Few rappers capture the thrill of a massive mosh pit quite like Che. On his second album, July’s Rest in Bass , the Atlanta rapper hurls his blunt, serrated bars as though he’s swept up in a jostling crowd of thousands and exerting half his energy to ward off errant elbows and knees. His Auto-Tuned croaks and shrieks blur into the instrumental tracks, whose atom-bomb bass and spiked-ball-on-a-chain synths bristle with speaker-destroying distortion no matter how quietly you listen. Che’s devotion to trunk-rattling rage raps comes through most vividly on “Never Too Young to Die,” which features an appearance from Chicago drill rapper Chuckyy. While Che’s verses almost melt into the noise, Chuckyy’s verses slice into it like a hot knife through butter. Che can sound overpowered by his own d
Che raps like he just jumped into the most chaotic mosh pit you've ever seen

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