Тема: tickets for future 2017

http://pm1.narvii.com/6330/1b8d2f778a7c2925dcaccb2ce7477a3554426dd4_hq.jpg


Remember that scowl Michael Phelps made at the Rio Olympics? It came from listening to the Atlanta rapper Future. In fact, some percentage of the scowls happening at any given time on Earth in the past few years likely have been thanks to Future, contemporary hip-hop’s most reliable resource for mood alteration.

The 33-year-old Future is now gunning for a Billboard milestone: being the first artist to have two separate albums chart at No. 1 in back to back weeks. Which would seem like an odd distinction—who releases two albums a week apart?—were it not for Future’s legendary profligacy (he released eight albums and mixtapes in 2015 and 2016 alone).

The key to his popularity is less in his volume than in his sound, though. Thank him partly for how slithery manipulated vocals, emotionally haunted bragging, and sputtering rhythms that evoke an interstellar machine shop have become to today’s music what gated reverb was to the ’80s. But also credit him for maintaining a recognizable style and outlook even as he has continued to shift shapes since his 2012 debut album.

After a year of relative quiet, Future is back with a surprise duo of releases, one self-titled and one called Hndrxx, a reference to a Jimi Hendrix-inspired alter-ego the rapper created for himself. The first was announced without mention of a follow-up, and when it arrived two weeks ago it sounded like a radical re-purification: no guest stars, no stylistic diversions, just Future in pure beast mode, cruel and confident over driving, jagged beats. It premiered as the No. 1 album in the country.

Days later came the news of Hndrxx, which turns out to be an aesthetic inverse: musically adventurous, introspective, too smooth and downbeat to help anyone set a 200m butterfly record.

The density of Future overwhelms at first, with his producers layering metallic clangs and hisses, wobbly synth motifs that read as aquatic or electrical, and—for refreshing bits of color—flutes. Future’s voice, as always, is doctored not to sound more polished but more human: He wavers between notes, saying one thing but communicating another, snapping from cloudy-headed one moment to clear the next, and repeatedly sneaking in little innovations. Listen to how he seems to be playing near the melody of “The Streets of Cairo” in “Super Trapper.” Check out how the deceptively simple “I’m So Groovy” continually returns to a quick, hooky “mhmmm” that seems to unmoor itself from the verse and become part of the beat.

Read more: future 2017 calendar

Рыбка плавает по дну --- **** хоть одну ))))