Watching Movies with the Sound Off is the second studio album by American rapper Mac Miller. It was released June 18, 2013, by Rostrum Records. The album continued his changes in musical sound that began with the mixtape Macadelic. Miller described the album as very introspective and very personal. It features guest appearances from Earl Sweatshirt, Ab-Soul, Action Bronson, Schoolboy Q, and Tyler, the Creator, among others. Production was handled primarily by Miller himself (under the pseudonym Larry Fisherman) among others such as Diplo, Tyler, the Creator, Flying Lotus, The Alchemist, Clams Casino, Earl Sweatshirt, J. Hill, Chuck Inglish, and Pharrell Williams.

On October 14, 2012, Miller announced that his second album, Watching Movies with the Sound Off, would be released in early 2013.[1][2] The album title is derived from Miller's habit of making music in the studio while watching films on mute.[3] When speaking of the album Miller said that it is "very introspective and very personal so it's kind of throwing it all out there and seeing what happens".[4]


Download Mac Miller Watching Movies With The Sound Off


Download File 🔥 https://urllio.com/2y3BPe 🔥



Listening through to the record, I felt a similarity with Tyler, The Creator's Wolf. Not necessarily in terms of content, but in terms of hazy, summer time soundscapes with feature artists that blended seamlessly into the mix. When I asked Mac about this, the answer was pretty surprising:

Watching Movies With The Sound Off brought together a stellar lineup of guest artists, including Ab-Soul, Action Bronson, and Earl Sweatshirt, among others. With its eclectic sound and introspective lyricism, the album resonated deeply with listeners and critics alike. Debuting at No. 3 on the Billboard 200 charts, it solidified Mac Miller as an artist, not just a rapper, and received widespread critical acclaim.

tag_hash_111Watching Movies With The Sound Off is the second studio album by rapper Mac Miller, originally released in 2013. The album continues the changes in his musical sound that he began with the mixtape Macadelic. Mac Miller has described the album as very introspective and very personal. The album features guest appearances from Earl Sweatshirt, Ab-Soul, Action Bronson, Schoolboy Q, Jay Electronica and Tyler The Creator among others. Production was handled primarily by Miller himself (under the pseudonym Larry Fisherman) among others such as Diplo, Tyler, The Creator, Flying Lotus, The Alchemist, Clams Casino, Earl Sweatshirt, J. Hill, Chuck Inglish and Pharrell Williams.

"I expected everyone to talk shit... cause it's me," Miller says of his new album as he lights his first cigarette. Released June 18, "Watching Movies with the Sound Off" has prompted critics to do just the opposite -- the rapper's second studio album has been largely praised by entertainment journalists, dubbed one of the "better sounding hip-hop [albums] this year" by the New York Times.

Miller is the guy who said, “I ain’t no hipster, but girl I can make your hips stir,” so we know his judgment was once far from perfect. The 21-year-old is more judicious now, though some dubious choices do pop up. The crystal almost-pop of “Youforia”, Watching Movies’ closer, is a major misstep, and I can’t imagine anyone who enjoys the rest of the album listening to it often. Miller is also still in need of an editor, and there are confusing lines here from time to time: “When I die, throw a couple bad bitches in my casket.” Uh, will the ladies be dead too or what? But for the most part, Watching Movies sounds free and easy enough to deserve the “stoner rap” tag it’s been slapped with and detailed enough to show us that the previously unassuming Miller really can give a fuck.

Watching Movies is, especially when compared with Blue Slide Park, a left-of-center rap album. We learn this early, as Miller’s voice is pitched-up to Quasimoto-like effect on opener “The Star Room”, and Earl Sweatshirt’s appearance on third track “I’m Not Real” is one of his most abstract ever. The overall weirdness of the record does lead to a sturdy sound bed, though, and it’s one that frees Miller up as an MC to the point where he moves effortlessly from subject to subject, whether it’s his family, weed, or his insistence that “I don’t act hard, I still read Babar.”

At some point while putting the finishing touches on his sophomore album, Watching Movies With the Sound Off, Mac Miller had himself a bit of a Dark Side Of The Moon/Wizard Of Oz moment while watching a documentary on Netflix about sea turtles. "Me and [my friend] were chillin', and I clicked to this random part of the movie and just started [the album]," he says. He's sitting at a table at Rostrum Records' ornate house-turned-office in lower Manhattan, which boasts two floors, a pool table and a gigantic brass bull head on the wall. "How on point it was was crazy. Like, I would say 'open your eyes,' and the turtle would open its eyes. I would say 'world,' and it would go to a shot of the world. When Action Bronson came on, whales were going. When Jay Electronica started rapping, it was chaos everywhere, every fish was just all over the place. When Ab-Soul started rapping, the moon came out. It was representative of every single person on that album, and the turtle was so representative of me. When 'REMember' came on, all the fish started getting eaten. Then 'Aquarium' comes on and they fuckin' catch the turtle, the fisherman has the turtle, and then he lets the turtle go and 'Euphoria' comes on, and it's like this little safe haven with the turtle swimming next to a shark. It was crazy."

"I'm just really serious about movies, I take them very seriously," he says when asked about the hook to his WMWTSO track "Watching Movies." "Not to do the cliche rapper, 'My life is like a movie,' but I just enjoy that concept. The idea of nothing being real, if everything is not actual reality. So [that track] is kinda toying with that."

That was one of my kid movies, Star Wars. I had the VHS three-piece. I definitely had that. We used to watch that shit all the time. Luke Skywalker, dude. I haven't seen them in so long, but I gotta say the last one [is the best]. It's gotta be. The other day I was with the homies, and we were talking about how funny it'd be if we overdubbed Star Wars, and it's the whole movie, and all we changed was at the end we had Darth Vader say, "Luke, I'm not your father." That would be so tight. [Laughs] And Luke's just like, "What? Why did you have to tell me? I know that. I didn't think you were." 2351a5e196

download software anycut jinka free

wifi mouse pro windows download

bsc nursing selection letter download

air attack download pc

cdx download center