Juice WRLD is a chameleonic 19-year-old rapper from Chicago who funnels Chief Keef’s more experimental flows, melodies, and songcraft through Lil Uzi Vert’s glossy filter, sometimes venturing as far into emo as Lil Peep. Juice is a feelings-first tragedian who writes ballads about falling fast for girls and then falling out of love with them even faster, or losing them altogether. The best song in his rapidly expanding catalog is the playfully juvenile party crier “All Girls Are the Same,” a pure distillation of his infectious, singsong lovesickness.

On “All Girls Are the Same,” Juice WRLD finds his sweet spot: dejected, murmured croons delivered in a buoyant cadence repurposed from Lil Boat-era Lil Yachty. “Who am I kiddin’? All this jealousy and agony that I sit in/I’m a jealous boy, really feel like John Lennon,” he raps, each phrase bounding into the next. Produced by frequent collaborator Nick Mira, the beat is spacious and numbing, most of the the synths surging off into the distance while others occasionally twinkle just above an unseen horizon. Juice navigates nimbly through the current as he bares his soul, redistributing the blame from the girls that hurt him onto girls he’ll never even meet, seeing all future relationships through the lens of his failed ones. It’s a rather bratty overreaction but it’s also an honest response to heartbreak, and he is consumed by his fear of being eternally undesirable; he’s grief stricken and woeful. With “All Girls Are the Same,” Juice WRLD establishes himself as a compelling new player in the SoundCloud rap universe.