His unwillingness to do so shows more laziness than it does blatant intolerance. There are more clever ways to describe his detractors, and Tyler proves he’s got the brain to do it. Wolf, while being a little messy at some points, is the start of something amazing. Tyler really starts to open up and improve his lyrics/rapping and production. Beauty and growth starts to rise while still holding onto its roots. He’d save a lot of breath, for example, if he cut back on one homophobic epithet in particular. This album we see Tyler planting the seeds to a beautiful flower. Tyler’s “Wolf” may lack in editing and aural oomph, but it more than compensates with wit, if you can get past the way he seems to revel in tossing off invectives and then doubling back to defend them. The enigmatic artist made his name as a provocateur, but hes always been one of the most creative rappers in the game. Even Tyler suggests this in “Domo 23,” saying that the record “sounds like midgets in the. Snares, high-hats and tom-tom drums don’t pop the way they should. Sonically, the record’s just not very dynamic. The best of them, “Treehome95" and “Tamale,” illustrate a musician taking rhythmic chances to great success, even if they’re hobbled by an unfortunate flatness. “I rolled here on a mean unicorn,” he raps on “Cowboy,” one of the album’s twisted highlights.Įlsewhere, Tyler, who produced the album, crafts minimal tracks with wobbly time signatures that are naturally unbalanced. He’s Tyler’s most menacing creation, who near the end of “Rusty” (spoiler alert) murders Earl Sweatshirt mid-rap. This swirling chaos of voices comes from every angle. Moving to Tylers second album, Jamba is the first track after the conceptual introduction and titular track, WOLF. Deep listening reveals nuances - many of them were introduced on his previous records “Bastard” and “Goblin” - and bits and pieces of plot pepper the album’s duration, making it feel like a comic book come to life. Still, when it’s on, “Wolf” is a daring, smart and precisely imagined record, and sounds like little else in hip-hop right now.Īt 70 minutes and 18 tracks, “Wolf” carries Tyler’s fans on a new journey into the minds of his characters. On “Wolf,” Tyler’s third solo album, the producer, rapper, comedic actor and storyteller revels in his many dimensions, and has released his best album to date - even if it’s too long and too sonically flat to confirm his place as a top-rate producer. It’s not only unfair, but inaccurately draws the Los Angeles-based rapper and founder of the Odd Future crew as one-dimensional, which he most certainly is not. Drawing conclusions on the music of Tyler the Creator based on his shocking way with language is like trying to explain the plot of a comic book by noting how much red ink is used.