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On October 28, 2024, during Tyler, the Creator's Chromakopia exclusive listening event, Tyler revealed the meaning behind the album, noting that the album was originally about him growing up in Hawthorne, Inglewood. He revealed on stage that "no one knows anything about me from before I was like 17" and that the record turned into Tyler "taking ...
Tyler Gregory Okonma (born March 6, 1991), known professionally as Tyler, the Creator, is an American rapper, singer-songwriter, and record producer. [2] He has been cited as an influential figure in alternative hip-hop during the 2010s.
The video was self-directed by Tyler, and features Wilson and Bundick, along with Cole Alexander, who was featured on "Deathcamp". [9] Billboard described the music video for "Fucking Young" as a "quirky/twisted love story," where Tyler "gets high" through inhaling a balloon, and attempts skateboard stunts. The video for "Fucking Young" ends ...
Tyler addressed the audience saying, “I got Swifties all mad at me with their racist ass — bringing up old lyrics, bitch, go listen to ‘Tron Cat,’ I don’t give a fuck hoe.” “Tron Cat ...
In October 2024, Doechii featured on the song "Balloon" from Tyler, the Creator's album Chromakopia. [29] Doechii also featured on Katy Perry's song "I'm His, He's Mine" from her album 143. Doechii appeared as a guest judge on a January 2025 episode of RuPaul's Drag Race season 17, with her song "Alter Ego" featured in a lip-sync competition ...
Reviewing Chromakopia for Pitchfork, Heven Haile stated "Tyler is an amazing rapper when he wants to be, even on cartoony beats like 'Balloon' and 'Thought I Was Dead.'" [2] Francis Buseko of The Quietus called the song "a powerful declaration of resilience that exudes Tyler's confidence, dismissing doubts and signalling his unapologetic ...
In November 2014, Larry Fitzmaurice wrote a piece for The Fader, giving details about a follow-up to Tyler, the Creator's third studio album, Wolf (2013). Fitzmaurice wrote the album features a multitude of guests, but likely no features from other Odd Future members, the rap group of which Tyler is the face, stating: "Everyone's on their own island."
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