He later went on and release, Supermarket, the soundtrack to his novel of the same name in March 2019. His fourth studio album, YSIV, was released in September 2018 and debuted at number two on the US Billboard 200 chart. It debuted at number one in the US, becoming his second consecutive number-one album in the US and included the singles: " 44 More", " Overnight" and " Everyday". Following the release of the album, Logic released the mixtape, Bobby Tarantino II, in March 2018. The album spawned three singles: The title track, " Black Spiderman", and " 1-80", with the latter single peaking in the top ten in various other countries and later became certified platinum 6× by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA). Logic's third studio album, Everybody, was released in May 2017 and debuted at number one in the US, becoming his first album to reached the top of the Billboard 200 chart with 247,000 album-equivalent units, of which 196,000 were pure album sales. He later went on and released the mixtape, Bobby Tarantino, in July 2016 and included the singles: " Flexicution" and " Wrist".
He was later featured on the song, " Sucker for Pain" for the Suicide Squad soundtrack, peaking at number 15 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. The album included the singles: "Young Jesus", "Like Woah" and " Fade Away". His second studio album, The Incredible True Story, was released in November 2015 and debuted at number three on the US Billboard 200 chart and at number one on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart. The album spawned two singles: The title track and "Buried Alive". The album debuted at number four on the US Billboard 200 chart. Logic went on and released his debut studio album, Under Pressure, on October 21, 2014, to generally favorable reviews from music critics. Logic later released the mixtapes, Young Sinatra: Undeniable, in April 2012 and Young Sinatra: Welcome to Forever, in May 2013. Logic released his second mixtape, Young Sinatra, in September 2011, which included the song, "All I Do".
In December 2010, Logic released his debut mixtape, Young, Broke & Infamous. But there is nothing on “Bobby Tarantino II” that is, without a doubt, a terrible song.Logic at the Verge Campus Tour in April 2014Īmerican rapper Logic has released six studio albums, one soundtrack album, eight mixtapes, 45 singles (including 28 singles as a featured artist), three promotional singles and 40 music videos. “Indica Badu” is an inoffensive but forgettable ode to marijuana that features, you guessed it, Wiz Khalifa. “Midnight” feels like a Drake song that Drake didn’t bother to write.
But there are a few clunkers, or at least a few things that are a bit too on the nose. The feature that most clearly cements Logic’s braggadocio comes at the end of “Yuck” and is a real life voicemail from Sir Elton John, calling to congratulate the rapper on his multiple Grammy wins and to ask him for a favor. It’s not likely to change the world, but it feels much more natural that having the star of “The Fault In Our Stars” sing a weepy, auto-tuned verse about cell phone addiction, which actually took place on “Everybody.” The songs are short on what sanctimonious detractors would call “messages,” but the freedom and airy feel of the whole album gives Logic the room to imbue the beats with his personality.Ģ Chainz delivers what is one of the mixtape’s best and most energized verses on “State of Emergency,” rattling o acronyms with enough air to make the audience want him to stick around just a bit longer. Fun is just about all “Bobby Tarantino II” is, a sigh of relief after the clenched- fist seriousness of its predecessor. Rick draws a clear line between “album Logic” and “mixtape Logic” from the word go, and it is the major distinction for anyone who hadn’t heard of the Maryland-based MC before last summer. If the conversation between Rick and Morty (of “Rick & Morty”) on the opening track of Logic’s new mixtape “Bobby Tarantino II” is any indication of his future in the industry, this isn’t something he worries about, and neither should his listeners. He’s the only rapper who could conceivably score an omnipresent megahit based around the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline and tweet a picture of himself enthusiastically gearing up to play Dungeons & Dragons in the same year. The rapper’s heart- on-sleeve earnestness and consistent, uplifting messages have made him an unlikely star.