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Smoke Again Chance the Rapper Sample

2013 mixtape by Run a risk the Rapper

Acid Rap
Chance the rapper acid rap.jpg
Mixtape by

Hazard the Rapper

Released April 30, 2013 (2013-04-30)
Recorded 2012–2013
Studio Soundscape, Force I, Seven, & Classick in Chicago
Genre
  • Hip hop
  • jazz rap
Length
  • 53:52
  • fifty:15 (2019 re-release)[one]
Producer
  • Nate Pull a fast one on
  • Peter Cottontale
  • Cam O'bi
  • Stefan Ponce
  • Ceej for Two-9
  • Nosaj Thing
  • DJ Ozone
  • Ludwig Göransson
  • brandUn DeShay
  • Blended Babies
  • Jake One
Chance the Rapper chronology
10 24-hour interval
(2012)
Acid Rap
(2013)
Surf
(2015)

Acid Rap is the 2nd mixtape by American rapper Chance the Rapper. It was released on April 30, 2013, as a complimentary digital download. In July 2013, the anthology debuted at number 63 on the Billboard Tiptop R&B/Hip-Hop Albums, due to bootleg downloads on iTunes and Amazon not affiliated with the artist.[2] The mixtape has been certified "diamond" on mixtape site Datpiff, for garnering over one,000,000 downloads.[3] It was rereleased on streaming services on June 21, 2019, alongside his 2012 mixtape 10 Twenty-four hours.

Background and production [edit]

Use of LSD [edit]

Chancelor Bennett has admitted that some LSD was used during the production of this mixtape. Bennett has said, "[There] was a lot of acid involved in Acid Rap. I mean, it wasn't too much — I'd say it was about 30 to twoscore pct acid... more than so xxx percent acid."[4] He has also made information technology clear that LSD's involvement was simply a small gene in the making of the mixtape. Bennett has said that, "It wasn't the biggest component at all. It was something that I was really interested in for a long fourth dimension during the making of the tape, only information technology'southward not necessarily a huge gene at all. It was more then just a booster, a bit of fuel. It'southward an allegory to acrid, more than so than just a record virtually acid."[4]

Comprehend art [edit]

The cover art for Acrid Rap was based on a existent picture taken at South by Southwest, an almanac conglomerate of film, interactive media, and music festivals and conferences that take place in mid-March in Austin, Texas. The picture was taken past Brandon Breuax, who also designed the comprehend art for Bennett's previous mixtape 10 Day. [5] The picture show happened by chance, according to Beaux, "I had made these Necktie Dye tank tops before nosotros went to SXSW and I gave them to Chance… In the back of my heed I'm like I hope you wear this."[half dozen]

Production [edit]

Bennett used artists and producers from Chicago who he had likewise worked with before. The acid jazz sound of the mixtape tin can be attributed to the collaboration of artists and producers from multiple genres.[vii] Bennett has said, "People that I worked with on other projects from multiple genres just came together to make a dope tape." Bennett attributes most of the funky or jazz sound to Peter Cottontale saying, "Peter Cottontale is a really sick jazz pianist."[seven]

Bennett describes Acid Rap as more of a music based album and less of a story-based album when compared to his previous mixtape. When asked to compare 10 Twenty-four hours to Acid Rap Bennett said, "Acid Rap is merely a whole different monster; it's me as an developed making great music instead of a kid trying to explain a story. It's less of a conceptual project. It'south withal very cohesive, storytelling-wise, and its ain project. Just information technology'southward more music-based than story-based this time. I'g however telling the story of what it's like coming out of loftier school, not going to college and my experience with LSD. The new music that I started listening to has got a really heavy Acid Jazz base to it. It'south just really good songs; it'southward a collection of dandy songs, which is exactly what #10Day is. But it's more than of merely a really good album than a story."[8]

Release [edit]

Acid Rap was released as a mixtape and not an album. Bennett said, "Ane of my biggest talents is performing live.[8] " This gave him the thought to brand his money by selling merchandise and performing alive. Forth with these reasons, he also chose to release his music as a mixtape because he wanted to create free music. More recently he has also rapped about his hatred for record labels in i of his more recent songs, "No Problem". [9] Bennett being unsigned as well gave him the ability to interact with any artists of his choosing. Collaboration was a principal factor in the production of Acrid Rap and that is another reason why Bennett decided to remain unsigned.

On June 28, 2019, Bennett officially released the mixtape onto streaming services along with his prior mixtape ten Day.[10] The track "Juice" didn't take its sample cleared and is instead replaced by a 30-2nd vox memo by Bennett.

