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History
editFormation (2012–2014)
editLive from the Dentist Office, Floss and Drive It Like It's Stolen (2015–2017)
editInjury Reserve (2018–2019)
editBy the Time I Get to Phoenix (2020–present)
editIn Liam Inscoe-Jones' review of By the Time I Get to Phoenix for The Quietus, the themes that were present in Injury Reserve's best music was the struggle of "overcoming impossible hurdles"; listing their "struggles of age, paycheques, and industry connections".[1] He notes that, "with the death of Groggs, the album depicts the bad ending", as they did not succeed. In the start of the review, he claims that there was an "alternative reality where [they were] as big as Drake, mentioning their second mixtape Floss (2016)."[1]
Artistry and musical style
editInfluences
editCommercialism
editPost-rap
editSet atmosphere
editBand members
editFormer band members
editDiscography
editStudio albums
- Injury Reserve (2019)
- By the Time I Get to Phoenix (2021)
References
edit- ^ a b Inscoe-Jones, Liam (21 September 2021). "The Quietus | Reviews | Injury Reserve". The Quietus. Retrieved 20 May 2022.