^ 'Mac Miller – Kickin' Incredibly Dope Shit (Intro)'.'Mac Miller 'K.I.D.S.' Mixtape Download'. ^ 'Interview with Benjy Grinberg, president of Rostrum Records and A&R and manager for Wiz Khalifa, Mac Miller'.'Mac Miller heading on 'Incredibly Dope' tour'. 'Mac Miller Settles $10 Million Lord Finesse Lawsuit'. ^ a b 'Mac Miller – Kool Aid & Frozen Pizza'.^ a b 'Mac Miller – Nikes On My Feet'.'Two new Mac Miller tracks released on deluxe digital version of 'K.I.D.S. ^ a b c Brereton, Greta (August 13, 2020).'Mac Miller's 2010 Mixtape 'K.I.D.S.' Is Now Available on Streaming Services'. From the title to the Good Will Hunting sample, to the pureness of the track, Soulmate is one of Mac Miller’s most refined loved songs, perhaps to the point of being a drop too pristine. ^ Cowen, Trace William (April 29, 2020).What happened?': Larry Clark's 1995 'Kids' turns 20'. The best things GO:OD AM does is combine elements of the humourous and fun-loving kid on Blue Slide Park and the hip hop aficionado on Watching Movies with the. 'Mac Miller Talks Sea Turtles, His New Album And Rapping About Movies'. ^ a b 'K.I.D.S Mixtape by Mac Miller'.
'Traffic in the Sky' and 'La La La La' are omitted from commercial releases on streaming services and vinyl.Mac Miller's odds keep getting better with each new leak, and Best Day Ever will undoubtedly. Cop Best Day Ever, the latest mixtape from Mac Miller, which dropped on Friday, March 11th, 2011.SoundCloud – Mac Miller / Larry Fisherman. If you’re a fan of Mac Miller’s music, check out our list of Lil Wayne albums and mixtapes, our list of awesome songs to smoke to, and our list of the sickest radio rap freestyles.For the new and improved Mac Miller we can only hope that his newfound clarity and moment in the sun will last a long time. The most surprising, yet appropriate, guest appearance comes from Internet prophet Lil' B on "Time Flies." While Miller reflects on his experiences in the verses, the Based God waxes philosophic on the song's choruses, pondering time and our place in it: "As we keep livin' and keep bein' positive, all we can do is hold on to these memories." He's right: time moves forward and moments are fleeting. Miller matches the range well, whether it's crooning in his nasal Pittsburgh drawl on "ROS" or nimbly twisting words on "Cut The Check." Not to be outdone on the aforementioned song, guest Chief Keef delivers clever one-liners like "I was posted with the hammer, y'all was telling' po-lice / now I wrestle with the racks, b****, I'm Mick Foley." Longtime Mac Miller collaborators ID Labs contribute the bulk of the album's diverse production, providing lush soul-stirring organs and a rich bass line on "Brand Name," bombastic percussion on "When In Rome" and the ethereal synths of the album's closing cut "Festival," which features Little Dragon. With a balanced new perspective comes a well-balanced variety of sounds. On GO:OD AM, he's a young man who ruminates on life and its contradictions ("Perfect Circle/ God Speed") but is finally comfortable enough to revel in his success instead of lamenting its drawbacks ("100 Grandkids"). He's not the dark, drug-addled Mac Miller of his 2014 mixtape Faces, but he's also not the wide-eyed kid who made the platinum hit " Donald Trump" anymore. The album starts off with the dreamy calm of the Tyler, The Creator-produced "Doors." Over sleepy strings and playful piano Miller sings instead of raps: "Ain't sayin' that I'm sober, I'm just in a better place." And throughout the album it seems true. Now, emerging from a dark period-a long night if you will-he presents GO:OD AM (a stylized play on the greeting "good morning"), his major label debut, and evidence that he has entered the next phase in his life and career. In that time he's learned that the byproducts of fortune and fame at a young age can be depression and addiction. In just a few years the 23-year-old rapper from Pittsburgh has gone from teenage Internet sensation to top-selling-albeit critically-maligned-indie artist to accepted and respected oddity.