If you were hoping for MIKE and Earl Sweatshirt’s first collab record to be some lofty, ruminative meditation on grief and self-growth, I’ma need you to relax your shoulders. And please keep that Another Country paperback in your tote bag. It’s immediately clear on POMPEII // UTILITY, their new Surf Gang-produced double album, that levity can be a virtue, in line with the loose, rollicking cuts from Earl’s Sick! and MIKE’s Pinball series. Across 33 tracks split into two solo albums, two of this century’s coldest, most martyrial rap auteurs—who have bled enough on the page to paint the walls a new color—decide to flex new muscles over a decent batch of ambient plugg beats.
There’s a sense of purity about Surf Gang’s union with MIKE and Earl that makes POMPEII // UTILITY feel like there’s zero pressure riding on it. Dating back to their origin as a sprawling, grassroots rap collective, the New York producer group/label have always let camaraderie inform the music. Though there was a thrilling edge to their early work—the lightning-in-a-bottle sample drill of Polo Perks and Moh Baretta, that spine-tingling Pasto Flocco run—it’s been dulled a bit in favor of ambling minimalism. Their sound on this side of the 2020s tends to feel as sleek as it does unremarkable: vague Babyfather-type atmosphere; skittering, click-clacking percs. It’s like that side-step pull-up LeBron does that almost always seems to work. You usually shake your head at its simplicity when it goes in, but every now and then, under the right conditions, it elicits enough emotion to get you out of your seat.
No score yet, be the first to add.
Thankfully, Surf Gang’s grassroots sensibility still remains intact. Beyond head-honcho Evilgiane’s handful of major placements, SG keep themselves busy by engaging with whoever’s bubbling under the surface. They count xaviersobased and Snow Strippers as signees and have spent years dropping one-off collab tapes with basically any other underground artists they fuck with: British wallflowers like John Glacier and Jawnino, oddballs like Valee and Durkalini, even 10k confidant 454.
This egalitarian, crate-digging ethos makes a lot of sense next to MIKE and Earl Sweatshirt, who’ve fostered years of goodwill from uplifting their own disciples. St. Paul rapper Lerado Khalil—whose Scenic Route tape is the best Surf Gang collab of the lot—appears next to Earl on UTILITY’s “Locusts,” fitting like a glove over the placid chimes and snaps that’ve become something of a Surf Gang signature. The vocal malaise baked into each of their tightly coiled verses relays the emotional pendulums they write about: the wisdom and fatigue that arrive with aging, the stress and reverence that come with a city counting on you. Some associate this kind of delivery with a lack of passion. I think the opposite: Here it reflects their poise in a way that says, This is the path I’ve chosen, I’ll be straight. “Leap and bound in and out of phases,” Earl raps, “Only one way to scale the gate.”
