Her latest project, Sunka Ryougen, is similarly embedded with elements of rock and nihilism, startling screams of fury that arrive unexpectedly and leave listeners unnerved, despite the language barrier. The singing and poetic rapping style of Haruna Kimishima (stage name Haru Nemuri) is too varied and multidimensional to be dubbed mere “J-pop.” Nemuri’s debut album, Haru to Shura, arrived, much to the shock of critics, thanks to its sonic palette, a cocktail mix of shoegaze, hip-hop, rock, and pop that refused to be defined and pushed at the edges of J-pop. In Aethiopes, Woods neglects beats for atmosphere, however disturbing it may be to the listener, and instead of audio pleasure, demands thinking, real mental processing, with lyrics that could be pulled to form any number of rich slam poetry entries, such as this lyric off of the 12th track, “Remorseless”: “In person, these rappers watches looking temptin’ / The chain say envy, but PTSD keeps me countin’, never spendin’ / My accountant is a head full of bad memories and sad endings / It’s all payment pending.” The two succeed in creating what woods calls in an interview with Fader “one of more symbiotic, feedback-loop processes of making an album that I probably ever had,” describing the unsettled nature and chaos of the project. Instead, the anti-capitalist, abstract hip-hop rapper is thoughtful with his latest project, a collaboration with producer Preservation. The antithesis of modern-day rap, billy woods, half of the duo Armand Hammer (no relation to the disgraced actor), refuses to be tied to verses littered with rhetoric about cars and expensive jewelry. Wet Leg, the duo’s self-titled debut project, is steeped in the brusque and satirical humor and lighthearted cheekiness that first attracted fans’ attention to “Chaise Longue,” with lyrics such as “Mommy, daddy, look at me / I went to school and I got a degree / All my friends call it “the big D” / I went to school and I got the big D.” The project, filled with sexual innuendos and immature taunts, is at the same time an emotionally developed and mature post-punk body of work that signals the rare entry of a fully formed band. No one could have guessed at Wet Leg’s immediate and rapid success, especially not themselves their debut single “Chaise Longue” could be heard everywhere following a viral release as millions of listens, and media attention, poured in. Their origin story nods to that, with the two deciding to form the band atop a ferris wheel at a music festival, and subsequently naming it after a slang term mocking mainland Brits. Rhian Teasdale and Hestel Chambers, who comprise British indie rock band Wet Leg, want the world to know they don’t take themselves too seriously. With his stunning vocal performances on tracks like “Call My Bluff” and “Neck & Wrist,” paired delightfully with tasteful and hard-hitting production from Williams, It’s Almost Dry is an instant standout among the rapper’s catalog. Thematically, the project is not different from the usual, which the rapper acknowledged after the release of Daytona: “If you want to talk about it, I really made variations of the same album for the past 20 years.” What separates It’s Almost Dry from the subject matter norm is Pusha’s innovative execution. The record also stars quite the seasoned lineup, with features from big names like Lil Uzi Vert, Kid Cudi, Don Toliver, Nigo, and Pusha’s brother, No Malice. Pusha welcomes back the creative direction of Kanye West (“Ye” as he’s known at the moment), Daytona executive producer, as well as Pharrell Williams, with each producing half of the project, six tracks each. The project is the first to net the Virginia Beach native a number one on the Billboard 200 chart, and listening to the record’s dynamic and dense verses, it’s no wonder. Four years since the release of Daytona, rapper Pusha T returns bigger than ever with It’s Almost Dry, his fourth studio album.
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