Review: Tyler, the Creator, Goblin - Slant Magazine (2024)

Review: Tyler, the Creator, Goblin - Slant Magazine (1)As the mouthpiece and figurehead of Odd Future Wolf Gang Kill Them All, the teenage hip-hop outfit that’s courted controversy and well-nigh governed the blogosphere for the better part of two years, Tyler, the Creator is facing down an especially large degree of expectation surrounding his first major-label release. His self-released and entirely self-produced 2009 album, Bastard, made waves for its shock value but also boasted some genuinely inspired moments that went some way toward vindicating his crew’s cult following. His new album, Goblin, is a much larger platform for Tyler’s polemical rants, and it will likely be the mainstream’s first taste of the OFWGKTA sound.

Goblin is just as disturbed and twisted as Tyler’s debut. And, moreover, it’s every bit as outrageously brilliant. If you can manage to stomach his debauched musings (the album is marinated in misogyny and bigotry), it’s impossible not to be awestruck by Goblin. The material visits some truly dark and troubled places, and Tyler’s prose is eerily mesmerizing from start to finish.

As with Bastard, Goblin is framed by exchanges of dialogue between Tyler and his fictional therapist, whom Tyler voices himself. This façade works to give the album gravity and context, but one gets the impression that there’s more than meets the eye with this illusory relationship. In Goblin’s more intimate moments, the 20-year-old prodigy wears his heart on his sleeve and exorcises his demons with unnerving candor. His estranged father is once again the focal point of his most personal tirades: On the title track, he bellows, “Competition missing like that nigg*r my mom f*cked/He still hasn’t called me yet…but that’s a whole f*cking different argument,” while on “Nightmare” he sobs, “I’m six-five, about to f*cking cry about another guy.” Tyler also discusses the impact of his fast track to superstardom, bemoaning the vacuous nature of life as a celebrity and mourning the loss of his youth. “Nightmare” is arguably Goblin’s most honest stream-of-consciousness rant, where a four-minute frenzy against his newfound fame is topped off with “I ain’t even killed myself yet, and I already want my life back.”

Tyler’s most reprehensible lines are reserved for the more insouciant tracks, usually when he’s detached from the subject matter. “Radicals” stands out for its extreme chorus, in which the rapper exclaims, “Kill people, burn sh*t, f*ck school,” in what must surely rank among music’s most provocative refrains of all time. And when impersonating Dracula in “Transylvania,” Tyler barks a flurry of misogynistic lines that are sure to shock. Many of these lyrics border on unlistenable, even for someone who reveres Kool Keith’s horrorcore landmark Dr. Octagonecologyst as one of his favorite hip-hop records, and all of them are categorically unprintable.

In the two years since Bastard, Tyler’s beats have come a long way. Despite sticking to the lo-fi sound that permeated his debut, Goblin boasts more refined musicianship. Lead single “Yonkers” is perhaps the foremost case in point, fusing fidgety synths and sonorous bass drones with snippets of sprightly matinee piano. Those choppy synths are seemingly tailor-made for fostering the necessary measures of tension and menace, so Tyler sees fit to exploit them frequently throughout songs like “Golden,” “Sandwitches,” and especially “Tron Cat.”

The instrumental “AU79” provides Goblin’s biggest surprise—which feels strange somehow, given that this is an album where the shocking and shameful hides behind every corner. Here, Tyler the twisted raconteur clocks out and makes way for a dreamy interlude that sounds simultaneously lost in space and 20,000 leagues under the sea. It’s a wonderful change of pace before Tyler resumes his stance behind the microphone and launches his chilling and spiteful curtain call.

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Although the album will no doubt polarize listeners, it also effortlessly appeases those who have already made up their mind about Tyler and Odd Future at large. The material is as disturbing as detractors might expect, and then some, while Tyler’s snappy lexicon and accomplished musicianship will only further nourish the hype surrounding him. Goblin could well be one of the decade’s most significant releases: On one hand, it endorses wanton violence and cavalierly advocates rape with such feverish enthusiasm that there will surely be a furious backlash from the general public, while on the other, it acts as the apogee of a genuinely wonderful success story that breathes independence back into grass-roots hip-hop. However history decides to assess it, there’s no denying that this co*cktail of self-loathing hysteria and bilious vitriol will get chins wagging and fingers pointing. Queerly irresistible in the same way one idly stares at road kill, Goblin is a masterpiece for those capable of stomaching it.

