This is the third 2nd In Command album I’ve covered this year, and probably their most conceptual - playing to their darkest and least sympathetic impulses in a vivid and venomous breakup, but Cosmo’s throaty vocals are an essential complicating puncture as the ex who has the other side of the story, and DBLE_T plays an exasperated friend sick of 2nd’s bullshit but with his own mess just out of frame.
Now there’s a final ‘twist’ that has harsher ... read more