The Best Album Covers Of 2024

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Via The Artists

There are times when you really shouldn’t judge a book by its cover. The covers for the Neapolitan Novels by Italian writer Elena Ferrante look like straight-up stock imagery, but Ferrante’s prose and narrative prowess are unmatched. They don’t exactly speak to the quality of writing within them. With records, you can make a similar argument. I can think of several incredible records with horrendous, even off-putting artwork, like the clumps of hair on Dry Cleaning’s Stumpwork or the horrifying alien mask on M83’s Fantasy. But when an album does have a great cover, it stands out. When that cover’s visually representative of the music itself, it stands out even more.

Below is a list of some of the most notable album covers of 2024. Some caused controversy; some are laughably simple; some were outright painful to create; some are incredibly intricate. Each of the covers below is iconic in its own way.

Beyoncé — Cowboy Carter

Beyonce Cowboy Carter album cover artwork
Parkwood Entertainment/Columbia Records

For Act II of Beyoncé’s trilogy, which started with 2022’s house and ballroom-indebted Renaissance, the pop powerhouse becomes a rodeo queen bee. The album cover of Cowboy Carter, Bey’s foray into country, makes this plainly apparent. It portrays Beyoncé riding atop a white horse, saddle in one hand, oversized American flag in the other, covered from head to toe in red, white, and blue regalia. A sash, reading “COWBOY CARTER,” cuts across her torso. Blair Caldwell’s photograph makes Beyoncé’s homage clear. She pays tribute to a historically Black genre that’s seldom been recognized by white Nashville institutions. With its cover, Bey intends to reclaim its lineage and contribute to its present form.

Billie Eilish — Hit Me Hard And Soft

Billie Eilish Hit Me Hard And Soft
Darkroom/Interscope

The artwork for Billie Eilish’s third album, shot by photographer William Drumm, shows the pop titan submerged underwater, looking up at an open door right beneath the surface. It’s a tidy analogue for Eilish’s signature sound: sparse, muted drum beats; woozy synths; and barely audible vocals. On Hit Me Hard And Soft, though, her voice occasionally rises to a scream, breaking free from the suffocating waters, making herself heard. It was a long, grueling photoshoot, according to Eilish’s own account, but it resulted in one of the most striking album covers of the year.

Blood Incantation — Absolute Elsewhere

Century Media

Steve Dodd, the artist who painted the cover of Blood Incantation’s Absolute Elsewhere, is not an easy man to get in touch with. When I spoke with Paul Riedl, who fronts the death metal Colorado group, he told me that Dodd has no computer, no internet, no phone, and only corresponds via snail mail. But the remote painter perfectly understands Blood Incantation’s overarching universe, and its highly detailed cover, which pops with rich colors, an interstellar expanse, and mythic imagery, is proof.

Brittany Howard — What Now

Brittany Howard

When I spoke with Brittany Howard about the influences of her second solo album, What Now, she said she drew inspiration from Akira Kurosawa’s late-period film, Dreams. That movie features some of Kurosawa’s experiments with vibrant color, such as the vignette where its protagonist enters a Van Gogh painting and meets the artist himself. The album cover for What Now is similarly evocative; it’s a photograph with the dreamlike, surrealist qualities of a watercolor.

Charli XCX — Brat

Charli XCX

Pantone 3507C. Arial narrow font. Width set to 90%. Stretched and set to a visibly low resolution. These are the hallmarks of the immediately iconic, kitschy cover art for Brat, Charli XCX’s sixth studio album. There are now meme generators; its visual cues have been co-opted by politicians, TikTok influencers, and NYT Cooking. For a record that reckoned with its creator’s periphery to the mainstream on songs like “Sympathy Is A Knife” and “I Might Say Something Stupid,” Brat achieved what it didn’t set out to do. Its archly ugly album cover played a large part in Brat Summer, a cultural epoch that will be long remembered.

Denzel Curry — King Of The Mischievous South

The sequel to Denzel Curry’s 2012 mixtape is a homage to Southern hip-hop. At the same time, it’s a celebration of how its scene influenced Curry, both as a member of Raider Klan and as an emcee in his own right. Across the tape’s 19 songs and 51 minutes, the Miami rapper is joined by a rotating cast of characters, a roster that boasts names old and new alike: Juicy J, TiaCorine, That Mexican OT, Maxo Kream, Project Pat, 2 Chainz. The stark, black-and-white album cover plays into this idea, too. Curry sits in the center, easily recognizable, while a flurry of other figures, much less discernible, surrounds him. Guest performers come and go, but the glue holding the project together is, of course, Curry himself.

Doechii — Alligator Bites Never Heal

Doechii

In John Jay’s photograph, which serves as the cover for Doechii’s third mixtape, the TDE rapper is in full control. An albino alligator, her native Florida’s official state reptile, rests calmly in her lap. “This mixtape embodies my resurgence, my reclaiming of power,” she wrote in an Instagram post. “I am nobody’s prey; I was born to be the predator.”

