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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Entertainment
Tara Joshi

Lil Peep: Come Over When You’re Sober Pt 2 review – honouring the rapper’s legacy

Rapper Lil Peep
Lil Peep, who died in November 2017. Photograph: Jonathan Weiner

“Is anybody out there? Can anybody hear me?” would be a striking refrain from any artist, but coming on the posthumous album from rapper Lil Peep it feels especially harrowing. The Long Island-raised Gustav Åhr died one year ago of an accidental overdose, aged 21. Much of this follow-up to his August 2017 debut had been recorded with his producer, Smokeasac, prior to Peep’s death; his mother then sifted through the material to curate a work that would honour her son’s memory.

Come Over When You’re Sober Pt 2 does exactly that. While it’s more poignant than ever to hear him sing, on the same track, about trying suicide and life being beautiful, or matter-of-factly relating his drug abuses, there is no attempt to sugar-coat his legacy. Unfiltered, melodic, cinematic and raw, this album has moments that feel a little cheesy, but that’s in keeping with how unconcerned he was with “coolness”. Ending on uplifting spikes of synth and guitar on Fingers, Peep says “I’m not gonna last long” – but this record belies that, and may provide solace for his many devastated fans.

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