| | Ratings (44) |
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0.0 | Jeffery J. Bigglestein | October 25th 20 | SHE LIKE THE WAY THAT I DANCErSHE LIKE THE WAY THAT I MOVErSHE LIKE THE WAY THAT I ROCKrSHE LIKE THE WAY THAT I WOO
1 Bumps | Bump |
3.0 good | StarlessCore | October 25th 19 | Welcome to the party better than most of kanye's songs this decade u clowns
1 Bumps | Bump |
3.7 great | Erwann S. STAFF | November 27th 20 | That voice, man. On top of the dark af UK drill atmosphere, what's most striking about Pop Smoke's music is how deep his voice is. This voice, associated with his quite unique delivery, perfectly matches said atmosphere, enveloping the whole record into a menacing vibe. What's imo super interesting is how he uses UK drill beats to tackle hedonistic, US trap matters. Apparently, this recipe got his songs to receive more airplay than some Billboard #1 in NYC. He could've change the game. Or maybe he wouldn't have, but what he achieved in 14 months only gets nuthang but respek from me. The mixtape's problem, however, is that it clearly is a one trick pony, but it's well executed throughout the quite short (27 mins) length.
Bump |
3.0 good | Doublez38 | August 17th 19 | If you?ve listened to Welcome To The party, you?ve already got the gist here. Pop Smoke almost never deviates from this formula and offers us a compilation of well street tracks, as well as the PTSD exception that looks like 50 cent of Get Rich. I will say that for a first project it is encouraging, because Pop smoke has some aspect of his own, and if he works well on a real album, he could do something interesting. But for now, it?s just fine.
Bump |
3.0 good | Henry | October 28th 23 |
4.0 excellent | iGuter | March 23rd 23 |
4.5 superb | Dogie | October 31st 22 |
3.5 great | lurxy | June 24th 22 |
4.0 excellent | Metaxu | August 3rd 21 |
2.5 average | defty12 | December 15th 20 |
3.5 great | lg433 | July 22nd 20 |
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