You don’t sequence an album with four bangers in a row – the title-track, Can I Get A, Born Fe Dis and This Is The Sound – unless you’re making a declaration of intent. This is an all-killer, no-filler affair. Born Fe Dis is the only of those four songs that fans won’t have heard yet, a moodier but no less catchy cut that’s the equal of the tunes you’ve already spun.
Meanwhile, it’s worth noting that This Is The Sound harks back to nu-metal’s early 2000s golden age, courtesy of a band that were sharing stages with its titans back in the day, adding the braggadociousness of soundsystem culture into the mix.
And even when the slower moments arrive, spirits don’t dip a jot. Dripping in the same dubby, sun-kissed atmosphere that made L.O.V.E. (Smile Please) from Smile so popular, Broke is sure to soundtrack the more sedate moments of celebration this summer.
Benji is in a different kind of celebratory mood on Glass, acknowledging the lives and encouragement of the people that gave the singer the confidence to rise from crooning outside Newport chip shops for change to rocking the world’s biggest venues. It deals with loss but isn’t morbid, raising a glass and a soaring chorus to those much-missed figures. It’s his best vocal performance on a record that’s replete with excellent examples of his writing too, revealing more of the man behind the studded sunglasses.
Oh, and it’ll be interesting to see if Big Em Up inspires any TikTok dances, as their 2002 hit Nobody did, given that its latter minute descends into a manic maelstrom that may cause palpitations for even the most energetic mover.
Whatever you’ve loved and are looking for from Skindred, it’s present and correct on You Got This, and then some. But it’s all mixed up a little differently – hardness and heart aren’t mutually exclusive concerns, but entwined here like a black Union Flag around a mic stand. Get on this!
Verdict: 4/5
For fans of: Enter Shikari, Limp Bizkit, Bloodywood
You Got This is released on April 17 via Earache.