Throughout the 2010s, producer and beat maker
Mustard revolutionized the sound of radio hip-hop and R&B, honing his signature style on magnanimous hits and brawny tracks for artists like
Jeremih,
Big Sean,
Tyga,
Cardi B, and many others. His production often centered around high-energy tempos, booming 808s, and club-friendly melodies that reveled in excitement and abandon.
Mustard's albums and mixtapes under his own name are simply more of the same, with a cavalcade of rap and R&B stars guesting on new beats in his recognizable style.
Perfect Ten is a brief album frontloaded with party songs, anthemic bangers, and brag-fests that slowly winds down to reveal
Mustard's skills with R&B and more sensitive instrumental arrangements.
Migos thrive on "Pure Water," even with
Mustard's bright beat outside of their usual dark and trappy comfort zone. Cinematic strings and gangster movie energy underpin ravenous verses from
YG,
A$AP Ferg,
A$AP Rocky, and
Tyga on the bouncing "On God," and "100 Bands" mixes atmospheric synth pads with a minimal and bass-heavy beat while
Quavo,
YG, and
Meek Mill flow overtop. On
Perfect Ten's second half,
Mustard's mellower R&B productions prove to be more musically diverse and colorful, especially on the lovesick "Surface," sung by
Ella Mai and
Ty Dolla $ign. The song's summery bass groove opens up just enough for an inspired and hooky chorus to shine before dissolving into old-school drum machine sounds at the song's close. Likewise, the inspirational rap/R&B hybrid "Ballin'" is a step forward for
Mustard's production, opening with a screwed sample of
702's hit "Get It Together" and layering organic instruments, dreamy samples, and percussion sounds under
Roddy Ricch's impassioned flow. The collection ends with a floating and drum-less title track, with flows and spoken word by the late
Nipsey Hussle in full focus over the daydreamy instrumental. Though
Perfect Ten is short by mixtape standards, it's another vibrant exhibit of
Mustard's gifts at arranging sounds that can that start the party or spark deep feelings. ~ Fred Thomas