Music Reviews

Bryson Tiller Is Done with Drama on "A N N I V E R S A R Y"

The singer's brief but satisfying third album focuses heavily on self-reflection.

Bryson Tiller

Photo by Chris Tuite/imageSPACE/Shutterstock

When Bryson Tiller released his debut cult classic, T R A P S O U L, five years ago, he didn't intend to become a superstar.

While the album was saturated with the heartbreak and sadness that became his calling card, the efforts behind his come-up were pure. He was a humble Papa John's-employee-turned-R&B-star who used to sleep in his car, and his music was a means to an end. He wanted to have some money saved up for his daughter, and he wanted to afford basic cable. He was putting in "overtime" to secure his legacy and, as a result, had a bitter aversion to being famous. When celebrity status inevitably came knocking after T R A P S O U L's explosive success, his resentment towards his popularity seeped into his music.

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Music Features

5 Years of "TRAPSOUL": Has Bryson Tiller's Debut Aged Well?

The singer recently announced a deluxe re-release of the project will drop this Friday

Bryson TillerBryson Tiller in concert at The Joint at Hard Rock Hotel, Las Vegas, USA

Photo by Mediapunch/Shutterstock

If we've learned one thing about Bryson Tiller over the last five years, it's that he is a heartfelt person.

"Every day I prayed that this music thing would work so I could give you the life I feel like you deserve," he wrote in one of the many Instagram captions dedicated to his eldest daughter. The singer, who recently welcomed another baby girl with his longtime partner Kendra Bailey, praises his children so often on social media that his two daughters have become as synonymous with Tiller's identity as the somber R&B he curates.

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