Piâerre Bourne and Young Nudy first stepped into the public eye during a rap renaissance. This was eons ago: a faraway time called 2017 when kids wanted to be VLONE Thugs and grown men bemoaned this thing they called âmumble rap.â At first, fans were more interested in Piâerre and Nudyâs proximity to hip-hopâs new-age disruptors (did you know Young Nudy is 21 Savageâs real cousin?) than the partnership between them. But theyâve played major roles in each otherâs development; the cunning producer/vocalist/engineer was already all over Nudyâs discography by the time his tags were slapped across Playboi Cartiâs gamebreaking debut. And once new fans began to delve into the lambent, 8-bit underbelly of Piâerreâs catalog, they discovered Nudyâs name slathered on every corner.
Nudy and Piâerreâs early work was imbued with malevolenceâtheir best track, âEA,â seethes with bloodshot paranoia. But the mood has progressively lightened since then. Nudy Land, the Atlanta rapperâs breakout, finds balance between macabre texture and gut-busting humor; while you wait for wings at the âBarbecue,â Nudy wants to âslap meat on her grill.â 2019âs Sliâmerre, his first official collab tape with Piâerre, peaks with âSunflower Seeds,â a guitar-driven track serene enough to put a toddler to sleep. Now, after five years of solo ventures and RIAA plaques, theyâve reappeared with Sliâmerre 2, a lukewarm collection of drug-and-sex anthems that, unfortunately, could put you to sleep.
Across the sequelâs 16 songs, Young Nudyâs streamlined delivery sits rigidly atop Piâerre Bourneâs all-too-familiar production quirks. The final boss music of âGotta Salute,â the Billy & Mandy synth swirls of âMoney,â and the bubbly chimes of âIâm Big Dawgâ feel like eating the old candy your grandma offered from the bottom of her purse: stale, trite, kinda obligatory. The cartoony soundboard that once made Piâerreâs production lucid and vibrant is tirelessly repurposed, while Nudyâs signature gusto gets bogged down by vapid clichés. âI have no worries, hakuna matata,â he inflects on a track named after the Lion King motif. âGotta feed my family (gotta feed the fam)/Any means necessary, I donât give a damn.â Oh, we know. In the words of habitual shitposter Hyperpop Daily, Sliâmerre 2 is Full Tummy Music: a stockpile of uninspired, industry-grade fodder put out for the sake of keeping the fridge filled. All thatâs missing is a âMy shooter keep a 30 like Curryâ line.