Cloud rap continues, to this day, to be one of the most curiously amusing genres I know, almost risible. Yet, at the same time, and it is precisely here that its strangeness resides, in being both massively popular and unexpectedly dense, it stands as one of the densest modern movements, a complete digital evolution of psychedelic music, in which the abuse of substances, alongside late capitalism, intensifies a process of depersonalization that also has social roots. It is no coincidence that ... read more