
Legends Never Die is a Hip-Hop album by Juice WRLD, originally released in 2020. On Gatefold: 10 pressings tracked, owned by 4 collectors.
Sound DNA
- Hip-Hop
- Emo Rap
- synthetic
- melancholic
- confessional
About
Surfacing seven months after his tragic passing, Juice WRLD’s 2020 LP, <i>Legends Never Die</i>, is the rare posthumous release to feel like one of an artist’s major statements. The project is indicative of the exciting and fresh direction in which Juice’s music might have headed if he were alive. In both music and lyrics, it stands as the most varied Juice WRLD release, finding him breaking out of his more broad-strokes treatises on romantic angst, drug abuse, and other dark themes and turning toward clearer, detail-oriented autobiography. The video version of the LP includes videos featuring animation, archival footage, and more, providing an epilogue to the music that celebrates Juice’s life and examines his legacy. Hauntingly, the lyrics on <i>Legends Never Die</i> feel more prescient than anything released before his death. On the mournful “Wishing Well,” Juice sings: “Let’s be for real/If it wasn’t for the pills, I wouldn’t be here/But if I keep taking these pills, I won’t be here, yeah/I just told y’all my secret, yeah.” In the computer-animated video for the song—included in this release—the rapper battles his way through a hallucinatory minefield of a world where gravity is suspended and threatening emojis chase and crowd him. The uncanny clarity of lyrics in songs like these points up the major difference between <i>Legends Never Die</i> and Juice’s formative releases: Having developed his character based on himself, he is often reacting to fame directly on these songs, sketching out an explicit road map for his anxiety and existential despair. (See also his snapshot of a self-destructive night in London on the explicit emo homage “Man of The Year”). As on the previous Juice WRLD release, 2019’s <i>Death Race For Love</i>, the young star also carves out a fair amount of new musical ground for himself in these songs, seemingly pushing away from being pigeonholed merely as a rapper. Amid the expected emo-trap anthems, the record’s singles find him venturing into more explicitly Top 40–oriented territory than ever before—specifically, the inspirational, Marshmello-featuring EDM-rock track “Come & Go.” There is also a bittersweet trap-pop ballad with Halsey, “Life’s a Mess,” dramatizing two flawed people attempting to find common ground to support each other.
via Apple Music
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Tracklist
- 1Anxiety (Intro)1:10
- 2Conversations3:01
- 3Titanic2:56
- 4Bad Energy3:06
- 5Righteous4:02
- 6Blood on My Jeans2:34
- 7Smile3:16
- 8Tell Me U Luv Me3:00
- 9Hate the Other Side2:40
- 10Get Through It (Interlude)0:20
- 11Life's a Mess3:22
- 12Come & Go3:25
- 13I Want It2:53
- 14Fighting Demons3:20
- 15Wishing Well3:14
- 16Screw Juice2:59
- 17Up Up and Away2:27
- 18The Man, The Myth, The Legend (Interlude)2:16
- 19Stay High2:48
- 20Can't Die3:02
- 21Man of the Year2:16
- 22Juice WRLD Speaks from Heaven (Outro)0:30
Credits
Performers
- Blake SlatkinKEYBOARDS PROGRAMMED BY BASS
- The WeekndFEATURING
- Trippie ReddFEATURING
- MarshmelloFEATURING
- Polo GFEATURING
- The Kid LaroiFEATURING
- HalseyFEATURING
- XxxtentacionFEATURING
4 collectors on Gatefold own this · 10 pressings tracked on Gatefold