Helado Negro — Phasor

4AD

When I look at the cover for Helado Negro’s excellent eighth album, Phasor, I’m reminded of the opening cutscene of Kingdom Hearts II, in which one of its characters draws a spiral staircase, and the camera zooms in to show that it has now become real, suspended in darkness, as Sora and friends climb it and battle through hordes of enemies. Crystal Zapata is the artist behind the cover, and she compiled various illustrations to create the highly detailed image. It perfectly captures how it feels to listen to Phasor: a psychedelic, maze-like experience that’s as dizzying as it is delightful.

Jamie xx — In Waves

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For Jamie xx’s 2015 debut, In Colour, the album cover lived up to its name. A rainbow pinwheel, adorned with a stray white block, dominates the field of vision. So it only makes sense that, for its long-awaited follow-up In Waves, the cover art — a collaboration between SJ Todd, Charles Britton, and Simon Guzylack — is very, very wavy. Like its artwork, the xx member’s second solo LP is sleek, hypnotizing, and rife with fine details that reveal themselves over time.

Knocked Loose — You Won’t Go Before You’re Supposed To

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Pure Noise

The album cover for Knocked Loose’s fourth album, You Won’t Go Before You’re Supposed To, stirred up so much discourse that fans began to wonder if their favorite metalcore band was, in fact, Christian rock. It’s the type of cover that’s eye-catching enough to generate discussion without even considering the music. But it ties into the central, spiritual ethos that the Kentucky quintet pose: only so much is in your control.

Magdalena Bay — Imaginal Disk

Magdalena Bay

The second LP from pop duo Magdalena Bay isn’t afraid to get weird. That much is conveyed via Maria Shatalova’s album artwork alone. Vocalist Mica Tenenbaum graces its cover. A strange, white light glares in the blue background behind her, and a cadaver-gray, extraterrestrial hand (replete with uncannily long nails and bony fingers) inserts a disc into her forehead. Tenenbaum is a stand-in for the protagonist of Imaginal Disk, Blue, who’s being subjected to alien testing to explore the missing evolutionary connection between apes and humans. It’s a simple image, but there’s a sci-fi novel’s worth of ideas contained within it.

Mavi — Shadowbox

Mavi

Designed by interdisciplinary artist Saint Ki, the platinum-palladium print cover of Mavi’s Shadowbox is a tour de force in contrasts. Mavi himself occupies the dead center, his gaze fixed on the camera, the negative space around him sharply delineating his figure even more. As the rapper mentioned in an interview, he has wanted to work with Saint Ki for a while now, and the stars have finally aligned.

Mdou Moctar — Funeral For Justice

Mdou Moctar Funeral For Justice cover art
Courtesy of Mdou Moctar

Tuareg guitarist Mdou Moctar’s rallying cries of resistance and empowerment course through his music. The album cover for Funeral For Justice achieves a similar feat, too. Robert Beatty’s artwork depicts a large crow with blood dripping off its talons, cascading onto a coffin below with an embossed outline of Africa. It’s a potent illustration, especially when paired with Mdou Moctar’s anti-colonialist anthems.

MIKE & Tony Seltzer — Pinball

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MIKE

MIKE is one of the most prolific rappers working right now. He releases at least an album a year, and this year’s Pinball, his collaboration with producer Tony Seltzer, is easily among his best. Vinny Fanta’s intricate artwork — a highly detailed, lined pinball machine set against a white background — is an apt visualization of MIKE’s ornate rhymes and Tony Seltzer’s immaculate instrumentals.

Mk.gee — Two Star And The Dream Police

MK.Gee Two Star & The Dream Police
R&R

One of the biggest breakouts of the year goes to singer-songwriter Mk.gee, whose debut album, Two Star And The Dream Police, evokes everyone from Frank Ocean to Sting. These days, he’s fully leaning into his rising rock stardom by playing the same song 12 times in a row. But the cover art, cast in twilit shadows with a forest backdrop, posits Mike Gordon as something of an enigma, a person who dual-wields his guitar and mystique with canny finesse.

Peggy Gou — I Hear You

On “Your Art,” the opening track of Peggy Gou’s proper debut LP, I Hear You, Gou recites a poem by visual artist and environmental activist Olafur Eliasson. “Create your own view / Your own universe,” goes its first couplet. Eliasson’s poem isn’t the only thing he contributed to the record; he also designed the cover art, including the futuristic mirrored headpiece Gou wears, reflecting her ears at various angles. Even from the cover alone, you can tell that the DJ insists on being heard.

