


The album featured contributions from guests like Kendrick Lamar, Cee Lo Green, Robert Glasper, and Anderson. Just a year after GO:OD AM ascended to the Top Five of the Billboard 200 and Rap charts, Miller returned with his fourth LP, The Divine Feminine. GO:OD AM followed in 2015 with Lil B, Chief Keef, and Miguel on the album's guest list. and launched his own imprint, REMember Music, under the major label. The more experimental effort Watching Movies with the Sound Off followed in 2013, with left-field hip-hop names like Action Bronson, Earl Sweatshirt, and Flying Lotus lending a hand. The album debuted at number one on the Billboard 200.

Miller first dropped the 13-track mixtape in October. After his second studio album, Watching Movies with the Sound Off (2013), he left Rostrum and signed with the major label Warner Bros. Rostrum released his debut EP, On and on and Beyond, and his debut album, Blue Slide Park, in 2011. Mac Miller’s estate has released the rapper’s sixth mixtape, I Love Life, Thank You, on streaming platforms. mixtape became his breakthrough when it was released in August of 2010, earning plenty of attention from hip-hop blogs and landing Miller a recording contract with Rostrum Records. Born Malcolm McCormick, Miller first used the alias 'Easy Mac,' a name referenced on his debut mixtape, 2007's But My Mackin' Ain't Easy. The pooch swims and flows through multiple dimensions, reveling in the “Colors and Shapes” implied by the music.Coming on the scene with a throwback style that betrayed his years, Pittsburgh-based rapper Mac Miller had just turned 18 when he spent 2010 making his name through mixtapes and video-sharing websites. American rapper Mac Miller released six studio albums, two extended plays, two live albums, thirteen mixtapes, forty-one singles (including thirteen as a. The surreal video features animated Mac Miller’s dog Ralph on a psychedelic trip through Wonderland. The tape’s signature piece “Colors and Shapes” was even scripted into a music video. There are copious references to drug-fueled euphoria as well as the pain of addiction and more than one hint to death in “Funeral” and “Grand Finale,” as if the artist was already aware of his tragic fate. Faces by Mac Millerįaces is a mixtape produced at the height of Miller’s career, full of deep, brooding sounds and dark foreboding. It is sure to become legendary as people pine for the artist who departed this earth too soon. The new 2021 version is available on all major platforms, as well as vinyl. They say you can’t take it with you, but Mac Miller seems to be trying to do just that with the posthumous release of his mixtape Faces, originally released seven years ago.