Reception [edit]

Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
Source Rating
AnyDecentMusic? 8.1/10[11]
Metacritic 86/100[12]
Review scores
Source Rating
AllMusic [13]
The A.V. Club A−[xiv]
Issue of Sound [15]
Fact 4/5[16]
MSN Music (Consumer Guide) A−[17]
Pitchfork viii.iv/10[18]
PopMatters 8/10[19]
Rolling Stone [20]
Spin 8/10[21]
XXL 4/5[22]

Acid Rap was met with widespread critical acclaim. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream publications, the mixtape received an average score of 86, based on 21 reviews.[12] Information technology was likewise nominated for Best Mixtape at the 2013 BET Hip Hop Awards.[23] The mixtape was ranked at number ii on Spin 'southward list[24] and number 26 on Rolling Stone 's list of the 50 best albums of 2013, and commencement on their list of best mixtapes of 2013.[25] It was the second most downloaded mixtape on MixtapeMonkey.com.[26] It was also ranked at number 12 on Pitchfork 'due south Top 50 Albums of 2013.[27]

President Barack Obama added the song "Acid Rain" to his summer 2022 playlist.[28]

In 2019, Pitchfork listed it 84 on its top 200 albums of the decade.[29]

Track list [edit]

Credits adjusted from Tidal and the album's vinyl liner notes, and reflect the 2022 re-release.[30]

No. Title Author(southward) Producer(s) Length
1. "Skillful Ass Intro" (featuring BJ the Chicago Kid)
  • Chancelor Bennett
  • Bryan J. Sledge
  • Lilliana Kryzanek
  • Kiara Lanier
  • Peter Wilkins
  • Will Miller
  • J.P. Floyd
  • Cameron Osteen
  • Stefan Ponce
  • Lonnie Lynn
  • Kanye West
  • John Stephens
  • Dewayne Julius Rogers Sr.
  • Chance the Rapper
  • Peter Cottontale
  • Cam O'bi
  • Ponce
3:59
2. "Pusha Homo" (featuring Nate Fox)
  • Bennett
  • Charles Jennings
  • Nate Play tricks
  • Dave Grusin
  • Curtis Mayfield
  • Risk the Rapper
  • Sushi Ceej
ii:19
3. "Paranoia" (featuring Lili K. and Nosaj Affair)
  • Bennett
  • Jason Chung
  • Adventure the Rapper
  • Nosaj Thing
4:35
4. "Cocoa Butter Kisses" (featuring Vic Mensa and Twista)
  • Bennett
  • Victor Mensah
  • Carl Mitchell
  • Osteen
  • Wilkins
  • Run a risk the Rapper
  • Cam O'bi
  • Peter Cottontale
five:07
5. "Juice"
  • Bennett
  • Fob
  • Chance the Rapper
  • Fox
3:35
half-dozen. "Lost" (featuring Noname)
  • Bennett
  • Fatimah Warner
  • Play tricks
  • Wilkins
  • Willie Hutch
  • Risk the Rapper
  • Fox
3:04
seven. "Everybody'southward Something" (featuring Saba and BJ the Chicago Kid)
  • Bennett
  • DJ O-Zone
  • Chuck Mangione
  • Roger Kay Karshner
  • James Yancey
  • Titus Glover
  • Chance the Rapper
  • DJ O-Zone
4:36
8. "Interlude (That's Dear)"
  • Bennett
  • Ludwig Göransson
  • Risk the Rapper
  • Göransson
ii:29
9. "Favorite Song" (featuring Kittenish Gambino)
  • Bennett
  • Flim-flam
  • Donald Glover II
  • Willie Clarke
  • Clarence Reid
  • Chance the Rapper
  • Fox
3:05
x. "NaNa" (featuring Activeness Bronson)
  • Bennett
  • Brandon Rudolph
  • Ariyan Arslani
  • Freddie Hubbard
  • Chance the Rapper
  • Brandun DeShay
3:20
xi. "Smoke Again" (featuring Ab-Soul)
  • Bennett
  • Herbert Stevens IV
  • Richard Neville Parry
  • Jonathan Keller
  • Chance the Rapper
  • Blended Babies
4:32
12. "Acid Rain"
  • Bennett
  • Jacob Dutton
  • Chance the Rapper
  • Jake One
3:36
13. "Chain Smoker"
  • Bennett
  • Play a joke on
  • Felix Pappalardi
  • John Ventura
  • Leslie Weinstein
  • Norman Landsberg
  • Chance the Rapper
  • Trick
3:30
fourteen. "Everything's Good (Good Donkey Outro)"
  • Bennett
  • Osteen
  • Chance the Rapper
  • Cam O'bi
5:33
Total length: 53:fifty

Notes

  • "Paranoia" was included equally a hidden rails following "Pusha Homo" for the original mixtape release, with Nosaj Matter'due south contributions receiving no credit. The twenty eight seconds of silence that separated the two tracks is omitted entirely on the streaming and vinyl releases.
  • "Juice" is replaced by a 30-second voice memo for the streaming re-release and is omitted entirely on the vinyl release.

