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F-1 Trillion Image
Metascore
71

Generally favorable reviews - based on 9 Critic Reviews What's this?

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  • Summary: The sixth full-length studio release from Post Malone features guest appearances by Luke Combs, Ernest, Sierra Ferrell, Hardy, Jelly Roll, Tim McGraw, Brad Paisley, Dolly Parton, Blake Shelton, Chris Stapleton, Billy Strings, Morgan Wallen, Hank Williams Jr., and Lainey Wilson.
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Score distribution:
  1. Positive: 6 out of 9
  2. Negative: 0 out of 9
  1. Aug 20, 2024
    80
    The Texas-raised Malone proves genuinely good at this stuff, with a sharp lyrical wit and sweet singing voice that rises to heights of soulful passion when needs be, notably on the disco flecked What Don’t Belong to Me and twisty alt-folk of Nosedive (the latter with Lainey Wilson).
  2. 80
    Although this album loses some of his distinctive sound – and has none of the cool experiments of Beyoncé’s record – it also showcases his undeniable song-crafting chops.
  3. Aug 16, 2024
    70
    At times struggling beneath its own weight, ‘F-1 Trillion’ is a love letter to the genre.
  4. Aug 16, 2024
    70
    While the case can be made that F-1 Trillion is just Malone wanting to have twangy fun and sing the kind of country music that fits in today, it’d have benefitted from more dusty detours and less paved roads, more gravitas and less flash, and certainly more Malone and less guests.
  5. Aug 20, 2024
    70
    There’s enough proof here that Post has the voice, demeanor, and goodwill to easily ingratiate himself into the Nashville scene.
  6. Aug 23, 2024
    60
    At 18 tracks F-1 Trillion felt overlong. The addition of nine more tracks since its release makes it excessive; it’s also overly polished and missing the instrumental virtuosity central to the genre. And yet it’s surprisingly enjoyable. Malone’s country sojourn seems here to stay.
  7. Aug 20, 2024
    58
    For most listeners, this album won’t be life changing, and it’s certainly not a genre-altering landmark a la COWBOY CARTER. But it’s good, and Malone cares so much about the work that it makes it just a bit better.

See all 9 Critic Reviews