The triumph of the era-defining 56 Nights mixtape was matched by that summer’s “proper album” DS2, but there was something missing. In New York, in Chicago, and elsewhere across the country, you couldn’t walk down a street without hearing ‘March Madness’, ‘Thought it Was a Drought’ or ‘Fuck Up Some Commas’ blaring from a car stereo. In the summer of 2015, Future seemed primed to compete with Drake as the current generation’s popstar king of rap. Claire Lobenfeld looks at what’s changed for Future Hendrix, and where he can go from here. Future’s second album in two weeks, HNDRXX would be easy to overlook if it didn’t show the Atlanta superstar at his strongest since 2012’s Pluto.
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