Music / hip hop

Fighting demons


Reviews (6)


Pitchfork

d. 20. Dec. 2021

By

By

Dylan Green

d. 20. Dec. 2021

"Fighting Demons is too polished to be considered a total flub and its heart is in the right place, but it's difficult to look at it as anything more than another product falling off a long assembly line powered by dead rappers".


NME

d. 10. Dec. 2021

By

By

Kyann-Sian Williams

d. 10. Dec. 2021

"Released to mark the second anniversary of the artist's tragic death, this is a rare thing: a posthumous album crafted with exquisite care ... The former NME cover star called himself the "codeine Cobain", and 'Fighting Demons' is evidence of a nuanced, complex artist whose legacy is stunning in its richness".


AllMusic

2021

By

By

Fred Thomas (musikanmelder)

2021

"Themes of struggling to overcome depression and drug dependency surface often on Fighting Demons, making it a heavier collection than the sometimes celebratory memoriam of Legends Never Die. It's not an essential piece of the Juice WRLD story, but it's also not without some solid reminders of his greatness".


NME

d. 10. Dec. 2021

By

By

Kyann-Sian Williams

d. 10. Dec. 2021

"Released to mark the second anniversary of the artist's tragic death, this is a rare thing: a posthumous album crafted with exquisite care ... The former NME cover star called himself the "codeine Cobain", and 'Fighting Demons' is evidence of a nuanced, complex artist whose legacy is stunning in its richness".


AllMusic

2021

By

By

Fred Thomas (musikanmelder)

2021

"Themes of struggling to overcome depression and drug dependency surface often on Fighting Demons, making it a heavier collection than the sometimes celebratory memoriam of Legends Never Die. It's not an essential piece of the Juice WRLD story, but it's also not without some solid reminders of his greatness".


Pitchfork

d. 20. Dec. 2021

By

By

Dylan Green

d. 20. Dec. 2021

"Fighting Demons is too polished to be considered a total flub and its heart is in the right place, but it's difficult to look at it as anything more than another product falling off a long assembly line powered by dead rappers".