Samples

  • "Adept Donkey Intro" contains a sample of "Intro", written by Kanye West; and embodies portions of "True-blue", written by Lonnie Lynn, John Stephens, Dewayne Julius Rogers Sr. and Due west.
  • "Pusha Man" contains a sample and embodies portions of "Modaji", performed and written by Dave Grusin; and contains an interpolation of "Pusherman", written past Curtis Mayfield.
  • "Lost" contains a sample and embodies portions of "Brother's Gonna Work It Out", performed and written by Willie Hutch.
  • "Everybody's Something" contains an interpolation of "Diana in the Autumn Wind", written by Roger Kay Karshner and Chuck Mangione; and contains a sample and embodies portions of "Fall in Love", performed by Slum Hamlet and written by James Yancey, R.L. Altman and Titus Glover.
  • "Favorite Song" contains samples and embodies portions of "Clean Up Woman", performed by Betty Wright and written past Willie Clarke and Clarence Reid.
  • "NaNa" contains samples from "Carmine Dirt", written by Freddie Hubbard and performed past Jack Wilkins.
  • "Chain Smoker" contains samples from "Long Red (Live)", written by Felix Pappalardi, John Ventura, Leslie Weinstein and Norman Landsberg.

Product personnel [edit]

  • Brandon Breaux — artwork
  • OJ Hays — "Acid Rap" typeface
  • Elton "L10mixedit" Chueng — engineering, mixing, mastering
  • Na'el Shehade — Engineer
  • Alex "PapiBeatz" Baez — engineering science
  • Andrew Barber – Founder of Fake Shore Drive
  • Su$h! Ceej — Member of Two-9, producer ("Pusha Man")
  • Peter CottonTale — Music Managing director, Producer ("Good Ass Intro," "Cocoa Butter Kisses")
  • brandUn DeShay (Ace Hashimoto) — Producer ("NaNa")
  • J.P. Floyd — Trombonist, featured artist ("Adept Ass Intro")
  • Nate Fox — Member of the Social Experiment, featured artist ("Pusha Man"), producer ("Juice," "Lost," "Favorite Song," "Concatenation Smoker")
  • Alex Fruchter — Founder of Closed Sessions
  • Rich Gains – Member of Blended Babies, producer ("Fume Once more")
  • Ludwig Göransson – Producer ("Interlude [That's Love]")
  • JP – Member of Blended Babies, producer ("Smoke Once more")
  • Kiara Lanier — Singer, featured artist ("Good Ass Intro")
  • Lili K — Vocalizer, featured creative person ("Good Donkey Intro," "Pusha Man")
  • Mike Kolar — Engineer, possessor of Soundscape Studios, founder of Closed Sessions
  • Vic Mensa — Rapper, featured creative person ("Cocoa Butter Kisses")
  • Cam O'bi – Producer ("Good Ass Intro," "Cocoa Butter Kisses," "Everything's Good [Good Ass Outro]")
  • Stefan Ponce – Producer ("Expert Ass Intro")
  • Nico Segal – Trumpeter, member of the Social Experiment
  • Twista — Rapper, featured creative person ("Cocoa Butter Kisses")
  • Austin Vesely – Director ("Juice," "Everybody'due south Something," "NaNa")

Charts [edit]

References [edit]