ScHoolboy Q — Blue Lips

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Schoolboy Q

The cover art for Blue Lips, the masterful sixth studio album from TDE rapper ScHoolboy Q, is, yes, a picture of blue lips. It’s literal and to the point; Bethany Vargas’ photograph of Olivia Mackell is closed in on her painted-blue mouth, a Parental Advisory sticker placed just underneath Mackell’s gap tooth, the album title scrawled in the bottom-left corner. It’s an image as distinct and laser-focused as Q’s rapping.

St. Vincent — All Born Screaming

St Vincent All Born Screaming album cover art
Virgin Music Group

When songwriter Annie Clark (AKA St. Vincent) and visual artist Alex Da Corte visited the Museo Del Prado together, they were both awestruck by Francisco Goya’s Black Paintings. For Da Corte’s cover of the seventh St. Vincent album, All Born Screaming, he painted the entire set black, capturing the void that lies at the heart of Goya’s series. Its main subject, Clark herself with sleeves ablaze, bursts from the darkness like a beacon to create an imposing image.

Tierra Whack — World Wide Whack

tierra whack world wide whack
Tierra Whack

Another standout Alex Da Corte album cover goes to Tierra Whack’s World Wide Whack. The two Philly residents came up with the record’s protagonist, whose story is told throughout the album’s various videos. Whack herself portrays the nameless character, a glaring spotlight showcasing the crescent moon she’s lying against and the gargantuan joker card in the background.

Tyler, The Creator — Chromakopia

Tyler The Creator

With each album, Tyler, The Creator toys with different iconography to complement the music itself. 2017’s Flower Boy portrayed Tyler in a sunflower field, cartoonishly large bees whizzing by him. 2021’s Call Me If You Get Lost played into its international imagery with suitcases and travel licenses. The cover art for Chromakopia, however, displays its masked creator in a nondescript black-and-white setting, like the protagonist (or antagonist?) of an eerie noir. Photographed by Luis “Panch” Perez, Tyler has his mask on, but it’s only a matter of time before his introspective lyrics force him to take it off.

Vampire Weekend — Only God Was Above Us

Only God Was Above Us vampire weekend
Columbia

Taken by street photographer Steven Siegel, the album art for Vampire Weekend’s fifth LP, Only God Was Above Us, depicts a New Jersey subway graveyard in 1988. One of its subjects sits just out of frame, holding a newspaper with the headline “ONLY GOD WAS ABOVE US” taking up half of its cover. Given that VW’s latest album concerns itself with urban detritus and the band’s New York origins, it’s a fitting choice for its visual representation.

Camp Flog Gnaw Somehow Improved On Perfection

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Getty Image/Merle Cooper

Tyler, The Creator’s Camp Flog Gnaw Carnival is already one of the best festivals in the world. So, for the festival’s tenth anniversary, how could the rebellious Los Angeles native possibly improve what is as close to perfection as it gets? The only way he knows how: By focusing on the fans to give them the experience he would want for himself. While that includes top-down conceptualizing like the always-excellent curation of the festival’s lineup of artists Tyler actually enjoys, it also means ensuring that everything from the facilities to the food stands out, meeting the best-in-class standard Flog Gnaw has set for the past ten years — and will hopefully continue to do so for many more. Here are five takeaways from the tenth Flog Gnaw.

Philip Cosores

Getting To The Festival Is A Breeze

Tyler rarely puts out environmental messages or talks about civic duty — that would be at odds with his image as a devil-may-care, mischievous menace — but his priorities are plain from the moves he makes in support of the Flog Gnaw festivities. This year, the festival partnered with LA’s local public transit network to provide a free shuttle from the city’s historical Union Station to the festival grounds at Dodger Stadium, where the fest returned for the fourth year. While Metro itself sort of dropped the ball with this due to some needed improvements on one of the rail lines (specifically, the one I use to get to Union Station), necessitating an additional transfer, the shuttle service somehow managed to corral those hundreds of exuberant 20-somethings (and one grumpy 40-year-old) and keep things moving along fairly efficiently. There aren’t too many other local festivals as ideally situated, but I would love to see more of them duplicate similar services.

Philip Cosores

Dodger Stadium Is The Perfect Venue

In the four years since the festival moved to Dodger Stadium from Exposition Park, gradual improvements to its layout and grounds have made it the ideal venue for such an event. Last year, someone figured out that sticking all three stages in the north parking lots offered the best version of the layout, and this year, that stuck, with the Camp Stage situated in the center of the event space, flanked by the Flog stage to the west and Gnaw to the east. There’s still plenty of space to move around, and the landscape is dotted with even more rides and games, giving the festival a true carnival feel. While in line for the shuttle, I overheard nearby attendees discussing whether VIP passes were worth it, ultimately coming to the conclusion that there’s plenty of bang for your buck thanks to the VIP-exclusive rides, which had shorter lines — although only two stages have dedicated VIP sections (Gnaw is situated in such a way that it really wouldn’t make sense to add one there).

