donald glover Archives - SCAD Radio https://scadradio.org/tag/donald-glover/ More than Music Wed, 23 Sep 2020 17:43:10 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.3 https://scadradio.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/cropped-15844751_10157973088380282_1722021642859959004_o-32x32.png donald glover Archives - SCAD Radio https://scadradio.org/tag/donald-glover/ 32 32 The Art of Simplicity: A Look Into Childish Gambino’s “3.15.20” https://scadradio.org/2020/09/23/the-art-of-simplicity-a-look-into-childish-gambinos-3-15-20/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=the-art-of-simplicity-a-look-into-childish-gambinos-3-15-20&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=the-art-of-simplicity-a-look-into-childish-gambinos-3-15-20 Wed, 23 Sep 2020 17:43:06 +0000 https://scadradio.org/?p=5844 This article was written during the spring quarter when SCAD Radio wasn’t able to post regularly. Donald Glover, the artist formally known as Childish Gambino, has dropped a new album—and it’s beautifully minimalist. On March 15, 2020, the modern renaissance man teased the album with a loop on the website donaldgloverpresents.com, only to take down […]

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This article was written during the spring quarter when SCAD Radio wasn’t able to post regularly.

Donald Glover, the artist formally known as Childish Gambino, has dropped a new album—and it’s beautifully minimalist.

On March 15, 2020, the modern renaissance man teased the album with a loop on the website donaldgloverpresents.com, only to take down the music 12 hours later. A week later, the album was released in full to streaming services worldwide under the name 3.15.20

At first look, the album might seem amateur—or even bootleg—in presentation. The cover is a simple white square, lacking even an artist accreditation or title, making it officially even more plain than the cover of The Beatles’ eponymous white album. All but two of the tracks are unnamed (“Algorhythm” and “Time”), instead being listed simply as their timestamp (“0.00” is the first, “24.19”is 24 minutes and 19 seconds in, and so on). And the title is, of course, just the date the album was first teased, leading many to identify it rather as Donald Glover Presents

The music, however, is anything but boring. Past the nondescript façade of its packaging, 3.15.20 offers 12 emotionally charged and passionate tracks showing off Glover’s impressive range. Stylistically, this album could be adequately described as a sequel to his 2016 funk powerhouse “Awaken, My Love!”, overall focusing more on bass, synth, and soothing vocals than the harder-hitting hip-hop treatment of Camp and Because The Internet. 

Though the album is much more powerful than the sum of its parts, a few tracks deserve individual mention. The second track on the album, “Algorhythm”, features heavily synthesized beats and stylistic use of voice modulation that makes it feel ripped right out of “II. Earth: The Oldest Computer (The Last Night)”. “12.38”, or “Psilocybin” (as I would name it), includes phenomenal appearances from fellow Atlanta native 21 Savage, R&B artist Kadhja Bonet, and vocalist Atia “Ink” Boggs. Savage’s verse touches on police brutality and the repercussions of success, and somehow still flows seamlessly with Gambino’s earlier verse about tripping on shrooms. Additionally, Glover’s hit “Feels Like Summer” is featured as “42.26”, with no changes other than an added 15 second intro. This song, originally part of the Summer Pack EP, delivers ever-pertinent lines on mankind moving too fast and destroying the world in its wake.

More than any other, however, “47.48” deserves mention. The song opens with a few synth notes reminiscent of the opening to “Baby Boy” and seems to follow a similar theme. As in “Baby Boy”, Glover talks to his son Legend through the lyrics. The twist? Four years later, Legend is old enough to respond, and he does. The outro consists of a low, ethereal backing track as father and son discuss what they love. Though it is not the last song on the album, “47.48” feels like a finale to both the album and the Childish Gambino story that started years ago with mixtapes like Sick Boi and Culdesac. In 2018, Glover had his second son. Later that year, his own father passed away, and in a few months Glover announced he would be retiring the name Childish Gambino

It seems, then, that Donald Glover’s minimalist design is neither laziness nor accident. Rather, 3.15.20 represents a blank slate upon which Glover can begin the next chapter of his life. Though Childish Gambino is perhaps my favorite artist this side of Y2K, it would be selfish for me to ask more of him past this album. It is time for him to stand aside and allow Donald Glover to shine—as a writer, as an actor, and as a father. 

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This is America Sends Waves Across the Nation https://scadradio.org/2018/05/15/childish-gambino-music-video-america/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=childish-gambino-music-video-america&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=childish-gambino-music-video-america Tue, 15 May 2018 15:58:00 +0000 https://scadradio.org/?p=4259 From riding a Ferris wheel with a teddy bear to spooky campfire stories, we’ve seen it all in Childish Gambino’s music videos. Ironically, one could see the new “This Is America” music video a few times over and still not quite catch all of the imagery. In Donald Glover’s first music video in five years, […]

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From riding a Ferris wheel with a teddy bear to spooky campfire stories, we’ve seen it all in Childish Gambino’s music videos. Ironically, one could see the new “This Is America” music video a few times over and still not quite catch all of the imagery. In Donald Glover’s first music video in five years, the ever-evolving genre of the star seems to have approached a hint of cheerful, upbeat reggae at the clip’s beginning, but turns into something completely different as soon as he pulls a gun out and blows a bullet through a guy with a bag over his head. The first in a series of hard-hitting political references throughout the 4-minute bit subtly arrives at the blink-and-you’ll-miss-it moment when the gun used to off the man is gently placed into a red handkerchief. The same can be seen at the 2-minute mark upon another massacre, this time Glover being tossed an AK out of nowhere and taking out 10 choir singers in a possible allusion to the infamous 2015 church shooting in Charleston. Both occurrences appear unexpectedly, but are immediately followed by Gambino uttering the titular phrase with an intentional lack of enthusiasm.

Much of the brilliance lies within the background. Black people running around in a frenzy are easy to spot behind the dancers, but there are even tinier details to miss. A video that demands to be rewatched and dissected, keen-eyed viewers will pick up on obscure bible references and Jim Crow caricatures poses, just to name a few. Even SZA makes a brief cameo towards the end, making a good case that she’ll be featured on his upcoming fourth album.

The simplicity of having Gambino and his dancers prance around in the foreground plays into a variety of interpretations. In a country that eats up black culture, the dancers could represent how oblivious some Americans are when it comes to realizing the turmoil minorities find themselves in, as opposed to the glitz and glamour on the TV screen. It could also be a jab at recent criticism towards black celebrities for getting “too political”: the crew is so concentrated on dancing, they don’t even acknowledge all the chaos happening around them. That’s the beauty of “This Is America”, at its core a deeply layered gem that only gets better and better the more times it is seen. So much so, it’s popularity on trending pages is outdone by breakdowns of the actual video.

If there’s any downside, it won’t be the same to listen to just the audio for this track. Part of me hopes it’s left off his next LP to ensure this song stays synonymous with the already iconic video, but hype for a Childish Gambino album is now at an all-time high thanks to this juggernaut lead single. Top-tier in its relevance and genius in its execution, the visuals conjured up by Glover and his Atlanta director Hiro Murai have cemented the legacy of “This Is America” as one of the greatest music videos of all time.

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