SOUNDTRACK: TYLER, THE CREATOR-Tiny Desk Concert #683 (December 11, 2017).

I’ve never really liked Tyler, The Creator. My experience with him and his Odd Future posse was that they were just too … everything. Violent, misogynist, homophobic, everything. Well, it has been a decade or so since he first came to my awareness and he has matured considerably.
The change was noted in the blurb:
Flower Boy, Tyler’s latest album, is much like this Tiny Desk performance; a surprising departure from the expected. Four albums in, he has matured as a producer, rapper and human being. Often equated to hip-hop’s class clown, the 26-year-old peels back his own mask of immaturity to reveal a young adult grappling with anxiety, fear and uncertainty of self.
Which is not to say that he’s not vulgar, because he is, but he is also a lot of fun. And he made a point of having fun at this Tiny Desk Concert:
Tyler, The Creator’s Tiny Desk performance was a first for many reasons. It was the Los Angeles rapper’s first time performing at our offices, but moreover, it was the Tiny Desk’s first nighttime performance, a special request from Tyler and his team in order to professionally light the “stage” themselves. Members of Tyler’s lighting crew came to the office a day before to set it up, eventually bathing him and his band in shades of fuchsia, orange and blue — one for each song — during the early evening show.
“Boredom” opens with the room bathed in blue as the two backing singers Kaye Fox and Kiandra Richardson sing a pretty melody of “boredom got a new best friend” as the keys by Jaret Landon, drums by Dalton Hodo and upright bass (!) by Dré Pinckney plays a mellow jam. After a minute and a half, Tyler comes out and starts rapping. I like when he adds his 70s sounding synth over the backing vocals.
They have a lengthy jam at the end with the backing singers getting a chance: “make something up its your turn.” Then he asks a woman in the audience with a phone: “whats your name?” “Nana.” he sings, “Nana in this mother fucker… you can call me.”
I assume he has a cold (his voice sounds very cool and gravelly) as he “sips this nasty ass tea. Can’t believe people choose to drink this shit.”
As “See You Again” starts, he plays a new synth sound and the lights turn fuschia. Then he says, “I don’t know how many people are familiar with this song. If you wanna join in because you’re excited, feel free to join in because i like that shit. Then he points, “I know you three for sure you been saying every lyric. I appreciate you.”
When it starts he says, “Excuse my voice. I can’t sing…. But I don’t fucking care because it feels good. Like a warm shower. I think.
The blurb notes that his warmth to the audience was genuine:
After he was done, Tyler did something of a modified mic-drop, throwing his tambourine in celebration of what he and his band had accomplished. Always one to stay casually connected with his fans, Tyler made time — nearly an hour after the performance was done — to pose for photos, sign merch and crack jokes with (and on) everyone around him.
“Glitter” features a lot more rapping and some great backing vocals. I assume that the backing singers will become known and their voices are great.
When the set ends, the screen goes black. But wait, there’s more.
He says, “I guess we’re done (people clap). Wait, wait (getting angry-sounding, like Dave Chapelle) I’m about to talk. I wanna talk. Shit.
Someone asks, “Whats on your mind.” He says, “Thank you. I respect that. People don’t take the time to ask that. To listen.” He has everyone go around and introduce themselves and give a fun fact. The whole set is a lot of fun.
[READ: October 20, 2017] Demon Vol. 3
Volume 3 of this series continues the thread of Jimmy Yee. Jimmy is a demon who–when his host body is killed–will instantly jump into the nearest living body. He and his daughter Sweetpea have been alive for hundreds of years and have seen and done everything. They have unlimited money and resources and have slept and killed their way around the world several time over.
By Chapter 15 Jimmy runs into that guy from the earlier books with the square hair and mustache (Hunter). Hunter wants to kill this demon so they get into a hilariously over the top fight sequence. Since nether one of them can die, they jump out of building and crash into things–jumping into the next body and the next. The carnage is incredible.
At one point they even come to in the bodies of two people having sex. (and once again, semen is used in a way you’d never expect).
The length of this chase is absurd and just gets crazier and crazier.
As this book ends Hunter has captured Sweetpea and put her in a heavily gauarded prsion. Hunter also assumes that Jimmy is dead for good.
And Chapter 17 is simply genius. Jimmy wakes up in a dark place. And thus all of the panels are just black–that makes me laugh so much. Twenty pages of black panels shaped and sized in various ways with dialogue.
That’s how we learn the (given this story, entirely believable) reason why Jimmy Yee’s demon is not dead.
I genuinely can’t imagine what the fourth and final book will hold.
Incidentally, Tabby asked if she could read this and while I’m usually not too concerned about what she reads, this one got a big no!
The attack by farting semen into someone’s eyes would have been simply too much to try to explain.

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