Pitch 92 – “Intervals” review

Sophomore effort from Dublin, Ireland producer Pitch 92. Known for being the in-house beatsmith of The Mouse Outfit, he would go on to produce the group’s first couple full-lengths Escape Music & Step Steadier until getting to jump behind the boards throughout Verb T’s 8th album Good Evening. He eventually signed to Hove, East Sussex, United Kingdom imprint High Focus Records for the Lost in Space EP preluding 3rd Culture & is following it up by dropping Intervals.

“Iph-Ro” by King Kashmere takes 94 seconds to begin sampling gospel talking about how living life’s a gift whereas “Under the Sun” by Kofi Stone dustily cautions that we never know when one’s shine truly burns out. “Live from London” by Jehst maintains a boom bap vibe instrumentally sending his love straight outta his hometown leading into “All In” by Verb T talks about not taking word from fake sources.

Dr. Outer takes over the mic for “Wife of Odin” nearing the end of the 1st half with an ode to the love of his live just before “Comin’ Home” by Verbz ruggedly talks about there not being much he didn’t already know. After the compositional title track, “Lullaby” by Confucius MC woozily kicks off the 2nd leg explaining blind love is when you’re waiting in a mystery while the funky “365” by Manic MC talks about pulling out the riddim soon as he hits the stage to set microphones ablaze.

“Good with Me” by Jehst & Lord Apex starts Intervals’ final act with a west coast inspired banger dedicated to getting crossfaded while “Suttin in the Trunk” by Lord Apex fuses these strings with kicks & snares talking about him not owing anyone shit & keeping the bass bumpin’. “On & On” by Dr. Syntax suggests to slow your role & keepin’ it flowin’ until they’re done while “Sacred Path” by ASM prior to the “1992” outro finishes by talking about not going anywhere too quickly & raising another glass.

So far looking at Pitch 92’s entire trilogy of solo material under High Focus Records, I’d have to pick Intervals as my least favorite of the bunch although it’s more average than both of it’s predecessors. Of course I can’t make any complaints regarding The Mouse Outfit beatsmith’s boom bap production homaging the Champion Sound of Jaylib, but I can say the list of performers feels more inconsistent than Lost in Space was or 3rd Culture despite the few moments of filler it had a couple years earlier.

Score: 3/5

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