Tyler, The Creator’s Evolution: From "Bastard" To "Flower Boy"


With “IGOR”‘s imminent arrival, we took a look at the musical and lyrical growth Tyler, The Creator and the shifts in his artistry.

Across all facets the entertainment sphere, shock value has proved to be worth its weight in gold. The catalyst for legions concerned parents and conservative moral outrage, it’s an age-old showbusiness trope that has played an instrumental part in the legacies punk trailblazers, daring filmmakers and even the one-time agitator turned elder statesman Eminem. In the same vein as how a young Em used the debased and puerile to his advantage, a voyage into the darker underbelly the psyche also propelled Tyler, The Creator on to the world’s stage.

Tyler, The Creator's Evolution: From "Bastard" To "Flower Boy"

Rich Fury/Getty s

Filled with nihilistic vitriol and brutal depictions murder, rape and anything else that he deemed fitting, the man from Ladera Heights harnessed the galling power his most depraved thoughts and positioned them at the forefront his music. Tyler’s debut project Bastard, shared with the world on Christmas day 2009, set the tone for what was to come. A prodigious sonic feat cloaked in introspective and at times vengeful lyricism, the first instalment the therapy sessions between Tyler– or his villainous alter ego Wolf Haley– and “DR.TC” would be the rebellious spark that put him and his Odd Future Wolf Gang Kill Them All affiliates on the map.

Laden with poignant piano chords and warped synths, each track bristled with the sort volatile energy that’s been insatiably attractive to receptive teenage minds since youth culture arose in the ’50s. Formed under the proviso that “I feel we’re more talented than 40-year-old rappers talking about Gucci,” the group would soon become synonymous with an anti-establishment spirit that was so neatly summarized on Tyler’s major label debut Goblin:

“Kill People, Burn Shit, F**k School.”

As their fame continued to morph and mutate, this epithet came to define OFWGKTA’s heyday and garnered them an audience that ranged from hip-hop heads to more indie-rock oriented consumers that were soon donning their Supreme box logos and emulating their newfound heroes.

Built on a reputation for chaotic live shows and misbehaviour, their fans’ cult-like devotion emboldened the group’s ringleader and his diverse array cronies to do anything they’d like in the realms music, fashion and even television. Reviled by LGBTQ+ organizations for their flagrant use homophobic slurs, the macabre sentiments and moral deconstructivism Tyler’s early work led to innumerable calls for boycotts and bans from both the UK and Australia. Yet just like all artists that are catapulted into view on a wave dissension, the effects outrage as a career accelerant eventually tapers f and by the release 2012’s OF Tape Vol 2, the sun was setting on the collective’s heyday as a genuine phenomenon.

Unburdened by the weight the group and the accompanying stigma, Tyler and cohorts such as Earl Sweatshirt, Syd The Internet and Domo Genesis have gone on to make music that is diametrically different to that which they’d rose to prominence from. But while each these metamorphic journeys have been exciting to behold, none has been quite as thrilling as Tyler’s shift from a vessel for youthful indignance into a high calibre artist. Once motivated by a desire to make “shit to piss f old white people,” the man lesser-known as Tyler Okonma has re-emerged anew and with a drastically shifted focus. However, what makes his evolution so compelling to witness is that hasn’t been governed by any prevailing trends or compliance with the commercial landscape.

In a recent video entitled “How To Make A Tyler, The Creator Song”, musician Left At London playfully satirizes the Golf Wang figurehead’s change in tact as she describes how he went from a “homophobic psychopath to a lonely gay man who made the Grinch soundtrack.”

Comical as that statement may be, it contains more than a few morsels truth and depicts just how sharp these recent shifts in his career path have been.

Tyler, The Creator's Evolution: From "Bastard" To "Flower Boy"

John Lamparski/Getty s

Released after the critical and commercial low ebb 2015’s Cherry Bomb, Tyler constructed a redemptive tale on 2017’s LP Flower Boy. A conceptual and musical departure from the provocations old, Tyler’s new album eschewed the guises and misdirects the previous era in favour unreserved honesty. A wistful and contemplative project, it took his longstanding affinity for the serene beauty soul music and the pioneering sound jazz-fusion legend Roy Ayers’ to its logical conclusion. Save for the A$AP Rocky-assisted “Who Dat Boy” and “I Ain’t Got Time,” much the splintering abrasion that was a staple his earlier work has been side-lined in favour f-kilter melodies and vibrant production.

