TRACK REVIEW: PLAYERTWO – THAT’S MY BABY

Written by Louis Pelingen  If there is one word that may perfectly describe PLAYERTWO’s artistic progression so far, it may have to be the word: flexible. From just a few singles that were put out last year, this 3-member boyband hailing from Davao comprised of Ivo Impreso, Wave P, and Luke April has already presented themselves adaptable and confident in leaning into genre-jumping from one song to another. The indie rock & bedroom pop genre flourish of ‘TALK STRAIGHT’ with a summery hook, compelling flows, and blurry guitar tones connect themselves with impressive results. ‘HDYF’ goes for a swerve, drilling down to Hardcore Hip-hop with rumbling low-ends and chalky beats as the members lean on the imposing side of their lyricism and dribbling flows with enough genuine snarl to make it work. So now, they have followed up with their latest release, ‘THAT’S MY BABY’ with another slight spin in style. A tight, sweeter pop cut where the band leans more on their slick, flirty side this time around. And leaning into it they did, embracing more vocal cooing and smoother flows that honestly owe a lot to the effortless and lightweight charm that a lot of K-pop boybands tend to showcase from time to time. For the band dabbling in this style, they’ve mostly delivered as there’s a lot of charismatic charm expressed from all members, making their flirtatiousness tiptoes more to admiring the woman that they see in the distance to feel more captivating and relaxing. If there is something that does distract from the vibes of the track, it has to be the instrumentation. Melodically, they do sound potent, especially with the grooves allowing the lightweight lovestruck charm to stick. However, the mixing and tone choices do come a little crushed up for the song to work all the way, with the bass sometimes crushing down the distorted guitar and the pristine keys. The texture of the drums comes off as chalky and thin that it sticks out like a sore thumb from the rather relaxed textures of the other instruments and could’ve switched to a different drum texture to compliment the rest of the instrumentation. As a third song showcasing the band’s free-spirited talents, it reaches quality territory. Each member brings out a charm that adds another dimensionality to them as a band and while this song (alongside their other past releases) does show the influences that they’re taking from, they still execute those ideas with good results. For a band where every genre-jumping attempt from each track release comes with pretty good results, their flexibility and compatibility as a band are something to behold. Listen to the artist:

TRACK REVIEW: RB Slatt – TAHLA

Written by Elijah P. Flying cars, anime transitions, a jersey club drum pattern and a melody ripped from a Kid Laroi track, Caloocan’s very own RB Slatt is building a world never heard before in the Northside in EIGHTEEN’s most outstanding offerings titled “TAHLA”. As close followers and homeboys claim their sound to be “hyperpop”, it’s almost unfair to box them right in the umbrella term. As RB Slatt covers a wide array of multi-fx and cross-dimensional beat switches, they surprisingly come out more cohesive than opting for a hodgepodge of digicore nonsense. Previously enabling the emo-rap of the late 2010s, RB Slatt smoothly transitions to the bitcrushed, rock-n-rolla of the internet age of the 2020s with aesthetics that call for a futuristic and almost self-destructive sonic direction in both production and vocal delivery.  “TAHLA” rallies behind RB Slatt’s newly found musical identity, supporting a grander, more possible pathway for rappers to partake in this untapped, almost idle landscape of production style. But with the existence of the emotive rap acting as a precursor to RB Slatt’s chosen subgenre, he effectively capitalizes on the delivery as if to complement its salted wounds of a nasty breakup. There’s potency to vocal prowess in louder, much more chaotic instrumental, and RB Slatt slightly masters that skill in “TAHLA”. SUPPORT THE ART & THE ARTIST:

TRACK REVIEW: YiYi and Piel ft. Xeno – Lumang Litrato

For a track like “Lumang Litrato” to micro-trend in a niche part of Twitter, it’s impressive to see how much lore has been built prior to the release of the track. From Yiyi’s ultimate hatred of the city of Dasmarinas to sending letters of a dearly departed loved one ala the intro of Silent Hill 2, there’s so much to unpack with 00s loverap revival alongside the unexpected backstory to YiYi’s sleeper hit. With emphasis on YiYi’s high pitched hook-writing to Piel’s bellowing rapping, it’s giving what Repablikan gave us back in the day, but in the case of YiYi, it doesn’t suffer from novelty either.  The track released before it titled “SINTA TELL ME”, YiYi and Piel are serious about building the lore of their relationship alongside the visual aesthetic that comes along with their pastiche of Friendster-era emoticons and YouTube karaoke cues. “Lumang Litrato” took a couple of listens to grasp the gravity of the situation even if its obscured by foggy Baguio-esque aesthetics and digicam shots of YiYi walking across a field all the while longing for their lover to come back from the grave. There’s beats to savor in both tracks and the production is laudable enough to give justice to the lore that both YiYi and Piel are building for themselves. Support the art & the artist: