Album of the Week: Partynextdoor’s Partynextdoor Two (2014)

Critics haven’t always been kind to my guy PND over the years, and while he does have some duds (2020’s limp Partymobile comes to mind), I think he’s an outstanding artist. Writing, producing and singing his own songs as a teenager, he came into the game with his own style and sound. I love a lot of his songs but PND 2 is probably the one project I’ve spent the most time with.

PND’s career is forever linked to Drake, and their stylistic similarities are evident from the jump here. “East Liberty”‘s opening line “The summer’s over…” recalls “The summer’s mine…” from Drake’s “Good Ones Go” (Take Care). Like Drake, Party’s songs revolve around the flashy lifestyle of a young star in Toronto, and his production echoes Drake producer 40’s muted beauty. Raps themselves take more of a backseat in PND’s work, and by leaning into the chill R&B thing his work is less memorable but for me more comfortable than Drake’s. It’s so easy for me to revisit – I just pop on these hazy beats and get in the zone.

The collection here is full of classics, with PND producing or co-producing all but one track. “SLS” is so well-constructed in its buildup of drums and vocal samples, and all the shit-talking he does (dude was 20 when he made this album) is convincing wrapped up in the music. The drum production on a track like this or “Her Way” feels really good. It’s difficult for me to describe, or maybe I just have a nostalgia for it, but I feel like drums in this era hit better than what’s in hip-hop and R&B today.

I think “Sex On the Beach”‘s Disclosure sample has aged well. At the time it almost felt like a mistake given how huge “Latch” was, but ultimately it turns a pop smash into a kind of underground banger (surprised this one wasn’t a single). I think I listened to “Bout It” every day in college for a while, just walking around campus getting that in-between-classes dopamine rush from the first 5 seconds. Listening to Drake’s verse on “Recognize” today, I’m surprised at how different his voice sounds and not surprised that he’s totally in his bag. The beat would go on to repeatedly soundtrack the legendary Nileseyy Niles “disappearing” meme, and samples some patois-laden deejay type vocals.

“Muse” ends things in stellar fashion. I think of this as a Kehlani tribute (“bad bitch is from Oakland…”), and all the little production quirks, the little piano notes, the “Lemme-Lemme get that A”, and the reconstruction of the Ginuwine sample really make it a song she’s deserving of. Plus dude is talking about getting flustered and dropping his weed, which is funny. PND would go on to release more good stuff including PND 3, Colours 2, and Seven Days, which all got a lot of play from me. I like some of his newer songs too and given his increased output I would guess a new album is on the way soon.

Listen to Partynextdoor Two here.

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