Download Album : The Kid LAROI Fuck Love 3 Zip Mp3 Leak 2021

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Music is universal, and don’t you ever forget it! That’s why a teen rapper from Australia can be a big deal in the United States – NO CAP! 🎙 The Kid LAROI (Charlton Howard) is indeed just a kid, born in 2003! That said, this 17-year-old is no ordinary kid and definitely has bars and an appealing style. His debut commercial mixtape, the unapologetically titled 💿 F*CK LOVE, debuted in the top-10 of the Billboard 200 (no. 8). Howard rereleased his tape as 💿 F*CK LOVE (SAVAGE) with seven additional tracks. The results are positive as the future certainly looks bright for The Kid.

✅🎵 “Pikachu” commences 💿 F*CK LOVE (SAVAGE) with a certified BANG…ER. The Kid LAROI covers familiar rap territory – the come-up. “My teachers said I wouldn’t be shit, now look at you,” he asserts on the chorus, later addressing the hardships of his beginnings (“My mama used to sell drugs to pay for my school / My Uncle Dub got knocked, ended up on the news”). He does all of this over sweet production by 🎙 Haan, 🎙 Keanu Beats, 🎙 FnZ, and 🎙 Khaled Rohaim. So, where does Pokémon come into play exactly? “Pull up, in a yellow Lambo’ like Pikachu.”

“I’m done, so done, I’m done with all the games you play,” The Kid LAROI asserts on the chorus of ✅🎵 “SO DONE”. So, what exactly is young Charlton Howard ‘done’ with? Love – he’s not ready for it right now! The result of his pain is the enjoyable, melodic single that arrived in advance of F*CK LOVE (SAVAGE). Given the melodic nature of this track, as well as Howard’s distinct, expressive sound, he perfectly captures the plight of love.

The deal meant Laroi was to uproot his life to LA and dig-in to becoming music’s next megastar, which 12 months on, is a glaring reality.

A Lyrical Lemonade regular, the Juice WRLD-mentored crooner has quickly gained the respect of his peers internationally, releasing singles with the likes of Lil Tecca, Bankrol Hayden and Lil Tjay all before the announcement of his debut mixtape ‘F*CK LOVE’.

‘F*CK LOVE’ features production credits from the likes of Benny Blanco, Internet Money and Cashmere Cat; in addition to the in-house team that Laroi has been riding with for a minute now, including KhaledBEATS, Omer Fedi and Haan.

While the mixtape obviously follows a loved-up theme – and largely a ‘fuck love’ theme – it isn’t all romance-related, also giving us a look into the general psyche of Laroi, as he openly deals with personal loss and mental health throughout the 31-minute run-time.

‘WRONG’ positions Laroi opposite fellow teen-star Lil Mosey for a certified hit record, as the two flex their notoriously melodic bars over the feathery piano lead and room-rattling bass hits by way of Internet Money (Juice WRLD, Lil Uzi Vert).

Following the energetic start to the project, we see The Kid Laroi look inwards on ‘I WISH’ and the Corbin featured ‘NOT FAIR’, with the latter a haunting duet that see’s the pair going back and forth for what is an epic trap ballad.

The guts of ‘F*CK LOVE’ features both lead singles, ‘GO’ and ‘TELL ME WHY’, which each hold their own as some of the most passionate and hearty releases of 2020.

It’s no secret that rap-rock is having a bit of a comeback right now. Distancing itself from the nu-metal scene of the early ‘00s, “glock-rock” (as it’s been dubbed) is seeing hip-hop stars revive the precarious crossover with thrilling results. Australia’s latest viral sensation, The Kid LAROI, is one such artist. Crooning over heavy 808s and zippy hit-hats, the teen’s new mixtape ‘F*CK LOVE’ shows off his versatile artistry as he explores his adolescent views on love, loss, and heartbreak with a penchant to let things get a bit gnarly here and there.

