“Love You All” by Austin’s Pimpin Change isn’t interested in making a good first impression in the traditional sense. There’s no slick hook, no big-budget production, no attempt to seduce you with studio shine. What you get instead is something far rarer: a track that feels like it was made because it had to be. Over a looped soul sample and a one-take freestyle delivery, Pimpin Change pulls you into his world without asking for permission, offering a raw, unfiltered outpouring that sounds more like a late-night voice memo than a polished single. It’s messy in all the right ways, grounded in emotion rather than artifice, and immediately lets you know you’re not dealing with someone trying to chase trends. If you’ve ever craved rap that trades clout-chasing for actual catharsis, this is your signal; tune in.
What stands out most is the intimacy. “Love You All” doesn’t really sound like a studio record; it sounds like a letter to the people who never folded. The track was recorded in a home studio, and you can feel it. There’s breath in the pauses, tension in the tone, and no attempt to sand down the edges. It’s a timestamp, just as Pimpin Change describes it, and it captures where he is right now: seasoned, sober-minded, and still pushing forward. As a single from his upcoming EP, Different Takes On Life, this track sets the tone for what’s to come. It’s a tribute to those who stood by him, wrapped in Southern soul and survivor’s wisdom.

If you’re into Kevin Gates, Mozzy, or just fed up with rap that feels all surface and no soul, let me put you on to “Love You All.” The first time I heard it, I knew it wasn’t trying to flex or show off. It was just… honest. This isn’t one of those tracks designed to blow up on TikTok or slide onto some algorithm-friendly playlist. It’s not built around a gimmick or a catchy hook that gets stuck in your head for all the wrong reasons. Instead, it feels like listening in on someone talking to the people who held them down when things were dark; a quiet tribute, not a loud performance. You can hear the weight in Pimpin Change’s voice, not because he’s trying to sound deep, but because the pain and gratitude are baked into every bar like they were never meant to be separated, leaving only a simple message: “Love You All”.
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About the Author

A tenured media critic known working as a ghost writer, freelance critic for various publications around the world, the former lead writer of review blogspace Atop The Treehouse and content creator for Manila Bulletin.