Difference between revisions of "Earl Sweatshirt"

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Thebe Neruda Kgositsile (born February 24, 1994), commonly known as [[Earl Sweatshirt]], is an American rapper, record producer and songwriter from Los Angeles, California. He is an [[atheism|atheist]].<ref>[https://pitchfork.com/thepitch/731-earl-sweatshirt-and-tyler-the-creators-odd-future-as-mature-adults/ Earl Sweatshirt and Tyler, the Creator's Odd Future as Mature Adults]</ref>
 
Thebe Neruda Kgositsile (born February 24, 1994), commonly known as [[Earl Sweatshirt]], is an American rapper, record producer and songwriter from Los Angeles, California. He is an [[atheism|atheist]].<ref>[https://pitchfork.com/thepitch/731-earl-sweatshirt-and-tyler-the-creators-odd-future-as-mature-adults/ Earl Sweatshirt and Tyler, the Creator's Odd Future as Mature Adults]</ref>
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[[National Public Radio]] says about Earl Sweatshirt:
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{{Cquote|Earl, born Thebe Kgositsile, has spent years being a topic of hip-hop discussion. First, he was the MySpace Music diamond in the rough and the lyrical miracle of Odd Future who got plucked from his crew and sent away to boarding school in Samoa as a teenager. Then, he was the polymath the who marked his triumphant return with two gritty, critically-acclaimed albums — 2013's Doris and 2015's I Don't Like S***, I Don't Go Outside: An Album by Earl Sweatshirt. And more recently, he's become a recluse, only popping up in production credits or on festival stages every so often. But all the while, the 24-year-old has felt more hailed and commodified than actually understood.
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Like the promo poster implies, Some Rap Songs is a fusion of a few different things. It's the soundtrack to his grief, as this is his first album to be released in the wake of the death of his father, South African poet laureate Keorapetse Kgositsile, this past January. And at 15 songs, each less than three minutes long, it's a study in scaled-back simplicity, a departure from what fans have come to expect from him. "N****s be victims of overwriting, bro. You can hear when it switches from the heart to the head," Earl says.<ref>[https://www.npr.org/2018/12/07/673227162/earl-sweatshirt-on-resentment-growth-and-giving-yourself-a-chance Earl Sweatshirt On Resentment, Growth And Giving Yourself A Chance], National Public Radio</ref>}}
  
 
== See also ==
 
== See also ==

Revision as of 05:57, October 14, 2019

Thebe Neruda Kgositsile (born February 24, 1994), commonly known as Earl Sweatshirt, is an American rapper, record producer and songwriter from Los Angeles, California. He is an atheist.[1]

National Public Radio says about Earl Sweatshirt:

Earl, born Thebe Kgositsile, has spent years being a topic of hip-hop discussion. First, he was the MySpace Music diamond in the rough and the lyrical miracle of Odd Future who got plucked from his crew and sent away to boarding school in Samoa as a teenager. Then, he was the polymath the who marked his triumphant return with two gritty, critically-acclaimed albums — 2013's Doris and 2015's I Don't Like S***, I Don't Go Outside: An Album by Earl Sweatshirt. And more recently, he's become a recluse, only popping up in production credits or on festival stages every so often. But all the while, the 24-year-old has felt more hailed and commodified than actually understood.

Like the promo poster implies, Some Rap Songs is a fusion of a few different things. It's the soundtrack to his grief, as this is his first album to be released in the wake of the death of his father, South African poet laureate Keorapetse Kgositsile, this past January. And at 15 songs, each less than three minutes long, it's a study in scaled-back simplicity, a departure from what fans have come to expect from him. "N****s be victims of overwriting, bro. You can hear when it switches from the heart to the head," Earl says.[2]

See also

Notes