Score:

Label: XL Release Date: May 10, 2011 Buy: Amazon

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Review: Tyler, the Creator, Goblin - Slant Magazine (2024)

FAQs

Review: Tyler, the Creator, Goblin - Slant Magazine? ›

His new album, Goblin, is a much larger platform for Tyler's polemical rants, and it will likely be the mainstream's first taste of the OFWGKTA sound. Goblin is just as disturbed and twisted as Tyler's debut. And, moreover, it's every bit as outrageously brilliant.

What is the meaning of the Goblin album? ›

It's about suicide, abandonment issues and dealing with internal rage. The album takes place over 15 songs and has a concept of Tyler talking to a fictional therapist with Goblin being their second “session.” His first album B*****d was their first session and upcoming album Wolf being their third and final one.

How old was Tyler the Creator when he dropped Goblin? ›

The original cover for Goblin features a photograph of Buffalo Bill. An American cowboy and showman, from 1865, when he was nineteen years old. Tyler was also nineteen when he released Goblin. However, this connection isn't coincidental.

What genre is Goblin Tyler the Creator? ›

Is Tyler proud of Goblin? ›

Tyler, The Creator is another artist who isn't proud of all his old material. In a new interview with GQ Style, Tyler reflected on his musical catalog, saying that only “some of it has aged well.” In particular, he pointed to his 2011 album Goblin—widely considered his breakout project—as lacking quality in hindsight.

What are all of Tyler, the Creator's alter egos? ›

Rest in peace to Ace, Wolf Haley, Chur Bum, Flower Boy, IGOR and Tyler Baudelaire who have all been found dead on March 29, 2023, allegedly at the hands of the cold-blooded murderer Tyler, The Creator.

Who is the guy on Tyler's Goblin album cover? ›

Also in March, the album cover was posted online featuring a colored picture of Buffalo Bill when he was 19, and it was featured as a backdrop for Tyler's MTV performance.

How old was Tyler when he turned? ›

Tyler Lockwood Was 17 to 18 Years Old

Tyler's aggression was an unfortunate symptom of his werewolf gene, which became better when he transformed with the full moon.

How old was Tyler when he released Cherry Bomb? ›

On “Cherry Bomb,” Tyler has done a complete 180. At 24 years old, his production — which he does heavily on this album, much like his past two — has finally matured. The aforementioned influences make this album the most diverse hip-hop record of 2015 from a production point of view.

What is the deep voice in Goblin? ›

TC. This character is better known as Tyler's psychiatrist, who can be signified through his deep, ominous tone of voice.

How old was Tyler when he made Wolf? ›

“Wolf” is the third album from Tyler, the Creator, and it shows him, at 22, trying to figure out exactly which types of youth he still wants to hold onto. It's not just one.

Is Goblin a prog rock? ›

Goblin (also Back to the Goblin, New Goblin, Goblin Rebirth, the Goblin Keys, the Goblins and Claudio Simonetti's Goblin) is an Italian progressive rock band known for their film scores.

What songs would Tyler keep on Goblin? ›

He stated that, in hindsight, he'd only keep seven tracks from the album: "Yonkers", "She", "Nightmare", "Tron Cat", "Fish", "Analog" and "AU79".

Why does Tyler, the Creator go by Tyler Baudelaire? ›

Tyler the Creator says that his “Tyler Baudelaire” persona was inspired by the Baudelaire family in the film 'Lemony Snicket's: A Series of Unfortunate Events' He explained they have a regal feel and loves their dynamic: “They're orphans but they still get sht done.”

What type of person is Tyler, the Creator? ›

Which Enneagram Type is Tyler, the Creator? After analyzing Tyler, the Creator's personality, it can be said that he falls under the Enneagram Type 7: The Enthusiast. As a Type 7, he seems to be adventurous, spontaneous, and always seeking new experiences.

Who is the little boy in Goblin? ›

Yoo Deok Hwa is the grandson of Yoo Shin Woo and the only grandson of the Yoo family, who have been tasked with taking care of the Goblin (Kim Shin) for centuries. He is named after a famous Hong Kong actor [Andy Lau] by the Goblin(Kim Shin) because the Goblin was obsessed with the actor in 1992, when he was born.

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