From the off, it makes no secret in trying to hide this influence. On ‘MAYBE’, the teen jumps about on a trap-style beat with a punky melody, setting the tone for the whole mixtape, all the while paying tribute to a huge influence in his life, Juice WRLD, who he likens to “a big brother”. The late US rapper mentored the 16-year-old LAROI in his formative years, and makes an appearance on heart-wrenching ‘TELL ME WHY’, which explores LAROI’s attempts at managing his grief after his death. Juice’s appearance on this mixtape’s ‘GO’ and their other team-up recent posthumous album, ‘Legends Never Die’ suggest that this pairing was still in its formative stages – something great was surely brewing.

Beyond those emotional moments, there are more sparks of genius. By reworking of Ne-Yo’s ‘00s classic ‘So Sick’ on ‘NEED YOU THE MOST’, the 16-year-old updates the track’s tale through a Gen-Z lens, where he flips the script, takes accountability and drowns his sorrows: “I said I was sorry for all of the times I fucked up / Fuck love, got me thinkin’ while I pour my cup up”. An injection of nostalgia makes this 16-year-old seem light years ahead of his peers – he knows a thing or two about making music with some longevity.

LAROI knows how to turn heartbreak into great music, just like his idol. Showing off his extensive musicality and emotional depth, The Kid LAROI is proof that the next generation are ready, willing and able to bring something new to the table.

Let's straighten one thing out right away: it's really easy to look at The Kid Laroi as another flash-in-the-pan emo rapper capitalizing on the success of Juice WRLD, Lil Peep and their legions of copycats while simultaneously trying to imitate the worst of SoundCloud rap, or even worse: Peepcore for weeaboos who hate themselves. From just looking at the album cover, the very name of the album, and the abundance of godawful skits, it would be quite easy to write this guy off as the second coming of Brokencyde after being Frankensteined into a middle school anime club reject, Ghostemane, and XXXTentacion's corpse. But something about this guy is compelling. Maybe it's his knack for extreme catchiness, or the fact that he's actually a half-decent singer and rapper at the same time, but surprisingly F**k Love is actually quite an enjoyable mixtape.

While Laroi is as guilty of using Auto-Tune as basically every single rapper since T-Pain, it isn't completely overdone to the point of annoyance; in fact, it shockingly compliments the music very well. Even without said Auto-Tune, he's still a very competent singer; he has good range, it's tone sounds great, and it's able to carry a song alone. His skills as a rapper are competent; he flows well, but he's nothing to really shout at. Laroi's biggest strengths, as mentioned before, is his knack for catchiness: F**k Love is absolutely brimming with earworms from front to back, with particular standouts being true opener "Maybe", Juice WRLD collaboration "Go" (where the chemistry between the two is just so freaking good that it's a shame we'll never see another), "Need You Most (So Sick)" and closer "Selfish". Unfortunately, being a rookie, Laroi also tends to fall into some very basic traps: his lyrics are certainly nothing special, with repetitive lines such as "So maybe, maybe I'm driving me crazy / Maybe it's me and it's not you / I'm not too good at admitting when I f**k up / But maybe, maybe it's you who can save me" and "Tell me why, tell me why it's so hard to say goodbye / And when I get inside of my mind, I lose my time / Thinking 'bout the times we had, thinking 'bout the time we spent / Tell me why you left when you told me this was forever and / Tell me why, tell me why it's so hard to say goodbye, yeah". The overabundance of skits on F**k Love are also immensely irritating; this reviewer has never been a fan of skits on hip hop albums, and this particular album has four; none of them are entertaining at all, instead just consisting of meandering phone calls that never go anywhere and probably should have just been cut entirely.

While the lyricism and overbearing bulls**t complaints can probably be chalked down to inexperience, the same cannot be said for the production, which has been handled by both members of Juice WRLD's production team and big names like Benny Blanco who really should know better by now. The loudness war never truly went away, and stuff like F**k Love just drives that through your skull even more, although the actual mixing itself isn't terrible; despite this, everything is a giant wall of noise and it makes the music less enjoyable than it would be without it. However, F**k Love is an enjoyable mixtape who's faults can be chalked down to rookie mistakes; if the kid improves, things are looking pretty promising for the future.