I’m sorry I just do not care. I found this album to bring really nothing to the table and was just kinda boring and lacking a unique identity. There’s really just nothing for me to say about it I found it to be a nothing album. Alex just kinda sounds like a less compelling Elliot smith to me. The instrumentation isn’t very impressive or unique too in my eyes. I just don’t get the hype
It’s great. It’s really great. But I just don’t think it’s for me. Most of the songs on here are really great however. The drumming for me can be hit or miss. Paul can obviously sing really well and write songs very well and compose these songs really well. I wasn’t blown away. I was just like “yep, that was a good song”.
It’s good. But insanely derivative of other metal acts that were popping up around this time. Mainly sunbather. But it still sounds very good. Except for the vocals. They feel very rough and kinda goofy. Overall, I hope whatever the band did next was more original and vocally preformed better
Incredible record. One brimming with charm and passion out of every known corner it can. I got a lot of I love you Jennifer B vibes out of this and that’s awesome to see. The singing, while mixed low, is so sweet and innocent sounding I can’t help but love it. The production is near flawless on here. Mixing elements of electronics, jazz, and some downtempo too. Overall, I’m in love with this record really
A truly psychedelic odyssey. Taking us through this whole new world really. REAL REAL
Great beats, flows, lyrics, features on this thing. The concept is also very intriguing and kept me listening and engaged the whole way through
A very very high quality album with lots of good guitar work and singing. It didn’t strike a chord with me personally but that’s just personal taste. The singing on here started out a bit weird and I liked it but then mellowed out a little with I also enjoyed quite a bit. Sometimes this album gets weird and freaky but most of the time it’s just solid, greatly produced rock music that sounds great
An enjoyable experience with some very cool ideas. Some songs are kinda ass but the standouts really do stand out. Uzi is infectious throughout the entire thing and the features do their things very well.
A beautiful album that still takes pretty big risks that pay off immensely. Will definitely return to in the future
American midiot
This album is weird to me because I think it has the exact opposite problems that warning did. Everything’s just way too over the top and annoying here. The writing is pretty corny at times and while billy is a good singer, I can’t take it for this amount of time. Also, why did Spotify combine songs? That shit pissed me off like why did they cram two songs into one they’re separate songs they shouldn’t be packed in together. Overall, I think this album ... read more
Probably the most consistent green day album I’ve heard. There’s no bad songs on here. But none I’d really consider standouts. Maybe brain stew if it didn’t have that long ass intro but whatever. A lot of these songs keep up the high energy and catchiness I really enjoyed with dookie but applying that into a semi switch up for the band going darker lyrically.
Feels like a tribute to their career, bringing in styles from most of their previous albums. With less emphasis on grand instrumentation and payoffs and more on this floaty feeling. The beggar lover (three) is a trip of a song taking me through so much. I think there is a lot of meat on the album but I’m not sure what I would trim down. Maybe some of the longer instrumental segments but that’s really it. Gira sounds spot on here. He understands his production to a tea. Also did this ... read more
A pretty interesting backstory for such a nothing album.
I’m sorry but I just didn’t get anything out of this. The production sounds pretty dated and it gets a pass due to how revered and spaced out it is. Jai himself doesn’t really feel like he’s controlling the album. He feels very backseat to this. I get that it’s unpolished and not finished but it’s still not interesting to me. And I don’t know how that happened because I usually gravitate to less ... read more