Showing posts with label Travis Scott. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Travis Scott. Show all posts

Monday, 13 August 2018

Travis Scott "Astroworld" (2018)


Anticipation for this record has been a thorn in the side, a constant ache commanding me to routinely check for its arrival with no release date mentioned. Its a frequent trend these days to drop albums with only a short notice. Although my reviews of Birds In The Trap Sing McKnight and Rodeo were not especially favorable I could hear something unique in Travis. Its truly manifested as the power of shuffle and time away from his music had those songs giving back more with each listen. After plenty of binging Id even consider Rodeo a modern Hip Hop classic. As my love for his sound grew, so has my apatite for more, hence the growing anticipation.

Astroworld had been grossly hyped. Given my knowledge of Six Flags Astroworld thanks to a Defunctland documentary, my curiosity was peaked as to what the closed theme parks roll in its topicality was this time around. Given my often disconnect from the lyrical aspects of music I certainly didn't pick up on any particular theme beyond a few references and so Astroworld has landed soft, nothing feels particularly distinct or intentional and so the promise of an obscure topic for a Hip Hop record is lost on me.

Reflecting back as to how the other records took months and even years to grow on me I figured its best not to rush into making up my mind on Astroworld. Although it hasn't charmed me I can analytically hear some stylistic progressions, expansive instrumentation and compositional ideas blossoming into indulging atmospheres, however the over saturated "skrt skrt"s and "its lit" cries coming from the background with excessive reverbs hold the music to its previous step, overshadowing what makes this record unique, retrospectively speaking.

The sleek dark atmospheres and romping grooves of tracks like Sicko Mode and Carousel are to be expected but get the album rolling in a different gear to the rest of its run time. The synthesizers and aesthetic of the music drifts into a peculiar place more psychedelic, dreamy and laid back than the urban darkness heard in his previous efforts. At times it can feel uplifting, the track Skeletons embodies this however its brief moment of what seems like a stream of conscious rap seems to loose its own train of thought as Travis morphs into a derogatory pair of rhymes spit very much in the style of Kanye West, a voice, tone and style you can hear in his flows often across the project.

My take away from Atroworld at this point is a lack of stylistic focus. Much of his production style traits stay intact and flirts with more excess as he layers some lyrics with gated reverbs and the like. The album steers its sampling and instrumentation beyond the percussion with R&B accents, some eclectic instruments like the harmonica and organ, it fails to nail a vibe that sucks you in. As stated above I am willing to let this one sink in and hope it reveals more meaning and indulgence with some absence and revival.

Favorite Tracks: Sicko Mode, Stop Trying To Be God, No Bystanders, Butterfly Effect,
Rating: 5/10

Friday, 23 September 2016

Travis Scott "Birds In The Trap Sing McKnight" (2016)


American Hip Hop producer Travis Scott's latest endeavor has been somewhat of a puzzle in my mind. Initially I disliked it, then it grew on me and a couple of gems in the track listing revealed themselves but now after plenty of spins I feel mostly disappointed. Last years "Rodeo" was a new and interesting listen for me but some of the tracks really grew on me over time and so I found myself rather excited for this release. Unfortunately my understanding of this record is that several forces are at work, a variety of ideas which on occasions add up to something fantastic but mostly fall flat. One of its biggest flaws is song structure, a lot of tracks meander and stagnate in instrumental passageways that use a lot vocal distortion and sampling between layers of synth. Without a direction the atmosphere and vibes conjured often fade into obscurity.

Lets start with the negatives. Travis likes to backup and affirm rhymes with echoing, pitch shifted "Yea" and "Straight Up" shouts. It gets tiresome quickly, they sound identical and there frequency quickly had me irritated. Secondly the rapping is rather questionable, Travis stroking his cactus? This record is loaded with bizarre lines and meaningless dribble which only for a couple of moments makes sense. The album kicks of with a feature from Andre 3000 of Outkast who really kills it. At first It was heartbreaking to hear such a talented and inspiring rapper drop into this new auto tuned sound but with each listen and familiarity with the lyrics I released he was killing it, showing how lyricism done.

With a lack of lyrical substance and cohesive direction there are moments of brilliance that spark from the experiment. Guest artist Nav kills it on "Beibs In The Trap" and makes sense of these lackadaisical rhymes styles. His overly simplistic rhymes and effortless style paint the careless attitude for the unsympathetic interactions hes expressing, its a moment where the style matches the intention. Then Travis jumps on the track and plays out these slow synthetic vocal moments, unstructured and drawn out they stretch aimlessly through this and many other songs. Oddly enough this same nuisance sounds genius on "Through The Late Night", my latest addiction. The songs chorus plays over and over and over while Kid Cudi hums a complimenting melody. Auto tuned and distorted it synthetically blends into the track like an instrument and is simply infectious. There are many other moments where these vocalized instruments jump into the tracks but rarely does it work like this.

The album experiments greatly with vocals as instruments, something Kanye pioneered in Hip Hop. Most of the time it doesn't amount to much and the core of these instrumentals seem to be washed with dense reverbs, auto tune and wavy synthetic sounds where only a few moments display genuine chemistry. In its moments of tolerance there's a barrage of shallow materialism, unemphatic attitudes and questionable morality in the lyricism that creates a rather disappointing feeling through its playtime. I'll probably tune back in from time to time but I don't think this one will grow on me.

Favorite Tracks: Through The Late Night, Beibs In The Trap, Sweet Sweet
Rating: 4/10

Tuesday, 6 October 2015

Travis Scott "Rodeo" (2015)


"Rodeo" is the debut full length of young Hip Hop producer Travis Scott who's named I'd not heard of before but has some hype around him being signed to Kanye's Good Music label. I decided to give this one a whirl after hearing good things and found a bi-polarizing record that gave me a lot to think about. "Rodeo" brings both the best and the worst of "Hip Hop"s almost unrecognizable current trap influenced direction, and pushes them into new territory id not heard before.

The record starts up with cold urban, spacious beats and an ethereal edge through excessive reverbs and echoing vocals. It takes a fair few songs to get to a decent rap as the balance plunges overboard in favor of style and texture. Boisterous showboating lyrics with one word rhymes bang out over and over with a lack of emotional context or any point other than enforcing attitude, wealth and excessive lifestyles. Its all about the delivery and production that treats the vocals like instruments, auto-tuning on overdrive and turning the "raps" into textural lavishes that tie tightly with the instruments and make use of many reverbs, pitch shifts and stylish distortions.

As the album develops it really comes into its own at the mid point with tracks like "Night Call", its big atmospheric nightclub sound dripping in deep base and ethereal chords buried under layers of synth, kits and echos. Its a prime example of whats great on this record, the production has an ambition and idea that's realized and reached in these dreamy "lose yourself" tracks. Despite feeling spacious and open, most the songs have many intricate noises detailing the backdrop and adding up to a bigger picture. The percussion takes a laid back roll often dropping out of focus and minimizing its roll in maintaining the pace, yet even in minimal moments its the backbone.

On one side of "Rodeo" we have unique, ethereal beats and the other a complete absence of lyrical substance. In between the two an overdose of auto-tune that tests my tolerance every time. I have to give credit through, auto-tune is not to my taste but its execution is creative and interesting at all times. This album could of been so much more to me with some rhymes and messages but instead the lyrical context and showboating tires and bores me.

Favorite Tracks: Wasted, Pray 4 Love, Night Call, Antidote, Flying High
Rating: 5/10