Themed Pop-Up Restaurants Even Make Eating Fun

While browsing social media posts about the festival, I saw quite a few posts responding to the MF DOOM’s MM..FOOD Diner menu with skepticism and derision. I assume most of these posts were just from commenters salty they weren’t at the fest and didn’t get to try the food for themselves. Consisting of items named after tracks from DOOM’s 2004 concept album, the menu was similar in price to the other concessions around it, and each item offered enough food to feed two people. My partner and I ordered the Rap Snitch Kniches, which turned out to be chicken and waffles with a twist — the chicken was INSIDE the waffle. This is momentous stuff. This needs to be a real restaurant, stat. Another artist-themed offering was Pusha T’s Grindin coffee, which cleverly tied into the artist’s persona in a similar way.

Meanwhile, even with the usual assortment of festival foods, we never waited in line for anything for longer than 10 or 20 minutes (the line for MM..FOOD was the longest, but the meal was in our hands almost as soon as we ordered it). The food booths are also ideally located to keep lines from overlapping any of the activations or stage crowds, so it was as close to a hassle-free experience as it gets. I would like to see more tables, but logistically, I understand potential safety hazards.

Philip Cosores

The Merch Is Enviable And Actually Looks Great

Flog Gnaw has always presented enviable merch options in comparison to a lot of other festivals. While it’s likely that not everybody in the fest’s target demographic can justify the cost of a $100 sweatshirt commemorating their attendance, the designs are undoubtedly among the coolest I’ve seen at the 20 or so fests I’ve covered in my time at Uproxx. My partner came away with one that cheekily reads “Save The Bees,” which doubles as both another ironic-but-sincere environmental message endorsed by Tyler and a reference to the cover of his 2017 breakout album Flower Boy. I still have yet to come away with a stuffed Tyler toy (there are all kinds of different ones, from his ski-masked Goblin alter ego to more recent album era-inspired looks), but perhaps next year will be my year. Meanwhile, even the general stores dotting the grounds had some unexpected treats; I haven’t seen another festival selling collapsible stools before, but I wouldn’t be surprised if they started showing up at more events in the future — and let me tell you, they are lifesavers no matter how old you are.

The Music Remains The Star Of The Show

The thing that makes Tyler so distinctive as an artist is that he’s such a huge fan of music, in general. Too often in hip-hop, there’s this cool-guy mindset: “I don’t really listen to music.” And I guess it’s an effort not to look cringe or like you’ve been inspired by someone else — you’re a one-of-one, completely original — which is why T not doing that is so dang cool (and kind of ironic, considering his seeming abhorrence of anything cringe or too sincere). He listens to everything; you can experience a sampling of his personal playlist by hanging around the Camp stage between sets. And he knows that just because you enjoy the jazz styling of André 3000’s latest album, doesn’t mean you won’t also get absolutely wrecked to Playboi Carti or Denzel Curry’s approach to thrash rap.

Philip Cosores

The same crowd that vibes out to Omar Apollo can get roasted by Vince Staples (do not, under any circumstances, forget that rap is Black music). Syd and Orion Sun can offer dreamy R&B, Raye can demonstrate her vocal virtuoso, Earl Sweatshirt can get deeply lyrical, and Mase can bring out the hits — some of which are older than half of Flog Gnaw’s attendees — and all of them can resonate with the diverse, eclectic crowd (some more than others, true). The weekend’s standouts, in addition to the above-mentioned names, were Doechii, who continued her campaign for rap’s upper echelons, and Sexyy Red, who made believers of even the most skeptical listeners, according to the results of my recap-related ear hustling. Oh, yeah, Tyler performed a bunch of his new songs from Chromakopia, and I can’t wait for that tour. “Sticky” is a hit.

Undoubtedly, the coolest part for me was seeing a full orchestra paying homage to the masked man who unexpectedly inspired so many of the artists who appeared on this bill, MF DOOM. There’s no way to describe it for those who weren’t there, but the vibes were immaculate — and elevated by an appearance from Erykah Badu, fresh off her main stage set, to reproduce the interpolation from his signature hit “Doomsday.” Also, yes, there was an actual accordion. For me, the set encapsulated the best thing about Camp Flog Gnaw: acknowledging the past, enjoying the present, and imagining a(n Odd) future where both can coexist and complement each other. That future is always on the way, thanks to Tyler The Creator.

Philip Cosores

Check out exclusive photos from Camp Flog Gnaw 2024 below.

Daniel Caesar

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Denzel Curry

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Doechii

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Earl Sweatshirt

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Erykah Badu

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Faye Webster

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Kaytranada

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Kenny Mason

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Laila!

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Lithe

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Mustard

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Omar Apollo

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Orion Sun

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Raye

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Sampha

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Syd

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The Marias

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Wisp

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Yves Tumor

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Playboi Carti

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Denzel Curry Is Bringing The ‘Mischievous South’ Around The World On His 2025 Tour

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Denzel Curry has some major plans for 2025: Today (November 18), he announced the Mischievous South Tour.

