
and
Notorious B.I.G.
on
Never Better
, it becomes obvious that this term is one he's determined to redefine. Track titles like
"Drumroll (We're All Thirsty)"
"Terrorish"
don't disappoint, all churlish guitar thuds, chest-thumping choruses and rapid-fire rhymes; it feels like the
Linkin Park
aesthetic done right, which is, really, a strange artistic achievement, but one handily accomplished. These hot flashes of intensity are nicely contrasted by neighbors like the darkly soothing
"Optimist (We Are Not for Them)"
and the satisfying boom-bap of
"Savion Glover,"
giving the album some assured ebbs in intensity. Better still is the bombastically chintzy
"Goodbye,"
which sounds like the type of beat
Just Blaze
would save for his very favorite client. But this is staunchly
' show, and as an MC he's eager to dazzle. While his big emphatic Midwestern enunciation recalls
Eminem
, his emo-rap fixations are more in line with
El-P
or
Cadence Weapon
. He's fixated, obsessed even, with his friends, particularly those who've abused his trust, and constructs his record from the pensive moments of solitude between vainglorious barnburners. Between this brutal bleating and the general anger of the production, the record is dank and punishing on the ears -- probably just as
intended, but still a step or two shy of the sonic maturity he so yearns to lend the subgenre. ~ Clayton Purdom