Official GOLDLINK thread

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His project: The God Complex:

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Download: http://www.goo.gl/Kvu1cp

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Pitchfork gave him a 7.9 :ehh:

GoldLink is a 20-year-old rapper with a name that recalls a securities firm (he used be to be Gold Link James, but dropped the surname to avoid any Trinidad James comparisons) and a sound all his own. Brightly colored, hyper, and upbeat, the Virginia native's music draws openly from genres that street rap usually has no time for: bachata, go-go, classic house. When Diddy's Revolt.TV asked him to describe his style, he responded thoughtfully: "Rick James meets Justin Timberlake (*NSYNC days) with Backstreet Boys and a little D12 and Tupac." GoldLink is a unique creature in rap right now and he knows it.

He doesn't have much music to his name yet—The God Complex, his debut mixtape, is only 26 minutes and nine tracks long. Prior to that, there were six songs on his Soundcloud. But his sound is distinct and unusual enough to have snagged the attention of local tastemakers: Peter Parker, nighttime DJ at D.C. urban radio station WPGC, named him one of the DMV's artists to watch last year, and several of those early songs of his have surpassed 100k plays on Soundcloud. He's struck a nerve, even if no one knows exactly where that nerve is just yet.

There is a lot of information to parse on The God Complex, all of it happening at once. The BPMs are nearly twice as fast as current street rap allows, and glitzy house synths flutter everywhere. Louie Lastic, one of GoldLink's main collaborators and an architect of the sound that they've dubbed "Future Bounce", handles most of the production here; the resulting sound is wet and lubricious—there is a lot of audible licking and jiggling, both in the lyrics and the music. The Ronnie Foster sample behind A Tribe Called Quest's "Electric Relaxation" peeks out furtively behind strobe lights and '90s R&B keyboards on "Bedtime Story". A slowed-down playback of Britney Spears' "Toxic" surfaces near the end of "How It's Done". You can imagine Azealia Banks wishing she'd corralled production from this crew.

And yet, GoldLink tramples through the music, his rhymes as hard as a shoulder check. This is one of the most fascinating pieces of GoldLink's sound—he skips through the minefield separating rap's ideas of "hard" and "soft". On "Bedtime Story", he calls out wearers of tight jeans and waves box-cutters at us. On "Hip-Hop (Interlude)" he reminisces about "masturbating to them porno flicks my brother gave me" and "popping guns" at age 11. His voice is high, hyper, and excitable, no one's idea of a tough-guy stereotype, but he keeps one foot firmly planted in street rap and the other in the club, tangling all the music's reference points and intentions like kite strings. The surfaces of his music are slick and slippery, and gaining purchase on what he's doing is like trying to hug a dolphin.

This confusion, and the endorphins it loosens, is presumably why people have been losing their shyt about GoldLink. His music doesn't just make you hold two opposing ideas in your mind--it opens twelve tabs in one browser window. On "Planet Paradise", he raps in triple-time, allowing a single pinhole gulp of air to open between "everyday we pray to-" and "God" in the exact same place every time. His mind moves at a thousand miles an hour, as does the music. Nine tracks is more than enough to digest for now.
 

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GoldLink Might Be the Wildest DMV Rapper Since Wale: “I could start a revolution” | The FADER

GoldLink Might Be the Wildest DMV Rapper Since Wale: “I could start a revolution”

STORY BY: DUNCAN COOPER
GoldLink-interview.jpg





INTERVIEW WITH GOLDLINK, THE FACELESS, DC-BORN PROPRIETOR OF “FUTURE BOUNCE”






GoldLink is a rapper who immediately seems to have carved his own lane—”future bounce” as he somewhat imprecisely calls it, “dream rap” as I even more poorly first conceived it. Basically he’s rapping over pittering dance beats that you can’t always dance to. Born in DC and now based in Virginia, he’s got a weirdness that could make him the biggest DMV rapper since Wale; at the very least, he shares a refreshing left-field newcomer’s confidence to experiment. Download his debut album, The God Complex, and below, read what he has to say about discovering club music, linking up with Soulection and the excitement of not knowing what might happen next.



Where exactly are you from? I was born in DC. I was born in Columbia Hospital, not that that matters… I ended up in Maryland. My apartment burned down and then I lived in Cheverly. My mother wanted better for us, so we ended up moving to Virginia, then my mom got divorced, but I stayed there.

Where are you living now? A few places. Woodbridge is one. Alexandria. It’s aight. There’s not a lot of minorities, so everything’s kinda awkward, but it’s cool. We manage. We stay on the west side, it’s calm and quiet.

I saw you said used to go to Busboys and Poets “on the very low.” What were you like as a teenager? At 17, I was wild. I was really wild. I was really smart for my age, but I thought I knew everything. I was really hardheaded, but I couldn’t control my temper. I was really smart-mouthed. I was the opposite of everything I am now. I was super loud and annoying. I was 17, you know what I’m saying?

Were you recording and putting out music at that time? Not at 17, no. I was just chilling.

