Goblin
As
the mouthpiece and figurehead of Odd Future Wolf Gang Kill Them All, the
teenage hip-hop outfit that's courted controversy and well-nigh governed the
blogosphere for the better part of two years, Tyler the Creator is facing down
an especially large degree of expectation surrounding his first major-label
release. His self-released and entirely self-produced 2009 album, Bastard, made
waves for its shock value, but also boasted some genuinely inspired moments
that went some way toward vindicating his crew's cult following. His new album,
Goblin, is a much larger platform for Tyler's polemical rants, and it will
likely be the mainstream's first taste of the OFWGKTA sound. Goblin is just as
disturbed and twisted as Tyler's debut. And, moreover, it's every bit as
outrageously brilliant. If you can manage to stomach his debauched musings (the
album is marinated in misogyny and bigotry), it's impossible not to be
awestruck by Goblin. The material visits some truly dark and troubled places,
and Tyler's prose is eerily mesmerizing from start to finish.
As
with Bastard, Goblin is framed by exchanges of dialogue between Tyler and his
fictional therapist, whom Tyler voices himself. This façade works to give the
album gravity and context, but one gets the impression that there's more than
meets the eye with this illusory relationship. In Goblin's more intimate
moments, the 20-year-old prodigy wears his heart on his sleeve and exorcises
his demons with unnerving candor. His estranged father is once again the focal
point of his most personal tirades: On the title track, he bellows,
"Competition missing like that nigger my mom fucked/He still hasn't called
me yet…but that's a whole fucking different argument," while on
"Nightmare" he sobs, "I'm 6'5", about to fucking cry about
another guy." Tyler also discusses the impact of his fast track to
superstardom, bemoaning the vacuous nature of life as a celebrity and mourning
the loss of his youth. "Nightmare" is arguably Goblin's most honest
stream-of-consciousness rant, where a four-minute frenzy against his newfound
fame is topped off with "I ain't even killed myself yet, and I already
want my life back." Tyler's most reprehensible lines are reserved for the
more insouciant tracks, usually when he's detached from the subject matter.
"Radicals" stands out for its extreme chorus, in which the rapper
exclaims, "Kill people, burn shit, fuck school," in what must surely
rank among music's most provocative refrains of all time. And when
impersonating Dracula in "Transylvania," Tyler barks a flurry of
misogynistic lines that are sure to shock. Many of these lyrics border on
unlistenable, even for someone who reveres Kool Keith's horrorcore landmark Dr.
Octagonecologyst as one of his favorite hip-hop records, and all of them are
categorically unprintable. In the two years since Bastard, Tyler's beats have
come a long way. Despite sticking to the lo-fi sound that permeated his debut,
Goblin boasts more refined musicianship. Lead single "Yonkers" is
perhaps the foremost case in point, fusing fidgety synths and sonorous bass
drones with snippets of sprightly matinee piano. Those choppy synths are
seemingly tailor-made for fostering the necessary measures of tension and
menace, so Tyler sees fit to exploit them frequently throughout songs like
"Golden," "Sandwitches," and especially "Tron
Cat." The instrumental "AU79" provides Goblin's biggest
surprise—which feels strange somehow, given that this is an album where the
shocking and shameful hides behind every corner. Here, Tyler the twisted
raconteur clocks out and makes way for a dreamy interlude that sounds
simultaneously lost in space and 20,000 leagues under the sea. It's a wonderful
change of pace before Tyler resumes his stance behind the microphone and
launches his chilling and spiteful curtain call. Although the album will no
doubt polarize listeners, it also effortlessly appeases those who have already
made up their mind about Tyler the Creator and Odd Future at large. The
material is as disturbing as detractors might expect, and then some, while
Tyler's snappy lexicon and accomplished musicianship will only further nourish
the hype surrounding him. Goblin could well be one of the decade's most
significant releases: On one hand, it endorses wanton violence and cavalierly
advocates rape with such feverish enthusiasm that there will surely be a
furious backlash from the general public, while on the other, it acts as the
apogee of a genuinely wonderful success story that breathes independence back
into grass-roots hip-hop. However history decides to assess it, there's no
denying that this cocktail of self-loathing hysteria and bilious vitriol will
get chins wagging and fingers pointing. Queerly irresistible in the same way
one idly stares at road kill, Goblin is a masterpiece for those capable of
stomaching it.
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