Review

Song Review: Young Posse – Visa

We seem to be in K-pop’s era of “rage hip-hop,” as the genre has slowly entrenched itself within idol releases. So far, this has largely been limited to a boy group phenomenon, but it makes sense that an act like Young Posse would give it a try. After all, they’ve covered many hip-hop sub-genres already.

As I mentioned when writing about releases from ENHYPEN, RIIZE and CORTIS, this is a difficult one for me. I’m not sure I’ll ever enjoy anything about this genre, as I find the sound claustrophobic, unpleasant and lacking any real melodic heft. To Visa‘s credit, the production adds shimmering synths as a sonic counterpoint, giving the track an almost hyperpop appeal. However, this is the only element I enjoy within its combative brew.

Others may disagree, but I find Visa borderline unlistenable. There’s not a single moment during this song that I actively want to hear. The vocals are shellacked in ugly filters from start to finish. The rapping feels more like sing-shouting most of the time, following a predictable flow that brings nothing new to the table. And when it comes to “raging,” the beat isn’t even hard enough to blow off any aggression. I honestly can’t picture a setting where I’d put this on. In short, I’m bewildered — but not in a fun way. I’m sure there are some listeners who will go to bat for Visa simply because it’s different. I guess when it comes to pop music, I’m just a bit more basic than that.

Hooks 3
 Production 5
 Longevity 3
 Bias 2
 RATING 3.25

Grade: F

18 thoughts on “Song Review: Young Posse – Visa

  1. Jan’s not over yet, it’s already a mid, sparse month and we already got a 3 rating. Sigh, someone fucking nuke the portal CORTIS opened, PLEASEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE

    4.75 (5, 5, 5, 4) for me.

    Liked by 3 people

    • Atp, I doubt we’re gonna get that “Revisiting lowest rated kpop songs” part 2 cause it seems like we’re getting 3.75- rated songs every year with no breaks 😭

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    • If you’re talking about the portal for groups that go brazenly mask off with cultural appropriation (over the past 2 years), it was Young Posse that really started that period. I say this as someone who does like some of their songs (oddly enough including this one), but I do have to admit it was debuts like theirs that set the way for future groups to just not be subtle with it.

      Liked by 1 person

      • I know that YP has been a polarizing group due to their cultural insensitivity since debut, I meant it in the sense of genre since I feel like after FaSHioN, many groups started going down the rage path (and both GO! and FaSHioN also saw moderate success). And CORTIS is also a HYBE group so they get more exposure and have too faced shit for their not-very-subtle CA as well, so they essentially expanded a base YP had already established

        Liked by 1 person

  2. Oof. I forgot how you rated Fashion and I didn’t think it’d be this low, lmao. Fair to be disconcerted by this, hell I have my own gripes with it (like the writing feels like a bunch of hiphop buzzwords thrown into a digicore track to show they’re “with it” when like, no, I don’t think any of you are actually into stuff like crypto and chip sales). Look, I’m a Jane Remover fan, I’m slowly getting into Lucy Bedroque, I love albums like Danny Brown’s Stardust, this is admittedly in a lane of mine. I don’t hate this.

    7 (7, 9, 7, 5), I wouldn’t mind this with more personal, intentional writing, and like you said, more interesting flows, I’ll give you that. I still think there are parts that sound nice within what feels just like a following of a style instead of an attempt to make it theirs (a big flaw of theirs, in my opinion).

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    • update: it has been brought to my attention that very early on there’s a ‘put the mask on like kanye’ bar in there, and it is confirmed to be that because the lyrics are posted in the description of the video. really hope it wasn’t one of the members who wrote that, but given that a member of lngshot recently claimed tory lanes as an inspiration (the guy who shot megan thee stallion)… f*ck, man…

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  3. I’m question how you rate songs below a certain threshold because I feel like it would be difficult to give it an review and actually scoring it accordingly? ☺️

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    • Speaking generally, Nick doesn’t usually bother with songs below somewhere in the 6’s, preferring to skip rather than waste his time, unless they come from a group that is somehow notable or the song really pisses him off. I suspect both of the latter.

      Liked by 1 person

  4. This morning our usual morning classical radio in the kitchen was caught in fuzz between the sounds of Bach and Beethoven and the indie college stations whose DJ of the morning was playing thrash metal. (To be fair, metal has borrowed a lot from classical music, viz every Eddie Van Halen solo ever. The man learned his inventions.) We didn’t get up to change the station because it was bad but not bad enough to get us to move.

    That radio fuzz between two stations was preferable to this assemblage of noise.

    Liked by 2 people

  5. A Kanye shoutout in this day an age is CRAZY hahhahahahahahahahah. The guy is a pioneer, but the years when being associated with Kanye was a compliment or honoring him are long gone.

    Other than that, I enjoy this style from them. I think they are well-trained in rap and they can pull it off pretty well. The production is also okay and it works well as part of the genre.

    I’m not surprised by the reception CORTIS or Young Posse may have by sticking to this style. It 100% lacks pop appeal and conventional melody and it’s also pretty divisive around hip-hop fans. It also can get annoying or too overstimulating but I’m here for it.

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  6. In Japan, Black music became popular in the 2000s and 2010s, and a lot of hip-hop artists emerged.

    But honestly, so much of it doesn’t even come close to what artists from the culture have been doing — a lot of it just feels like imitation with no real substance.

    Part of the problem is that Japanese as a language can be a tough fit for hip-hop in certain ways, but in most cases it’s because the artists don’t really understand the cultural side of hip-hop. They don’t mean any harm, but their admiration for America is sometimes so intense that they don’t realize how uncomfortable it can come across. K-pop can run into the same issue too.

    Ideally, people shouldn’t copy another culture too casually — but it’s also true that the music industry has grown by absorbing influences from overseas.

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