Wednesday 9 August 2023

Post Malone "Austin" (2023)

 

Returning swiftly from the lukewarm reception of Twelve Carat Toothache, Post Malone returns with a notable progression in his persona and musical identity. Austin, named after himself, is a traditional leaning Pop record that initially disappoints with its generic withdrawal from what made him standout as an artist. Flushing out percussive Trap influences and stepping back from the embellishment auto-tune offered, this new direction withdraws into pleasing practices and sensibilities established for years now.

With a lack of aesthetic novelty to draw one in, Its with repetitions that one gets to know these songs. Humble and sincere, Post revels in his emotions with an authenticity complimented by his voice. Ditching auto-tune for the most part, merits emerge in his singing that prove this talent is beyond gimmicks. The melodic lines and catchy lyrics are illuminating when they land. Backed by subtle swooning instrumentals, the union lands songs sweetly when the stars align.

With less hands involved in the records production, the trio emerge with a cohesive vision pulling on a little kick clap of coffee shop Rock, the shimmer 80s Synthpop and dreamy touch of modern Pop. Compositions are apt, purpose built, across a range of tones all lavished in gorgeous aesthetics. Its builds a summery indulgence of warmth and good times masking an underbelly of sunset reflections on masked pains.

Brushing aside the false start of the self-pity opener Don't Understand and yearning Gospel cries of Something Real, an arc emerges from upbeat to introspective. Early on the best tracks arrive on pacey percussion tempos and cool breezes. As the record matures, the calmer acoustic leaning expressions steadily shift its focus. Its a decent trajectory but given only a handful of songs really pulled this listener in.

I found Austin's lulls to highlight how well its uplifting choruses landed. Early on, every other song croons and grooves on its slick impressions. As moodier acoustics roll in, mediocrity rises. Curation is often a pitfall on lengthy records. At an hour long, its clear a concise expression of Post's warmth would have rocked strong. The reveling on melancholic vibes didn't land with the same infectiousness. This could of been something special but its retained to a handful of songs that stand apart.

Rating: 6/10