- Music
- 11 Sep 14
Rustie 'Green Language' - Album Review
Dance wunderkind trips up in his desire to have a grown-up moment
Russell White became the darling of discerning clubber’s with 2011’s Glass Swords, with one UK newspaper moved to name it their debut of the year. Ahead of the follow-up, however, the Glasgow native seems to have distanced himself from the project’s mash-up of kitsch samples and bludgeoning grooves. He has, he declares, grown up and aims to make music that is less ‘silly’.
Alas, one of his strategies has been to recruit some workaday rappers (D Double E and Danny Brown), whose cliché-laden rhymes actually represent a backward step for White. At its best, Green Language coheres into something that is lissome and high-soaring (the title refers to a scientific term for the language of birds). However, there is a whiff of someone trying slightly too hard – Rustie’s second is endlessly serious but not much fun.
RELATED
- Music
- 03 Mar 26
40 years ago today: Metallica released Master of Puppets
- Music
- 03 Mar 26
Album Review: Ben Reel, Spirit’s Not Broken
RELATED
- Music
- 27 Feb 26
Album Review: KEELEY, Girl On The Edge Of The World
- Music
- 27 Feb 26
Album Review: Buck Meek, The Mirror
- Music
- 27 Feb 26