
Speaking with Billboard, Malay explained that for the song’s first half - the ancient-history portion, with Cleopatra and the loosed cheetahs - Ocean was intensely meticulous, recording vocal takes for 30 days at a home he had rented in Los Angeles.įrank Ocean, 'Channel Orange': Track-By-Track Review Behind the scenes, though, the song posed a greater challenge than Ocean’s typically dead-pan Twitter commentary let on.įor Frank Ocean and producer-songwriter Malay, the two parts of “Pyramids” emerged quickly and it was clear that they wanted to fuse them - that’s when it became a problem. The songwriting is high-wire act, but he makes it look easy. “The way you say my name makes me feel like I’m that n-a, but I’m still unemployed,” he sings, revealing how we’re all vulnerable to imagination and performance, whether it’s in the bedroom or the champagne room, with a lover or a stripper. I trolled the music industry.” The song is a neon-lit blockbuster epic that manages to nail the complex interplay of fantasy and reality in a sexual relationship. He tweeted, “Pyramids is a ten minute long single. When Frank released the time-traveling two-part “Pyramids” on June 8, 2012, it was his second announcement of the day earlier that Friday, he revealed that his debut album Channel Orange would be out July 17. Special thanks to Zet Gold for the stunning playlist cover.These songs beguile and confound listeners, immediately standing out for their ambition and scale, and the 2010s gave us plenty of examples to marvel at, from the aforementioned Kendrick track to the Weeknd’s “House of Balloons/Glass Table Girls” to Frank Ocean’s “Pyramids.” These stream-of-consciousness songs are where a gifted writer like Frank Ocean shines brightest.
PYRAMIDS FRANK OCEAN LYRICS FREE
And yet, the New Orleans native has never sounded as free as on the 2019 single “In My Room,” song that takes the best from the dreamy “Pyramids,” the stark “Solo” and the visceral “Ivy." "In My Room" sounds like it was fun to make while being a hyper-informed, genreless ode to music itself. “Pyramids” is a ten-minute song intent on establishing a world within itself, while “Thinkin Bout You” is a true R&B classic that’ll hold its own against any song by Usher or The-Dream. The channel ORANGE album cut “Monks” is an N.E.R.D-influenced jam Frank Ocean takes a step further on Blonde with “Pretty Sweet.” "Super Rich Kids” ties up many of the aforementioned themes nicely, toying with privilege as a concept while winking at prohibition as a fact. “Lost” tackles travel, and “Sierra Leone” cuddles West African folklore. When it comes to admiration and atonement, “Pink Matter'' serves as exhibit A within Ocean's discography. I mean, the second half of “Self Control” couldn’t soundtrack two love-sick kids taking in a purplish summer sunset over their suburban cul-de-sac any better. As these songs play, the same themes unfurl themselves like once-rolled flags into a full-fledged display of hyper-sensitive American youth, privy to love and loss, luxury, liberation and more. “I woke / You were there / Tracing planets on my forehead / But I forget 23 / Like I forget 17 / And I forget my first love / Like you forget a daydream” are nostalgic lyrics about intimacy and memory only Frank Ocean could write, nestled into “White” as soft infants are softer sheets. As these songs in the playlist range from timeless, minimal ballads to soaring, anthemic hits as alluded to in LVRN co-founder Justice Baiden's tweet on R&B, it’s clear Ocean ’s reputation as one of the most acclaimed artists of his generation has everything to do with trusting intuitions and nothing to do with fearing expectations. Much of his work operates without the pretense of fear, ignoring trends in search of the bigger picture. His lyrics enjoy freeform surrealism, challenging to pin down to any one influence, and his ear for the music accompanying the words has yet to fail him. Songwriting has long been the bright red cherry on top of Frank Ocean's caked-with-soul sound. Fortunately, for the fan who prefers a tidy and neat streaming experience, the officially-sanctioned Frank Ocean discography likely satisfies even the pickiest of people. The free-to-download 2011 mixtape nostalgia,ULTRA. has yet to hit streaming at press time save for three singles, as do singles like “Whip Appeal,” “Acura Integurl,” “Pyrite” and “Memrise.” His 2016 visual album Endless can’t be streamed individually on Apple Music or Spotify. For as many songs and albums 33-year-old singer, songwriter, record producer, photographer and visual artist Frank Oceanhas put out into the world, his official discography in major streaming services comes out to just two albums-2012 Def Jam album channel ORANGE and the 2016 Boys Don’t Cry album Blonde-and a slew of singles.
