Wikipedia Genre: Indie pop, indie electronic, dream pop, electronic rock
Home: L.A. (but originally formed in San Marcos)
Poster Position: 5
Day: Friday at 6:45
Both Weekends.
The group formed in San Marcos, Texas a few years ago, but then moved to L.A. They apparently formed after their "leader" Kevin Abstract posted an invitation on some weird Kanye message board to see if others wanted to form a band. That original group was called AliveSinceForever, but it melted into BROCKHAMPTON a few years later. Wikipedia lists 15 current members and 4 past members of the group. But some of those dudes are apparently just art directors, and aren't actually contributing verses. This article provides a more in-depth background look at each of the members, in their own words.
Of interest (to me at least) from that article:
- Kevin Abstract is only 20 or 21 years old. And from Corpus. I don't know why it seems weird to know that a creative brain came from Corpus, but it just does.
- Some other dudes interviewed are from Houston, The Woodlands, Glen Rose, and Austin. Cool but so strange to think of a rapper from the Woodlands. I need to expand my mind. But it sounds like several of these guys actually met in high school.
- I love the idea of them all in the BROCKHAMPTON house, out in L.A., just churning out beats and raps and videos and imagery, like a factory for creatives. Wake, bake, and create.
- JOBA was in school at Texas State, which sounds like the reason they moved to San Marcos in the first place. Super rad to think of these wack art brains posting up in plain jane old San Marcos.
One of the interesting thing about the group is how they fired out three albums in rapid succession last year - Saturation on June 9, Saturation II on August 25, and Saturation III on December 15. And they have been releasing music videos at a similarly breakneck pace - their YouTube channel offers up 12 in the "SATURATION trilogy," but that only scratches the surface, as there 21+ more videos up there. So I have a bunch more videos to watch and show you, apparently.
The second most popular track is "Gold," with just barely over 17 million streams.
You honestly should just go onto YouTube and run through some of these videos. They all appear to start with Roberto, and then they generally just follow the dudes doing some weird stuff in a street in L.A. Pretty basic, but with an arty slant, like bench pressing a huge pencil or dressing up in cardboard boxes. In "Heat," I laughed at the random guy who rolls up in an old Honda and is like "uh, should I just drive around these dudes jumping around and filming?" And then the Leo DiCaprio guy comes in and loses his shit.
I definitely prefer the hip-hop-centric tunes of the Saturation trilogy (although some of those tunes lean on sing/song R&B type stuff instead, like "Face.") over their earlier album, 2016's All-American Trash, which is less rap-centered and more into the R&B fold. Still has rap and hip-hop elements, but stuff like "HOME" is just a song without any rap. Still OK, but not my preference.
According to this article, their first weekend Coachella set was a trainwreck. Hopefully they get those technical glitches resolved for the second weekend and then come to Austin to blow the doors off. I'm in.
Also, if you want to see the process they use for making a song (and a fire song, in my opinion), watch this (but you'll need almost an hour):
[EDIT 9.21.18] They boys released a new album today, called iridescence. I've run through it five times so far today, and its pretty good. I'd be way more into it, except I think they try to jam too much into many of these songs. This isn't entirely new, they frequently throw curveballs in their songs, but I wish they wouldn't do it so much. They'll get a good beat and groove going with a song, and then after 3 minutes they'l downshift entirely into some piano ballad and fart along with that for a minute to end the song. Although, I have to admit that they fooled me on this with the two opening tracks of this album. "NEW ORLEANS" has this ominous, rotten beat that sounds super cool, but then the transition into "THUG LIFE," which is a pretty lame piano thing, is so seamless and shares the same clicking background noise, that they seemed like the same song. All of that to say, listen to the first track and then skip the second track. The one that keeps catching my brain as I listen is "J'OUVERT,"
1 comment:
I dig these guys. How did you not link to Boogie? That SONG IS A JAM!!!!
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