

On Blue Slide Park it was the title track. But he always chose a track or two on each project to remind the backpackers what he could do. He began singing more, the beats got more experimental, and the subject matter skewed further and further away from what I was willing to keep in my rotation.

Some would call it creative growth, but I heard a creative shift. The music changed once his first album was released. He earned verses alongside Talib, Rapsody, Wale, Phonte, and Skyzoo to name a few. He tastefully paid homage to legends like Outkast, Tribe, and Jay Z. It was on his song “Boom Bap Rap” where I first heard the phrase “boom bap”. He had a respect for rap’s history that is lost on most contemporary Hip Hop. Unlike many other young MC’s, Mac did his homework.

He had the flow, delivery, and timing of a veteran MC, but he was still young and kept enough youthful banter to satiate the taste of listeners in his age bracket. The mixtapes High Life, K.I.D.S., and Best Day Ever were out in addition to some very early mixtapes where he stuck primarily to industry instrumentals. By the time I began listening to him, it was 2011 and I had some catching up to do. That was easily one of the biggest mistakes I’ve ever made. A rapper with a backpack on and his pants sagging was just trying too hard. I saw a flyer for a show he was doing around my school in 2010, but I disregarded it quickly. We might not learn a lot of specifics about him, but there’s a lot of honesty in his music if you look for it.Malcolm McCormick, or Mac Miller, passed away one year ago last week on September 7, 2018. He’s a corny white rapper (meant as a compliment) who loves his family, friends, and hometown. There’s a kind of authenticity to him that has been there since the beginning, if you look for it: He doesn’t rap about breaking the law, because he’s not about that life. "I know niggas think you white and you not about to go in with these bars," chimes in Domo Genesis on "In the Bag". Many songs here reference his status as a white rapper, signaling his awareness of the rap game’s perception of him: "I’m a white rapper/ They always call me shady," he says on "Brand Name", just a few minutes into the album. He’s never preachy, though: He sounds refreshed and rejuvenated, like someone who has been going for daily walks, eating veggies and drinking fruit smoothies every day. "Everybody saying I need rehab/ So I’m speeding with a blindfold on/ It won’t be long before they watching me crash/ And they don’t wanna see that," he raps, thanking the people that got him through the toughest time of his life. On "God Speed", the album’s standout track, he pays tribute to the close friends in his Most Dope Family, especially his right hand man Q, and it’s genuinely touching. The interlude before "God Speed" includes a voicemail from his brother, checking in on him at a low point in his life, and later on in the song, he admits: "White lines be numbing them dark times/ Them pills that I’m popping, I need to man up/ Admit it’s a problem, I need a wake up/ Before one morning, I don’t wake up." It’s funny to hear a 23-year-old who just kicked his habit and could be considered a kid himself refer regretfully to "all the kids doing drugs" on "In the Bag", but Mac has enough of his sense of humor intact to keep the album from playing like a D.A.R.E. "I’ve seen some motherfucking shit," he warns on "Two Matches". Lyrically, Mac offers a music industry "Scared Straight". Miller said he recorded 400 songs for Watching, and sometimes you couldn’t help but wonder about the selection process ( "Objects in the Mirror"?) but on GO:OD AM, he’s learned to self-edit.

The beats on GO:OD AM have a New York, boom-bap feel, with lots of jazz samples and harder drums, and it’s both more varied and more upbeat, from the trap-sounding beats of "When in Rome" or the Chief Keef-featuring "Cut the Check" to love songs like "ROS" or the Miguel collaboration "The Weekend". Getting through the 16 tracks on Blue Slide Park was like an endurance test, and even the deeper and much-improved Watching Movies started to sound interchangeable before it ended. From start to finish, this is his most refined and well put-together project.