The shows span from February to July and will be everywhere from Australia to North America to Europe. Curry will also be joined by Kenny Mason, 454, and Clip.

Tickets are set to go on sale on November 22. Find more information on Curry’s website.

Check out Curry’s tour dates below.

Denzel Curry’s 2025 Tour Dates: Mischievous South Tour

02/21/2025 — Brisbane, AUS @ The Tivoli
02/22/2025 — Sydney, AUS @ The Hordern Pavilion
02/27/2025 — Auckland, NZ @ Shed 10
03/01/2025 — Wollongong, AUS @ Yours & Owls
03/02/2025 — Melbourne, AUS @ Palace Foreshore
03/04/2025 — Perth, AUS @ Metro City
03/31/2025 — Phoenix, AZ @ The Van Buren
04/01/2025 — Albuquerque, NM @ El Rey Theater
04/03/2025 — Houston, TX @ Bayou Music Center
04/04/2025 — Austin, TX @ Stubb’s Haller Creek
04/05/2025 — Dallas, TX @ The Factory Deep Ellum
04/08/2025 — Tampa, FL @ Jannus Live
04/10/2025 — Atlanta, GA @ The Eastern
04/11/2025 — Raleigh, NC @ The Ritz
04/12/2025 — Nashville, TN @ The Pinnacle
04/14/2025 — Washington, DC @ The Fillmore Silver Springs
04/16/2025 — New York, NY @ Terminal 5
04/17/2025 — Boston, MA @ Roadrunner
04/18/2025 — Philadelphia, PA @ Franklin Music Hall
04/20/2025 — Toronto, ON @ History
04/21/2025 — Pittsburgh, PA @ Stage Ae
04/22/2025 — Columbus, OH @ Kemba Live!
04/24/2025 — Detroit, MI @ Royal Oak Music Theatre
04/25/2025 — Chicago, IL @ The Salt Shed
04/26/2025 — Minneapolis, MN @ Fillmore Minneapolis
04/28/2025 — Kansas City, MO @ Uptown Theater
04/30/2025 — Salt Lake City, UT @ The Complex
05/02/2025 — Seattle, HA @ Showbox Sodo
05/03/2025 — Vancouver, BC @ Pne Forum
05/04/2025 — Portland, OR @ McMenamins Crystal Ballroom
05/06/2025 — Oakland, CA @ Fox Theater
05/09/2025 — Los Angeles, CA @ Shrine Expo Hall
06/03/2025 — Amsterdam, NL @ Melkheg Max
06/05/2025 — Barcelona, ES @ Primavera Sound
06/09/2025 — Prague, CZ @ Roxy
06/10/2025 — Munich, DE @ Theaterfabrik
06/11/2025 — Berlin, DE @ Huxleys
06/13/2025 — Porto, PT @ Nos Primavera Sound
06/18/2025 — London, UK @ O2 Academy Brixton
06/20/2025 — Glasgow, UK @ O2 Academy Glasgow
06/23/2025 — Dublin, IE @ National Stadium
07/01/2025 — Frankfurt, DE @ 200M
07/02/2025 — Cologne, DE @ Carlswerk Victoria
07/03/2025 — Vienna, AT @ Gasometer
07/07/2025 — Vilnius, LI @ Lukiskes Prison 2.0
07/09/2025 — Hamburg, DE @ Grosse Freiheit

Denzel Curry Drops Complete “KING OF THE MISCHIEVOUS SOUTH” Album

Denzel Curry has been chipping away at the KING OF THE MISCHIEVOUS SOUTH title for quite a while. He dropped a mixtape with the title in 2012, then an album in 2024. It still wasn’t enough. Curry opted to record a few bonus tracks, rearrange the tracklist, and drop the complete version of the album on Friday. It was well worth the wait. KING OF THE MISCHIEVOUS SOUTH encompasses every facet of the Denzel Curry experience. It showcases the rapper’s aggression, his commercial sensibility, and his consistently stellar lyricism at every turn.

It’s not easy to make a lyrical album that knocks, but Denzel Curry does that exact thing here. The rapper pays homage to the Waka Flocka Flame hit “Hard In da Paint” with “STILL IN THE PAINT.” He adds to the blistering instrumental, and trades bars with the likes of LAZER DIM 700 and Bktherula. It’s an obvious tip of the cap to the music Denzel Curry grew up listening to, and he manages to put a fresh spin on it. The other bonus tracks features less notable samples, but they are of equal quality. “ANOTHA LATE NIGHT” is a nocturnal meditation on sex and love. “P.O.P.,” meanwhile, is a smooth riding anthem with additional bars from Sauce Walka and Key Nyata. It might be the best song on here, even if it’s subtleness will lead to it being buried.