Exhibited on many Cherry Bomb’s finest ferings– including “Find Your Wings,” “Keep Da O’s” and the Yeezy and Weezy-aided “Smuckers,” his penchant for grand, sweeping arrangements came to its logical conclusion on Flower Boy. Although it took many aback, any long-term fan Tyler was already aware that he had the capabilities to create works musical beauty. Among all the misanthropic statements on Bastard, its blunt revelations were fset by the emergence soaring chord progressions. Exhibited across Goblin and the trilogy-concluding Wolf on tracks such as “She,” “Nightmare” “48” and “Slater,” his tendency to incorporate these moments splendour amid the animosity his lyrics came from influences that extended far beyond the hip-hop purview.

As detailed to The Guardian in 2011, the sounds that brewed in the background his music came from a love the dreamy terrain shoegaze and chillwave:

“I listen to Washed Out, Beach House and Broadcast. That’s what I’m influenced by. That’s why] the music is a mixture pretty chords, fuckin’ hardcore drums and basslines, and really nice strings.”

Aside from his well-publicized love Pharrell and N.E.R.D, it is these influences that permeate through most regularly in his output and this doesn’t seem to be subject to change. Set to be released this Friday (May 17), the teasers for Tyler’s new album IGOR have all featured fragments that sound while harbouring a brash, electronica-infused edge.

Said to feature guest appearances from alternative acts King Krule and Mild High Club, these two artists are synonymous with atmospheric, guitar-oriented output and would seamlessly slip into his aural world should the rumoured tracklist turn out to be accurate. On top frequent collaborators such as Pharrell, A$AP Rocky, Frank Ocean and Kali Uchis, it’ll also see him team up with Playboi Carti and Brockhampton-affiliated singer/songwriter Ryan Beatty. As displayed in the teaser for the frantically paced “WHATSGOOD,” it appears that Tyler is operating with a renewed confidence and sense defiance that he’d lost in the wake the turgid response to Cherry Bomb:

“Y’all said I wouldn’t go nowhere, took the detour

When you see the someone in the crack right by the sea shore?

When you see them brand new Le Fleurs on these floors?

If the cop says my name, bitch, I’m Igor.”

As yet, Tyler has yet to clarify exactly what the IGOR motif is in reference to. But when viewed in conjunction with the Lewis Rossignol-devized album cover, it begins to come into focus. A surrealist portrait Tyler, it comes with a certain level grotesqueness and horror that makes him seem inhuman. With his cheeks wiped out and hair that protrudes into the face, it shares an unsightly quality that is in keeping with the album’s most prominent namesake. Normally depicted with a hunch and a villainous personality, Igor is a staple Frankenstein films and classical horror. The faithful assistant to the notorious mad scientist, he’s an integral part his schemes and– in the Ghost Of Frankenstein— even has his brain placed within the hulking monster’s body. Throughout Tyler’s career, he has been something an eternal outcast and is prone to melding together sounds and textures in a way that many would deem to be unconventional. A self-confessed loner, the idea a pariah that spends his days in a lab is one that would resonate with the restlessly creative mind. A man that’s made a living out refusing to conform or blend in, this concept sheds light on how he’s perceived in both the media and by hip-hop’s inner circles.

For all that he’s disavowed much his earlier music and expunged it from live sets, the evolution Tyler, The Creator is one the more captivating the 21st Century. From provocateur to pop-culture icon, what’s clear upon reflection and revisiting his back catalogue is that he’s achieved the rare feat keeping his personality intact. Although he may not be threatening the lives B.o.B and Bruno Mars anymore, his quick-wittedness and ability to craft newsworthy soundbites has retained its potency albeit through taking different forms. More acquainted with grabbing headlines through his candidness about his sexuality and struggles with isolation late, he may be a far cry from the man that incited a riot at SXSW but he’s all the better for it. Now, all we can do is wait for Friday and see what shape this chameleonic artist will take next.