Sublime’s legacy is more complicated than the bros (and the haters) would have you think
by Marty Sartini Garner on Music, shared by Tom Ley t from Deadspin > Sports News Without Fear, Favor or Compromise on (#4G1HM)

One Sunday last February, seemingly apropos of nothing, Pitchfork ran a review of Sublime's 1992 debut, 40 Oz. To Freedom. It was, let's say, not chill in its assessment of the Long Beach band's merits. Although he credits singer Bradley Nowell's rich voice and the band's forward-thinking hybrid of reggae, hip-hop,"