Let us know what you think of this brand new album, in the comments section down below. Additionally, stay tuned to HNHH for the latest news and updates from around the music world. We will continue to keep you informed on all of your favorite artists and their upcoming projects.

Read More: Denzel Curry Drops Killer Freestyle During Kai Cenat Live Stream

Denzel Curry Improves On His Previous Version

  1. KOTMS (featuring Kingpin Skinny Pimp)
  2. ULTRA SHXT (featuring Key Nyata)
  3. SEE IT (featuring Maxo Kream)
  4. HOT ONE (featuring TiaCorrine & A$AP Ferg)
  5. ACT A DAMN FOOL (featuring Duke Deuce & Slim Guerilla)
  6. BLACK FLAG FREESTYLE (featuring That Mexican OT)
  7. HEADCRACK INTERLUDE (featuring Kingpin Skinny Pimp)
  8. G’Z UP (featuring 2 Chainz & Mike Dimes)
  9. LUNATIC INTERLUDE (featuring Kingpin Skinny Pimp)
  10. SKED (featuring Kenny Mason & Project Pat)
  11. GOT ME GEEKED
  12. COLE PIMP (featuring Ty Dolla $ign Juicy J)
  13. P.O.P. (featuring Sauce Walka & Key Nyata)
  14. ANOTHER LATE NITE (featuring 454)
  15. WISHLIST (featuring Armani White)
  16. HIT THE FLOOR (featuring Ski Mask the Slump God)
  17. STILL HARD IN THE PAINT (featuring LAZER DIM 700 & Bktherula)
  18. HOODLUMZ (featuring PlayThatBoiZay & A$AP Rocky)
  19. KOTMS II OUTRO (featuring Kingpin Skinny Pimp)

Read More: Kai Cenat Celebrates With Denzel Curry After Hitting 300K Subscribers On Twitch

The post Denzel Curry Drops Complete “KING OF THE MISCHIEVOUS SOUTH” Album appeared first on HotNewHipHop.

Denzel Curry Makes It Rain At The Strip Club In His Debauched ‘Got Me Geeked’ Video

Denzel Curry’s new album King Of The Mischievous South is out now, along with a new music video for “Got Me Geeked.” The clip captures a debauched night at the strip club, where Denzel makes it rain, customers find themselves lost in the sauce, and of course, a fight breaks out over a spilled drink. It’s all in a night’s work for the dedicated dancers, though, who keep twerking through it all, spinning on the pole, and collecting bills from the stage.

King Of The Mischievous South is the album version of the mixtape Denzel released earlier this year, King Of The Mischievous South Vol. 2 (yes, it’s a little confusing, but Zel does what he wants), adding a handful of additional songs with features from alt-rap rising stars like Bktherula and Lazer Dim, as well as Dirty South mainstays like Duke Deuce and Sauce Walka. The project pays homage to the region’s musical lineage and legacy, from Memphis crunk and trap to Houston screw and Florida bounce, all filtered through Denzel’s unique, internet-influenced lens. It also still features fan favorite singles like “Hot One” with Ferg and TiaCorine, “Hoodlumz” with ASAP Rocky and PlayThatBoiZay, and “Set It” with Maxo Kream. You can catch Denzel live this weekend at Camp Flog Gnaw Carnival in LA.

You can watch Denzel Curry’s “Got Me Geeked” video above.

King Of The Mischievous South is out now via Loma Vista Recordings. You can find more info here.

Maxo Kream Shares The Tracklist For ‘Personification,’ Which Features Denzel Curry, Tyler The Creator, And More

maxo kream
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This Friday, November 15, Maxo Kream will release his fourth (or eighth, if you were to ask him) studio album, Personification. The rollout for the album has included the release of his singles “Talkin In Screw” featuring That Mexican OT and “Cracc Era” featuring Tyler The Creator, and a few guest features with the likes of Denzel Curry, with whom Maxo collaborated on “Set It.” Curry also appears on the tracklist for Personification, which Maxo shared this week, and also has appearances from fellow Texan BigXthaPlug, Houston rap legend Z-Ro, rising starts Rob49 and Skilla Baby, and Maxo’s brother, who has renamed himself Josh Kream.

Also, earlier this week, Maxo broke down the philosophy behind his new album with a short film shared to Twitter (which I will never call “X”). In the caption, Maxo writes, “Emekwanem. Trigga Maxo. Maxo C. All me all in one. I’ve had it all and lost it all. Thankful for my angels and I regret nothing. I’m still here dropping albums and my new one comes this Friday.”

https://twitter.com/MAXOKREAM/status/1856097095804998000

You can check out the tracklist for Personification below.

Personification is out on 11/15 via RCA Records. You can find more information here.