That was a few years before Wale started blowing up, and Baltimore Club was having a big moment too. Did you feel that excitement? Even though I was young, I remember it. Wale was cool. You know how you had that friend circle and out of that circle one guy gets everybody hip? I was that kid. So I was like, yo, Wale, you head 100 Miles of Running? I got hip to Baltimore Club music because I took somebody’s CD out of their car and it was a blank CD with nothing on it. I was like, ‘What is all this?’ He was like, ‘Oh, it’s Baltimore club music, all this red light district music.’ I remember I caught that riff. I was young but I was old enough to understand that there was something in the DMV going on.


When you came out, your sound was already really solid. Did that take time? Were you fukking around over Zaytoven beats a few years ago? No, that was the sound. I never crossed over like, trap is cool, I’m going to do this. This is what I started with. I heard Ta-Ku beat two years ago and I thought it was cooler than all the bullshyt that was hot. I didn’t care what the fukk was hot. I thought that was cool. I didn’t get it when I was 18 at all, but I just rode with it. That’s why it’s so natural over the beats. I wrote to those beats to challenge myself, not knowing that this is the route I was going to take. I was like, ‘Man, this is weird. I know someone wouldn’t rap over this so I’m going to challenge myself.’ So I just did. I was never really influenced by anybody.

How did you link with the Soulection team? I know you’ve worked with Sango. A friend of ours introduced us through email. We ended up talking and I ended up sending him tracks that I did over previous beats to see if he liked them. He ended up loving them and became a fan and he started sending me beats. From there we built a friendship. We got each others numbers and started talking and we both did Broccoli City Festival. That was two weeks ago and we kicked it there and we kicked it the whole day. It was all through email at first, though.

There’s more in the pipeline coming with him? Yeah, maybe.

I was going to ask you about Broccoli City—Cam’ron and Kelela performed, and you’re kind of like midway between them, to me. I met Kelela. Cam’ron was really protected, so he was kind of in and out. He did his job. But the scene was cool. DMV is such a soul, neo-black city. So people accepted both. There were a lot of people there who liked soul and they liked Kelela and were singing along, and there was a lot of people from the hood because it was in Southeast, and Southeast is like “Oh it’s Cam’ron!”

How do you deal with the not-showing-your-face thing at shows? I did UStreet with a mask at the beginning and then I took it off. I guess it’s like a suspense thing, but I’m really into the music and not into the imaging and I don’t necessarily think we should put an image to the music. I’d rather just make music, and people like that. For performing it’s different, because you actually get to look people in the face—these people that have been following you for months or maybe a few days and you get to look at them. It’s really intimate. I don’t mind showing my face to people because they get to deserve it.

It’s funny that you mention not putting an image to music, because your videos are so striking. The beats are on a spacey, electronic thing, but the videos have a very real street feel. Is that an important tension, for you? I could see why you could say it’s tension, but I don’t think it is. I make it work. Even though the beats are really outlandish and wild, that bounce is really familiar. It’s really different, but it’s the same trap bounce, the same street bounce, the same hip-hop ruggedness, but it’s really new it’s really futuristic sounding. That’s why I feel like people can actually accept it. It’s at a fine line where it’s different, but it’s not so new that it’s annoying or trying too hard. I made it mesh and meet in the middle. Tasteful.


Have labels been reaching out? Is it at that point? I guess it’s at that point. I like what I’m doing and I think it can grow naturally because it’s been growing naturally to this point. I want to see how far it can go naturally. If it makes a complete 100 percent sense, then maybe I’ll consider a label, but right now I’m content with what I’m doing.

What most excites you about what you’re doing right now? Knowing that I don’t know where it’s going to go or how big it could possibly be. The unknown is really exciting. This could be big! It could be on the radio, and it could change what people think. It could change the way the music goes. It could change the BPM. Knowing that I don’t know that makes me excited. Knowing that kids could take this route and add something to it is cool. Knowing that I could start something and start a revolution is exciting. That’s the coolest part about what I’m doing. In my city there’s a lot of hate, but I don’t get any of it at all. I get so much love it almost doesn’t make any sense. Kids are changing up the music and starting to let that image shyt go. They’re starting to make better music and clique up more. This is the best era for the DMV.

What else do you want people to know? I want fans to be like, ‘Damn, that nikka tight.’



Read more:GoldLink Might Be the Wildest DMV Rapper Since Wale: “I could start a revolution” | The FADER
 

blizzard man

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Woodbridge further than Waldorf :hubie:

only cuz of that ridiculous woodbridge traffic, but they about the same distance south from DC

regardless, now that i live in dc proper, i really aint tryna go to woodbridge OR waldof unless ima be there for a whole day or more :picard:
 

KeysT

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only cuz of that ridiculous woodbridge traffic, but they about the same distance south from DC

regardless, now that i live in dc proper, i really aint tryna go to woodbridge OR waldof unless ima be there for a whole day or more :picard:
Gotta pack for a whole weekend at bernies and ish.:russ:
 

zoo

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I fukks with that Crew joint w/ Teddy Walton
 
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