

It goes some way towards fusing the two extremes of Tyler, the Creator’s persona – the hard hitting rapper who, as he’s often wont to point out doesn’t “give a fuck”, makes jokes about terrorism and brags about having been “cancelled before cancelled was with Twitter fingers” and the sensitive, lovelorn melodic experimentalist who claims “I would rather hold your hand than have a cool handshake”. It’s a process of evolution that continues on Call Me If You Get Lost, an album on which all the tracks elide into each other that deals largely in short, sharp bursts of music but finds room for two episodic epics that each clock in close to the 10-minute mark. But I have to keep doing what I’m doing.” A year from now no one will give a fuck about this interview,” Tyler told the Guardian in 2012. Occasionally, those voices belonged to Odd Future themselves.
#Call me if you get lost set list for free
It had provoked the kind of bad-faith performative outrage in which certain corners of the internet specialise, but, if nothing else, it functioned as a reminder of different era, in which the Odd Future collective were held to be The World’s Most Notorious Rap Group – a broiling mass of wilful controversy thanks to their lyrics – and Tyler, their de facto leader, was quaintly thought such a threat to public morals that the then-home secretary, Theresa May, successfully petitioned to have him barred from entering the UK.įor all the column inches expended on them, you would have been forgiven for thinking that this was not a career built to last: the succès de scandale tends to burn bright, but not long dissenting voices wondered if it were possible to translate infamy and a willingness to give their music away for free online into a career.

E arlier this week, Billie Eilish was obliged to issue an apology, after an eight-year-old video of the singer emerged, featuring her mouthing along to a racial slur in Tyler, the Creator’s Fish, in a lyric that is also about date rape.
