Sunday, May 15, 2016

The Sunday Comic: Post Malone "Go Flex"


Post Malone - Too Young

Im sorry, but I cant bring myself to hate this song. Go Flex broke my spell of Post Malone dismissal, and I dont know if going back is an option. Until now, Posts career has been anchored by his two wildly successful songs, White Iverson and Too Young, which are essentially the same. He sings in an echoing ballad voice over sleepy, dreamlike FKi beats. The stunt-rap content of his lyrics always made the dramatism of his voice seem funny, if not gimmicky. Like he was almost in tears with hollow longing, but he was talking about swagging upon you.

Go Flex brings that same content to a new sonic palette, a campfire-like acoustic guitar. Its a series of simple, on-beat chords reminiscent of that kid at your high school who always brought out his guitar when nobody asked him. But fused cleverly with FKis drums, it becomes this irresistible, stadium-worthy anthem. You can already see Post cutting out the music to hear thousands of fans scream back the words, Gold on my teeth and on my neck.

People clowned Post when a video surfaced of him playing a cover to Bob Dylans Dont Think Twice, Its Alright, but really it just showed that he had a musical background, the fingerpicking on that song requires legitimate technical skill. Theres nothing shameful about growing up on folk. Finally, it seems, Post has prepared the world to accept his marriage of folk with 2016 drums. And again, theatrical vocals make for a sort of comical compositionlike, his desire to flex matches the emotional response of a loved one dying.

Post, of course, is not the first to experiment with this kind of sound. Bubba Sparxxx did a prototypical version with Deliverance in 2003. In that case, it fused the folk guitar with Timbalands characteristic, energetic drums, but the sound of it matched the introspective content; he was a weary traveler, not a flexer. David Banners Cadillac on 22s, also from 2003, combined a fingerpicked guitar with his own Southern-informed drums. In that case, though, he was using the idea of flexing in contrast, bemoaning the state of his home, Mississippi, and venting about his rocky relationship with G*d.

Meanwhile, Post Malone told Fader Go Flex is really just about stuntin, showing you got the sauce. In my case, it worked. Im now a convert, and no other song succeeds in making me feel closer to the sensation of flexing than this. Perhaps this is an underrated musical quality. It doesn"t always have to be that deep.

Source: http://www.complex.com/music/2016/05/sunday-comic-post-malone-go-flex

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