![]() ![]() This may also be a reference to the music video of 'Who Dat Boy' in which Tyler is in a car with a River Phoenix lookalike sitting in the passenger seat. Tyler raps 'Passenger a white boy, look like River Phoenix'. Ĭalum Slingerland of Exclaim! identifies the reference to River Phoenix on 'I Ain't Got Time!'. Kevin Lozano of Pitchfork spoke on the song 'Boredom', stating ' range is kaleidoscopic, and the neo-soul sound he started to shape on Wolf is in full flower' and 'large parts of the song is an exercise for him to flex his production skills'. Zachary Hoskins of Slant Magazine describes 'Garden Shed' as a 'woozy trapped-in-the-closet metaphor'. Slingerland proclaimed the song is 'one of most powerful recorded moments to date', and also picked out the references to sexuality. Calum Slingerland of Exclaim! describes 'Garden Shed' featuring 'psychedelic guitar licks and synths build up a ballad featuring Estelle vocals, as liberation is encouraged before noisy feedback makes way for a confessional verse'. 'Pothole' is described as a 'low-profile standout' that features vehicular metaphors potholes are used as a metaphor for being stuck in life. ![]() Jesse Fairfax of HipHopDX describes 'Who Dat Boy' as a 'raucous jam that sounds like a score to a horror film', while Zachary Hoskins of Slant Magazine compared the song to Kanye West's song 'Freestyle 4' from The Life of Pablo. 'See You Again' is described as a 'positively kaleidoscopic love song' about an unidentified person. 'Sometimes.' is a short track which includes an unidentified male stating that he wants to hear the song about him, hinting that following song, 'See You Again', is about Tyler's male lover. Tyler says 'Let's take it back to them days/Counting sheep on Sadie Hannah's floor' which refers to the time before and during the release of his debut mixtape Bastard when he lived in his grandmother's house. ![]() The album's opening track, 'Foreword', is described by Scott Glaysher of XXL as an open letter to the fans and the nation, citing the lines 'How many raps can I write 'til I get me a chain?/How many chains can I wear 'til I'm considered a slave?/How many slaves can it be until Nat Turner arise?/How many riots can it be 'til them Black lives matter?' 'Where This Flower Blooms' refers back to his times before fame and money in the first line. Andy Kellman of AllMusic describes the overall lyrical content of the album as Tyler's 'least vulgar release' compared to the shock value lyrics in his previous projects. Correlating with the album's title, Tyler has noted flowers as a recurring theme of the album. ![]()
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