Music / hip hop

Legends never die


Reviews (6)


Rolling stone

d. 15. July 2020

By

By

Danny Schwartz

d. 15. July 2020

"While Death Race sampled modern rap production trends, Legends Never Die is committed to the guitar as an instrument used to meld hip hop and various shades of pop-punk and emo. The album shines brightest when Juice stops navel-gazing, when he tempers his fatalism with a sense of hope and togetherness, the yang to his depressive yin".


The line of best fit

d. 10. July 2020

By

By

Steven Loftin

d. 10. July 2020

"Legends never die... which is true, their legacy remains, imprinted upon the culture they helped spawn. A legacy that remains stunted is one that remains pure, and for Juice WRLD it's one that, in the same vein as Lil Peep, continues to offer an exploration into the dark, harsh realities of the human mind, even those that might seem untouchable through dizzying social media numbers and bank accounts with more zeroes than albums. We are all human after all".


Pitchfork

d. 30. Sep. 2020

By

By

Brandon Caldwell

d. 30. Sep. 2020

"The Chicago artist's first posthumous release doesn't feel like a final goodbye, but instead a continued look inside his world. It's bleak and beautiful ... Legends Never Die becomes another way for Juice WRLD to keep saving people from their demons. He wanted to help fans who were also enduring his pain-he never wanted to be alone in the process".


The line of best fit

d. 10. July 2020

By

By

Steven Loftin

d. 10. July 2020

"Legends never die... which is true, their legacy remains, imprinted upon the culture they helped spawn. A legacy that remains stunted is one that remains pure, and for Juice WRLD it's one that, in the same vein as Lil Peep, continues to offer an exploration into the dark, harsh realities of the human mind, even those that might seem untouchable through dizzying social media numbers and bank accounts with more zeroes than albums. We are all human after all".


Pitchfork

d. 30. Sep. 2020

By

By

Brandon Caldwell

d. 30. Sep. 2020

"The Chicago artist's first posthumous release doesn't feel like a final goodbye, but instead a continued look inside his world. It's bleak and beautiful ... Legends Never Die becomes another way for Juice WRLD to keep saving people from their demons. He wanted to help fans who were also enduring his pain-he never wanted to be alone in the process".


Rolling stone

d. 15. July 2020

By

By

Danny Schwartz

d. 15. July 2020

"While Death Race sampled modern rap production trends, Legends Never Die is committed to the guitar as an instrument used to meld hip hop and various shades of pop-punk and emo. The album shines brightest when Juice stops navel-gazing, when he tempers his fatalism with a sense of hope and togetherness, the yang to his depressive yin".