Garbology | |
Type: | studio |
Artist: | Aesop Rock and Blockhead |
Cover: | Aesop Rock Garbology Album Cover.jpg |
Alt: | A drawing of a trash can overflowing with refuse sits upon a blank background. |
Genre: | Hip hop |
Label: | Rhymesayers |
Producer: | Blockhead |
Garbology is a collaborative studio album by rapper Aesop Rock and producer Blockhead. It was released through Rhymesayers Entertainment on November 12, 2021. The album was preceded by one single, "Jazz Hands", which was released on October 13, 2021, alongside a music video directed by Rob Shaw.
Prior to this album, Aesop Rock and Blockhead had been longtime collaborators; Blockhead had contributed production to each of Aesop's first five albums, and Aesop had provided vocals on several of Blockhead's solo tracks. However, before the two artists started work on this album, they had never collaborated on a full-length project together.[1]
The artists began working in this album in early 2020, as Aesop was processing the death of a close friend, the skateboarder Kurt Hayashi. This origin influenced the title of the album: Aesop has stated that he sees parallels between the field of garbology and the idea of "picking up the pieces after a loss or period of intense unrest." The title was also chosen as a reference to sampling, due to the way in which samples reuse and repurpose music from earlier eras.
At Metacritic, which assigns a weighted average score out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, Garbology received an average score of 79 based on 5 reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews".
A PopMatters review praised Aesop's rapping on Garbology as "sound[ing] on fire in a way he hasn't in years," with lyrical content characterized as "surrealistic, funny, and sometimes downright haunting". A review on Stereogum, meanwhile, described Aesop's writing as feeling "alive" despite themes of "sadness and anger and boredom and free-floating dread". Aesop's performance was also noted for versatility in his vocal delivery; Pitchfork described him as utilizing "increasingly complex" flows with "subtle vocal variations", while Stereogum described him as rapping "more deliberately" and "finding new cadences." Blockhead's production was characterized as minimalist; Pitchfork labels it as "musically spare" and as employing "an abundance of negative space," while PopMatters describes "desolate" production that "focused on keeping the spotlight on Bavitz". The Stereogum review placed less emphasis on the minimalism, however, instead identifying the album's main musical motifs as "deep grooves and cymbal-splashes and squelchy guitars" that were reminiscent of "junkyard blues".
Comparing the release to Aesop Rock's previous album, AllMusic's Paul Simpson claimed that "Garbology isn't nearly as complex or conceptually driven as 2020's Spirit World Field Guide, but it still contains an abundance of memorable lyrics, and demonstrates Aesop's talent for spinning fantastic stories out of nothing."