01. “Mo Murda”
02. “Fashitsho”
03. “Cracc Era” Feat. Tyler The Creator
04. “Street Fraternity”
05. “Big Hoe Me”
06. “Smokey” Feat. BigXthaPlug
07. “Higher Than Ever” Feat. Rob49 & Skilla Baby
08. “Drizzy Draco”
09. “Walk By Faith” Feat. Josh Kream
10. “Drop Top Impala” Feat. Z-Ro
11. “Bibles & Rifles”
12. “Talkin In Screw” Feat. That Mexican OT
13. “Bang The Bus”
14. “Triggaman” Feat. Denzel Curry

Maxo Kream Reveals Loaded Tracklist For New Album “Personification”

Maxo Kream is in a groove. The rapper has build up a fanbase over the last several years, but it feels as though he’s on the cusp of a commercial breakthrough. The hype has never been more deafening than it has been for his upcoming album, Personification. Part of the reason is that Kream is honing his skills as an artist, and simply getting better. The other part is that the singles for Personification have been stellar across the board. Maxo Kream has been working with some of the most exciting rappers in the game and holding his own. Now, we have the album tracklist.

Maxo Kream is not making the mistake that so many of his genre peers make. Personification is a tight 14 songs, ensuring that it will not overstay its welcome. The solo singles are accounted for here, like the soft and contemplative “Bang the Bus” and the retro-sounding “Big Hoe Me.” It’s the collabs, however, that’ll draw most of the attention. Tyler, The Creator and That Mexican OT shined on “Cracc Era” and “Talkin In Screw,” respectively. Both songs were released ahead of the album, and prove that Maxo Kream can slip into any style and vibe imaginable. The star power continues on the songs that have yet to be released.

Read More: Maxo Kream Responds To Sketch Gay OnlyFans Allegations

Maxo Kream Calls In A-List Features On New Album

 
 
 
 
 
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“Smokey” will see Maxo Kream trade bars with BigXthaPlug, while Rob49 and Skilla Baby drop by for verses on “Higher Than Ever.” Kream also brings in Denzel Curry for what is sure to be a standout cut, “Triggaman.” Z-Ro and Josh Kream round out the guest features on the album, but the producer list on the album is also worth highlighting. Tyler, The Creator lends his musical talents to the aforementioned “Cracc Era.” Hit-Boy, meanwhile, will produce “Smokey.” Other established names like Nick Grand, Beat Butcha and Cubeatz pop up in the credits.

  1. Mo Murda
  2. FASH*TSHO
  3. CRACC ERA (featuring Tyler, The Creator)
  4. Street Fraternity
  5. Big Hoe Me
  6. Smokey (featuring BigXthaPlug)
  7. Higher Than Ever (featuring Rob49 & Skilla Baby)
  8. Drizzy Draco (Part 2)
  9. Walk By Faith (featuring KCG Josh)
  10. Drop Top Impala (featuring Z-Ro)
  11. Bibles & Rifles
  12. Talkin’ In Screw (featuring That Mexican OT)
  13. Bang the Bus
  14. Triggaman (featuring Denzel Curry)

Read More: That Mexican OT, Maxo Kream, & Lil’ Keke Are Battle-Tested On “War Wounds”

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Denzel Curry Drops Killer Freestyle During Kai Cenat Live Stream

Denzel Curry is one of the best rappers of his generation. You’d be hard-pressed to find someone who can drop lyrical gems with as much consistency and/or ease. He’s one of the few who can actually step to the microphone in a freestyle capacity and not embarrass himself. If anything, Denzel Curry’s ability to freestyle has increased his profile in the game. This was definitely the case on November 10. Curry went on Kai Cenat’s 300K subscribers stream and dropped an absolutely jaw-dropping two minute freestyle.

We’re not going to recount Denzel Curry’s entire verse, but one look at Kai Cenat during this masterful display communicates enough. The streamer is absolutely floored by Curry’s wordplay and his ability to string seemingly random words together into something cogent. Curry is clearly having fun doing so, and part of what makes the live stream freestyle so much fun to watch is the way Curry and Kai feed off one another. It’s evident Denzel Curry wants to blow Cenat’s mind, and it’s even more evident that the latter is having the time of his life next to the latter.

Read More: JID Responds To Denzel Curry’s Viral Request To Make A Collab Album

Denzel Curry Also Previewed Unreleased Music

https://twitter.com/nfr_podcast/status/1855846841260122317

Denzel Curry also teased some unreleased music and talked directly to fans. The former wasn’t too surprising, given that he recently announced plans to release King of the Mischievous South (Complete), an expansion upon the the album he dropped in 2024. The album is set for release on November 15. Zel also treated viewers to a motivational speech about achieving dreams. He implored people to put in hard work when it came to pursuing the things they want to do. “Kids have dreams, but adults make them a reality,” he asserted.

