”Purgatory” is Juganot da Beast’s Most Passionate Work Yet (Album Review)

Richmond, California emcee Juganot da Beast returning almost 2 years after the sophomore effort Lovelly’s Baby Boy for his 3rd full-length studio LP. Emerging in the fall of 2019 off the debut EP P.O.M.E. (Product of My Environment), he followed this up a year later with the debut album Pennsylvania Ave as well as the Love is Pain mixtape & the previously mentioned Lovelly’s Baby Boy. I had the pleasure of meeting Juganot myself at Astronomicon 7 a few months back & I was really flattered by him telling me how happy he was that we got to link up, so I decided to give Purgatory a listen

“Guillotine” is a trunk-rattling opener explaining that they don’t understand exactly how different he is out here whereas “Hold Me Down” kinda gives me a dreary trap vibe instrumentally confessing that he’s been going through it for a while now. “U Ain’t Mobbin’” radiates a grim atmosphere dissin’ all the fakes who ain’t really ‘bout that gang life, but then “Not My Problem” featuring Swanky Rich cloudily talks about bitches not being something they should worry over.

We get some pianos & hi-hats woven together for “Where Jug At?” addressing those who been looking for him for a minute just before the standout “None of Y’all” featuring his cousin G-Mo Skee gets on the boom bap tip thanks to Eminem’s current hypeman mR. pOrTeR of prior D12 fame making it clear they ain’t fuckin’ with none of these muhfuckas out here. “Old School 50” keeps the kicks & snares together flexing that his pedigree is as Beast as 14-time WWE World Champion & the Endeavor-owned TKO Group Holdings division’s CCO Triple H leading into the smooth “Holla at You” getting romantic topically.

“You Can Be Touched” gives off a bit of a mobb flare to the beat telling y’all he don’t give a fuck about how many bodies you’ve dropped & that it was an epic fail attempting to even kill da Beast to begin with while the guitar-driven “Letter to My Younger Self” sends a message to Juganot of the past. “O.G.” futuristically refuses to rest with his mind on the money while the violin-laced “I’m Him” produced by Nobe discusses being on a new level. “Everybody’s a Killer” fuses g-funk & horrorcore calling out the pussies who started rapping & the jazzy “Letter to Heaven” ends promising to stay to himself.

G-Mo’s been my favorite MC to come out of the Rich for over a decade now since his verses on “Lunchtime Cypher” & “Innermost Hate” and Purgatory if anything reveals itself as the strongest body of work that Juganot da Beast has ever put his heart & soul into, which is why I hope he doesn’t quit making music after this. The production ranges from trap to boom bap, g-funk, horrorcore, jazz rap, mobb music & cloud rap backing Juganot’s most passionate lyricism to date.

Score: 8/10