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Friday, 1 November 2024

Review of ‘Chromakopia’ by Tyler, the Creator

Tyler, the Creator wrestles with the idea of becoming Tyler, the Procreator.

Tyler has been slacking. We used to get an album from him every two years. But it’s been three years since Call Me If You Get Lost. Bloody disgraceful. Has he run out of things to rap about? As this album reveals, clearly not. This might be Tyler’s most confessional record to date. As guest rapper Doechii poetically describes on track 14, he’s airing it all out ‘like a queef’.

In usual Tyler the Creator fashion, Chromakopia opens with a completely bombastic-but-brilliant intro track – this time with marching feet, menacing whisper-rapping and a grimy beat change towards the end. We then dive into second track ‘Rah Tah Tah’ in which Tyler is bragging about his wealth. Not my favourite type of Tyler track. In fact, my one gripe with Call Me As You Get Lost is that it had a bit too much braggadocio on it. But it’s okay, because the beat is enjoyably nuts, and we largely leave behind the braggadocio from this point on.

‘Noid’ is the first glimpse that grammy-winning rapper is not entirely content beneath the fortune and fame. Even an extra-extroverted guy like Tyler needs his privacy, and being constantly photographed and filmed is making him paranoid. Made up of stuttering synths and Black-Sabbath-esque guitars (they’re actually sampled from this 70s zamrock band), the instrumental feels fittingly frantic.

After this we get ‘Darling, I’, which explores Tyler’s inability to settle down in a relationship. I’m still not entirely convinced by his hammy singing on this one, but he graciously lets Teezo Touchdown take over at the end. This song leads nicely into ‘Hey Jane’, at which point this album starts to touch on the really heavy shit. It sees Tyler exploring an accidental pregnancy from the perspective of both partners. 15 years ago, I would have never imagined I’d hear Tyler declare ‘You just hope to God I get a period again’ in a serious context. He delicately and maturely navigates the feelings of each partner as they decide whether to go through with having a baby. It ends on a cliffhanger, however the choice to name the track after an abortion service makes me think Tyler and his partner ultimately didn’t go through with it (if the track is in fact describing a real life situation that happened to Tyler).  

I hoped ‘I Killed You’ wasn’t going to be a distasteful continuation of the same theme, and I’m happy to report it’s in fact a completely unrelated track about killing his hair with products. In fact, this and the next two tracks take a break into lighter subject matter. ‘Judge Judy’ is an ode to a past fuckbuddy with some backing vocals that sound almost like Frank Ocean (he’s not credited, so I’m not sure if it’s actually him). ‘Sticky’ meanwhile is a banger with a positively disgusting beat and lively guest rapping from Glorilla, Lil Wayne and Sexyy Red (I expected her verse to be trash, but it’s not).

This last half of the album is where Tyler really pours his heart out and turns this into an AOTY contender. ‘Take Your Mask Off’ is a creative track about exposing the mask of various people, which in the last verse transforms into a diss track aimed at himself. And he doesn’t hold back either – he goes all in as if he's Kendrick dissing Drake. It certainly counterbalances the braggadocio at the beginning of this album.    

Among his many caustic self-criticisms, he claims ‘you selfish as fuck, that’s why you scared of being a parent’ – which ends up being the topic of the next track ‘Tomorrow’. Along with Charli XCX’s ‘I think about it all the time’, it’s the second track I’ve heard in 2024 that deals with parental anxiety in one’s 30s. I’m impressed again by the maturity Tyler shows in this track, and it’s very touching stuff. However, the most powerful song on the album is yet to come…

No, I’m not talking about ‘Thought I Was Dead’. This banger features Schoolboy Q and some nasty trumpets, and it provides some much-needed levity before Tyler hits us with ‘Like Him’. This track continues the album’s theme of reluctant fatherhood, but centres around his own estranged dad. Tyler already wrote a heavy song about this topic 10 years ago called ‘Answer’. This song hits even harder – exchanging bitterness for a desperation to know what his father is/was like. The production is heavenly and it’s delivered in such a heartfelt manner that I don’t even mind Tyler’s amateurish singing.

Finally, we get ‘Balloon’ and ‘I Hope You Find Your Way Home’. After emotionally ruining us with ‘Like Him’, these songs end the album on a positive and hopeful note. ‘Baloon’ has a soaring energy to it with a potty-mouthed verse from Doechii that feels like a throwback to Tyler’s roots. And ‘I Hope You Find You Way Home’ closes the album with a fantastic synth solo from Tyler that shows how far he’s come as a producer.

Up until now, I’ve been waiting for Tyler to drop a masterpiece, and it feels like every album has fallen just short. However, Chromakopia feels like its truly reached that bar. There isn’t a single song on this album that isn’t impressive. Even on the tracks where I don’t really care for the lyrics such as ‘Rah Tah Tah’ and ‘Judge Judy’, the production is fun and detailed enough that it makes up for it. The album features some of Tyler’s most mature songs and also some ridiculous bangers. It’s also worth noting that his vocals are incredibly dynamic on this record, with moments where he almost sounds like a completely different singer or rapper. And yet as sonically messy as it feels, he manages to tie it altogether with the themes of distrust and fatherhood. It’s enough to make you question whether it should be the 'big four' and not the 'big three'.

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