Punk
The first step of listening to Young Thug is to discard any and all expectations. The next is to prepare. For what? One can never be entirely certain. At minimum, brace for a reintroduction to the polymathic Atlanta rapper—over 20 projects in, and he remains incalculable. There\'s a tiny bit of precedent for *Punk* in the country melodies of 2017\'s *BEAUTIFUL THUGGER GIRLS*, but even its title is a bait-and-switch. There\'s plenty of guitars, though they are acoustic rather than electric, and they tend to pulse more than thrash. From the outset, his aim is to disarm. An air of solemnity hangs over the album. Sometimes it makes sense, as on “Contagious,” a reflection on the highs and lows of fame, or “Stupid/Asking,” a two-part lovesick ballad that doubles as a display of Thug\'s singular vocal charisma. At other points, it seems almost opposed to the subject matter—the flex-filled “Insure My Wrist,” the gorgeously sappy standout “Love You More”—because Thug has always intrinsically understood the power of contrasting tones as a means of drawing out a range of emotions. Perhaps the biggest testament to his shape-shifting finesse, though, is the way the thunderous roar of songs like “Rich N\*\*\*a Shit” and “Bubbly” doesn\'t interrupt the concept but instead feels essential to it; the range is as much the point as the aesthetic. Still. In the end, any words that could describe *Punk*—pensive but playful, measured yet mercurial, bluesy folk music dressed up as trap rap—feel woefully inadequate to capture Thug\'s present essence, let alone his past, and certainly never his future. Perhaps that\'s the most punk thing of all.
While Young Thug’s creative choices after about 2015 have had little sway over emerging trends, Punk suggests that the place he now occupies is one that allows him more room to experiment.
Featuring a masterpiece of a collaboration with the late, great Mac Miller, this second studio album proves Thugger's all-time greatness
Punk is an interesting ride, but it's far from Young Thug's greatest
Very rarely are artists simultaneously experimental, influential, and commercially successful, but Young Thug's combination of risk-taking creativity and infectious personality kept him consistently falling into all three categories at once.
Young Thug’s ascent to hip-hop upper echelons was complete long before his new album. Yet ‘PUNK’ truly sets the tone for his