Injury Reserve
By The Time I Get To Phoenix


5.0
classic

Review

by Miloslaw Archibald Rugallini STAFF
September 22nd, 2021 | 140 replies


Release Date: 2021 | Tracklist

Review Summary: bababadalgharaghtakamminarronnkon...

Injury Reserve are a hip-hop group who make music that is fundamentally based in Rhythm & Poetry. Their latest release, By the Time I Get to Phoenix, was catalysed by an improvised DJ set of their very own rap music in a small club which yielded surprising and fascinating results. Using our rich powers of deduction and boundless knowledge of genre conventions, we can confidently state th–

“this is NOT a hip hop album”
sputnikmusic user JayEnder, September 15th, 2021

Huh? It sure seems an essential slice of taxonomy to lend context to this album. I get it, though. There's a few sounds being toyed with here, like, uh...


“abstract production meets dissonant riffs a la This Heat’s Deceit
sputnikmusic user luci, September 15th, 2021

Oh sweet Jesus, how deep does this go? How do we engage with By the Time I Get to Phoenix on its own terms? I've certainly been trying. Three days have passed. The straws I'm clutching at have chafed to a fine dust in my clammy palms. Some field testing is in order.


“What the fuck are we listening to?”
Milo's long-suffering better half, September 18th, 2021

Righto. Even my dysfunctional social barometer should've called that. By the Time I Get to Phoenix will inevitably exclude listeners with its abstract and surreal leanings, its frank and inherent engagement with grief, but it's not entirely defined by either. While the ghost of Stepa J. Groggs haunts this album, the experience is not overwhelmingly maudlin. Far from it; 'Wild Wild West' relates 5G conspiracy to the five-time Razzie Award winning film of the same name, which might sound like the silliest fucking thing, but it doesn't compromise the album's sincerity at all. Meanwhile, the beats attack in a twitching, glitching, spaced-out fervour while somehow avoiding becoming an irritating cerebral challenge. By the Time I Get to Phoenix is jam-packed with such paradoxes. It doesn't subsist on any one simple act of juxtaposition or subversion, and it'll have your mind spinning elliptical should you attempt to corner it and demand its raison d'être. The only option is to listen.

Ritchie with a T's stop-start diatribe in 'Outside' kickstarts the experience in disorienting fashion. He makes infrequent attempts at consistent cadence while lurching through a stream of trash talk. The instrumental's meandering melody worms its way through small variations while the opening monologue is slowly recontextualised into muffled background noise, roiling as thunderclouds wreathed around the track's amorphous heartbeat. Meanwhile a pitch-lowered vocal enters with the threat that “this don't end in agree to disagree”. Following this warning the instrumental is finally given the lead, a descending minor chord progression shakily building steam as burnt melodies flit to-and-fro, Ritchie's panting manipulated into clustered swarms, tapering the gentle expansion of the instrumental back to claustrophobia.

'Superman That' is a violent change of pace. When Injury Reserve were recently in conversation with the internet's most melonious music nerd they rejected the limitation of experimental labels and the intellectual dead-end of approaching this track from a cerebral standpoint. To paraphrase, Ritchie told us to simply feel the music. Sage fucking advice this has turned out to be. Although many of the tracks here seethe and lurch, obscure and feint, play games of rhythmic breakcore while stilted, effect-laden vocals circle and jab, the end result is not an imparseable brick wall of unpleasant experimentation; it's a garden of unearthly delights.

If 'Outside' was Alice peering over the rabbit hole, eyes glittering and curious as she musters what resolve she can, and 'Superman That' an arm thrust straight from Wonderland's core tugging her tumbling to depths unknown, the album as it follows is a technicolour montage of insanity in all its guises, glorious and terrible. 'SS San Francisco''s dusty descending four-note bassline sounds like the end of the fucking world, and the immense percussion that acccompanies reserves an extra dose of low end to make Ritchie's verse pop like a toaster strudel. 'Footwork in a Forest Fire' starts uptempo enough to inspire cranium-led defenestration before it devolves, momentum flagging, detuning itself to an unholy death. 'Ground Zero' is a dystopian shitshow, everything collapsing, disintegrating, the humour in the lyrics and hall-of-fame ad libs all that can save us now. 'Smoke Don't Clear' follows maybe the funniest intro of all time with a hilarious and surreal vocal performance over uptempo IDM chromaticism. 'Postpostpartum' feels like floating on a wave of success, blissing out, the gong of your heart just straight vibrating. 'Bye Storm''s Brian Eno sample serves as a swirling basis for what could almost be a Black Lodge rendition of 'Closing Time' in some world or another.

Mention non sequiturs somewhere

It's not all so disconnected and crazy as that might all sound, though. Two songs in particular give this album a raw emotional core that somehow seeps through into tracks that they don't even touch. 'Top Picks for You' is a slice of gorgeous, heartbreaking poetry. A loose arrangement around a simple, bleeding melody allows for a potent contemporary take on the space left behind by the recently departed, algorithms invoked both metaphorically and literally to illustrate how loved ones' silhouettes can seem outlined in day-to-day life by the most innocuous things. 'Knees' is the second pure heartbreaker of the album, sudden stabs of guitar underlying a tale of physical deterioration and spiritual stagnation, Groggs stepping in for the final verse to further clarify the nature of his addiction: “Okay, this last one is my last one, shit / Probably said that about the last one / Probably gon' say it 'bout the next two...