Denzel Curry was one of the best rappers to appear on Kai Cenat’s live stream in some time. There has been some controversy surrounding the streamer in recent weeks, especially when it comes to rappers being involved. DDG chopped it up with Kai Cenat while holding his infant son. The infant’s mom, Halle Bailey, proceeded to call DDG out, and then the internet turned on her. She ultimately deleted her social media as a result. Then there was Kodak Black. The Florida rapper was visibly inebriated during his stint on Kai Cenat’s stream. So much so, in fact, that fans criticized Cenat for allowing the guest appearance to play out.

Read More: Asap Ferg & Denzel Curry Are Fending Off A Plethora Of “Demons” On Their Newest Collab

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Asap Ferg & Denzel Curry Are Fending Off A Plethora Of “Demons” On Their Newest Collab

While we are still waiting on one of the A$AP Mob’s marquee members to deliver their album, another one of them fulfilled their promise. This weekend, A$AP Ferg put out his first record in four years with DAROLD, and it’s clear that the New York rapper was finding himself again. The Trap Lord penned a heartfelt and inspiring message to his fans on IG while hyping up the project. He talked about how he rediscovered his passion for painting and found a nice balance for this tape’s themes and messages. “Creating my first album “Trap lord” was an outlet for me being a young black man in the hood facing daily adversities. At one point I even felt like a “lord that was trapped.” Reflection led me to becoming more “Hood pope” the enlightened one but I found balance in just being “Darold.”

It’s pretty impressive how well A$AP Ferg was able to translate that idea into this album, and it shows through tracks like “Demons.” This Denzel Curry collaboration is the perfect embodiment of balance. Overall, it hits hard both in the whip and mentally speaking. The haunting synths and expressive background kid vocals add to the theme about shapeshifting demons that Ferg and Curry are dealing with. For them they come in the form of death, drugs, social media, and familial issues. The ambiguity allows for some clever wordplay, and they take full advantage of it. It’s another homerun from Ferg and Curry and we hope their relationship translates to a collab tape one day.

Read More: Bhad Bhabie’s Mom Confirms Cancer Diagnosis In Scathing Rant

“Demons” – Asap Ferg & Denzel Curry

Quotable Lyrics:

Goin’ through drama created the trauma
That shit that’ll make you a demon
Psychological warfare, digital bots (Uh)
Algorithm on the Instagram (Woo), I’m seein’ nothin’ but thots
Demons that’s scared of the block (Block), I got to carry the Glock (Glock, yeah)
My uncle was a fiend (Fiend), he was married to the rock, huh

Read More: Diddy Is Still Trying To Secure Bail In Alleged Sex Trafficking Case Via New Motion

[Via]

The post Asap Ferg & Denzel Curry Are Fending Off A Plethora Of “Demons” On Their Newest Collab appeared first on HotNewHipHop.

FERG Gives Fans His Most Vulnerable Album Yet With “DAROLD”

FERG is back. The former ASAP Mob standout has been through a lot over the last few years. The most obvious of which is a name change. FERG has dropped from the ASAP from his stage name, which has allowed him to focus more on his craft as an individual. DAROLD, his latest album, is an example of this focus. The rapper manages to take his signature sound and refine it. The attempts to water his singular talents down with mainstream sounds has largely dissipated, and in its place is a batch of fun and off kilter songs.

FERG has generally been viewed as the goofy yin to ASAP Rocky’s yang. The rapper gets a bit more serious on DAROLD, however. Songs like “Casting Spells” and “Pool” are shocking admissions of stress and guilt set to somber, piano-driven beats. “Pool” is an especially poignant song about struggling with the desire to prove oneself as traditionally masculine. It’s a beautiful track, and one that would’ve been inconceivable coming from FERG just five years ago. The production on the album is uniformly stripped down, which proves to be a smart decision. FERG is an expressive emcee, and he sounds best when he has simple beats to anchor his ad-libs. This is evident on the bangers “Allure” and “Thought I Was Dead,” which has nothing to do with the new Tyler, The Creator song of the same name.

Let us know what you think of this brand new album, in the comments section down below. Additionally, stay tuned to HNHH for the latest news and updates from around the music world. We will continue to keep you informed on all of your favorite artists and their upcoming projects.

Read More: Ferg Brings The Energy On His Latest Single “Off White Rozay”

FERG Reflects On His Troubled Life And Career

DAROLD tracklist:

  1. Light Work
  2. Thought I Was Dead
  3. Alive 🙁 (featuring Dapper Don)
  4. Allure (featuring Future & Mike WiLL Made-It)
  5. Demons (featuring Denzel Curry)
  6. Messy
  7. French Tips (featuring Coco Jones)
  8. Dead Homies (featuring BLK PRL & Elmiene)
  9. Casting Spells (featuring Mary J. Blige)
  10. Pool (featuring Elmiene)
  11. Chosen (featuring Mary J. Blige & Shay Rock)
  12. DAROLD

Read More: Jaylen Brown And Ferg Play It Cool On New Single “Just Do It”

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