  1. ^ "Acid Rap by Chance the Rapper on Apple Music". Music.apple.com. Retrieved 2020-04-08 .
  2. ^ "Gamble the Rapper, with 'Acid Rap' Mixtape, Meets the Legal Blackness Pigsty Around Unsigned Artists (From the Magazine)". Billboard. 2013-08-14. Retrieved 2013-10-13 .
  3. ^ "Datpiff Acid Rap". Datpiff. 2014. Retrieved 2015-08-21 .
  4. ^ a b Alexis, Nadeska. "Chance The Rapper: In that location Was 'A Lot Of Acid Involved In Acid Rap'". MTV News . Retrieved 2019-03-17 .
  5. ^ "The Artist Responsible For Chance The Rapper's Meme-Inspired Abstract Art". NPR.org . Retrieved 2019-03-xi .
  6. ^ "Here's the Original Photo That Inspired Chance the Rapper's 'Acrid Rap' Embrace". Genius . Retrieved 2019-03-11 .
  7. ^ a b BackRoomsBasements (2013-04-29), Adventure The Rapper talks Acid Rap, SXSW, Violence in Chicago + more, archived from the original on 2021-12-xv, retrieved 2019-03-17
  8. ^ a b "Take chances The Rapper Talks The Chicago Scene & His "Acid Rap" Mixtape". HipHopDX. 2013-05-03. Retrieved 2019-03-17 .
  9. ^ TR (2016-05-16), Chance The Rapper - No Problem (feat. Lil Wayne 2 Chainz) Explicit, archived from the original on 2021-12-15, retrieved 2019-03-17
  10. ^ "Take a chance the Rapper'due south Mixtapes Are Now Streaming, Coming to Vinyl". Retrieved 2019-06-28 .
  11. ^ "Acid Rap by Risk The Rapper reviews". AnyDecentMusic?. Retrieved July 12, 2019.
  12. ^ a b "Reviews for Acid Rap by Chance the Rapper". Metacritic. Retrieved October thirteen, 2013.
  13. ^ Thomas, Fred (April 30, 2013). "Acid Rap - Hazard the Rapper | Songs, Reviews, Credits". AllMusic . Retrieved February 16, 2022.
  14. ^ Rytlewski, Evan (May 14, 2013). "Chance The Rapper: Acid Rap". The A.Five. Club . Retrieved October 13, 2013.
  15. ^ Kivel, Adam (May viii, 2013). "Album Review: Chance The Rapper – Acid Rap". Result of Sound. Archived from the original on June three, 2013. Retrieved October 13, 2013.
  16. ^ Kalev, Maya (May 14, 2013). "Acid Rap". Fact. Archived from the original on April 9, 2016. Retrieved May 5, 2019.
  17. ^ Christgau, Robert (June 2013). "Chance the Rapper/Homeboy Sandman". MSN Music . Retrieved June 27, 2016.
  18. ^ Weiss, Jeff (May seven, 2013). "Chance the Rapper: Acrid Rap". Pitchfork . Retrieved October 13, 2013.
  19. ^ Tryneski, John K. (June xx, 2013). "Chance the Rapper: Acrid Rap". PopMatters. Archived from the original on August 22, 2013. Retrieved June 27, 2016.
  20. ^ Rosen, Jody (May 8, 2013). "Acid Rap". Rolling Stone . Retrieved Oct 13, 2013.
  21. ^ Soderberg, Brandon (May ii, 2013). "Take a chance the Rapper, 'Acid Rap' (Cocky-Released)". Spin . Retrieved Oct 13, 2013.
  22. ^ C. Grand., Emmanuel (May 13, 2013). "Mixtape Review: Adventure the Rapper, Acid Rap". XXL. Archived from the original on June 7, 2013. Retrieved October 13, 2013.
  23. ^ "Here Are The BET Award Nominees". Circuitous. 2013-08-22. Retrieved 2013-10-13 .
  24. ^ "SPIN'southward 50 Best Album'south of 2013".
  25. ^ "50 Best Albums of 2013". Rolling Stone. Dec 2, 2013.
  26. ^ "MixtapeMonkey Charts".
  27. ^ "The Elevation fifty Albums of 2013". Pitchfork.
  28. ^ Obama, President (2016-08-11). "Been waiting to driblet this: summertime playlist, the encore. What's everybody listening to?pic.twitter.com/mqh1YVrycj". @POTUS44 . Retrieved 2019-03-eleven .
  29. ^ "The 200 Best Albums of the 2010s". Pitchfork. 2019-ten-08. Retrieved 2021-08-28 .
  30. ^ "Acid Rap / Run a risk the Rapper – TIDAL". Tidal. Retrieved 28 June 2019.
  31. ^ "Chance the Rapper Chart History (Heatseekers Albums)". Billboard. Retrieved May 24, 2016.
  32. ^ "Chance the Rapper Nautical chart History (Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums)". Billboard. Retrieved May 24, 2016.
  33. ^ "Billbord Canadian Albums". FYIMusicNews . Retrieved July 9, 2019.
  34. ^ "Gamble the Rapper Chart History (Billboard 200)". Billboard. Retrieved July 9, 2019.
  35. ^ "Chance the Rapper Chart History (Acme R&B/Hip-Hop Albums)". Billboard. Retrieved July 9, 2019.

External links [edit]

  • Official Acid Rap download and stream

fultonthwithis.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acid_Rap

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