“i listen 2 music p. broadly and I honestly couldn't tell you that anything else sounds like this. some sui generis ass shit. gonna Loveless a whole genre on us”
sputnikmusic user Winesburgohio, September 16th, 2021

An artist has released an album, and people are confused, angry, and afraid. Collateral listeners lodging with forum-dwelling weirdos are already chirping a familiar refrain along with bumps-in-the-whip-vibe-chasers involving the words “just” and “noise”, but those that are enjoying By the Time I Get to Phoenix are partaking in an unusual form of hyperbole which contains little consensus beyond the album being really fucking good. It's tempting to refer to the album's serendipitous and explicit portrayal of grief as the overwhelming factor here, but this buries the life-affirming humour, the abstract emoting, and the joyously impetuous music that underlies good portions of the release. On that last point, it's also tempting to use that nice catch-all term “production” and start singing Parker Corey's praises. This wouldn't really be a mistake. Parker proves here that he's not only ahead of the curve, but a thoroughly outlying anomaly who probably can hear dog whistles, see UV light, and orate at length about the significance of neologism in Finnegans Wake. Yet this album begins and ends with a group of people and their artistic synthesis. Ritchie and Groggs' performances across the album are dynamic, bizarre, outrageously creative, and underpinned by lyrics that are as effective at distracting and surprising the unsuspecting listener as they are at explicitly hanging their own cold truths on the line for the world to gawk at. What these artists have pulled together in their last outing as a trio is something more than the sum of its parts, a paradoxical masterpiece that lies somewhere in the space between, blindingly bright and painfully incomprehensible.



Recent reviews by this author
gyrofield A Faint Glow of BraveryYussef Dayes Black Classical Music
Swans The BeggarBilly Woods and Kenny Segal Maps
Alfa Mist VariablesJPEGMAFIA and Danny Brown Scaring the Hoes
user ratings (322)
3.8
excellent
other reviews of this album
luci (4.5)
Injury Reserve have found their purgatory and it’s a hellscape you won’t want to leave....



Comments:Add a Comment 
parksungjoon
September 22nd 2021


47231 Comments


congrats u broke the front page

Gnocchi
Staff Reviewer
September 22nd 2021


18256 Comments


taking inspiration from me now hmmmm?

Cryptkeeper
September 22nd 2021


2070 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

Ghost pos

Sowing
Moderator
September 22nd 2021


43943 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

Even though I have this rated, I still honestly have no idea what to think of it. It's sheer lunacy.

Wonderful review, of course.

MiloRuggles
Staff Reviewer
September 22nd 2021


3025 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

a thankee both, yes I can confirm from the frontlines that thinking about this album is not conducive to productive, solutions-based thinking

Slex
September 22nd 2021


16523 Comments


I feel like what did I do before this album came out because I can't ever be without it now

Anyways what a dope review u cheeky bugger

Dewinged
Staff Reviewer
September 22nd 2021


32020 Comments


I still haven't heard this and this review just made me regret it.

someone
Contributing Reviewer
September 22nd 2021


6581 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5 | Sound Off

can all reviews be Milo reviews, please?

Winesburgohio
Staff Reviewer
September 22nd 2021


3950 Comments

Album Rating: 4.8

nailed it < 3



loving Footwork in a Forest Fire at the moment. just the way it ratchets up tension to the point of saturation and then, contra expectation, use a relief valve. just wonderfully wry humour and such a banger of a track

Gnocchi
Staff Reviewer
September 22nd 2021


18256 Comments


We are all milos

dedex
Staff Reviewer
September 22nd 2021


12784 Comments

Album Rating: 3.6 | Sound Off

aye now that is a goodass review

kinda mad the site ain't broken tho 😠

MiloRuggles
Staff Reviewer
September 22nd 2021


3025 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

Yeah slex, I've lost count at this point. Will give it a rest presently as it's echoing through my head in my spare time.

A final thanks for reading/feedback before I hunker down for the night. Legit lost sleep making this one vaguely timely.

Wry humour is fucking right, this album makes me laugh

We are indeed all Milos if we choose to be

parksungjoon
September 22nd 2021


47231 Comments


only lasted minute or so

https://i.imgur.com/4cL3GUu.jpg

JohnnyoftheWell
Staff Reviewer
September 22nd 2021


60294 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

woa !

KrillBoi
September 22nd 2021


464 Comments


I don't understand what is happening on this album half of the time but I dig it anyway.

YoYoMancuso
Staff Reviewer
September 22nd 2021


18855 Comments

Album Rating: 2.5

this didn't do it for me but fantastic review

Rowan5215
Staff Reviewer
September 22nd 2021


47594 Comments

Album Rating: 4.8

yes very good



I like how Superman That has the best hook of the year over Parker just absolutely butchering Athens France by BC,NR and it's a perfect fucking fit. this album is beautiful alchemy

JayEnder
September 22nd 2021


19773 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

Oh wowie I was featured in sputnikmusic.com user MiloRuggles' review of By the Time I Get to Phoenix by Injury Reserve. This is what hitting the big time feels like 😭



In all honesty though fantastic review dude!

MiloRuggles
Staff Reviewer
September 22nd 2021


3025 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

Haha cheers for the historic document, park. Yeah I shortened the summary as soon as I saw your comment roll in.

Cheers cheers frens

Butchering is the right fucking word row

Luv ya Jay xx quote me back sometime

MiloRuggles
Staff Reviewer
September 22nd 2021


3025 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

Oh and a sleepy fumble deleted a comment where I thanked wines for being wines. Let the record show that the thanks remains



You have to be logged in to post a comment. Login | Create a Profile





STAFF & CONTRIBUTORS // CONTACT US

Bands: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z


Site Copyright 2005-2023 Sputnikmusic.com
All Album Reviews Displayed With Permission of Authors | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy