Yung Gud

Yung Gud

Yung Gud is wearing a black shirt with Yung Lean in the background.

Yung Gud performing with Yung Lean and the Sad Boys in 2014
Background information
Birth name Carl-Mikael Berlander
Born (1995-08-29) August 29, 1995
Stockholm, Sweden
Genres
Years active 2008–present
Labels Sky Team
Associated acts Yung Lean

Carl-Mikael "Micke" Berlander (born August 29, 1995)[1] known by his stage name as Yung Gud, is a Swedish DJ and producer well known for being one of the members for rapper Yung Lean's Stockholm-based group Sad Boys. Being influenced by "left-field" music, he began producing at the age of twelve, first making psychedelic trance music, but would not get into hip hop until much later. He did not do well in school, and pursued a career in music before he graduated, which garnered mixed feelings from his father. His production alongside Sad Boys for Yung Lean's music has been well received.

Outside of his Sad Boys career, he released his debut extended play Beautiful, Wonderful in November 2014, and has done production work for acts including Halsey and Deniro Farrar, and remixes of songs by acts including Jacques Greene, Kacy Hill, Meek Mill and Tinashe. These have also garnered a positive critical response from publications including Pigeons & Planes and The Fader. He has stated in a 2014 interview to be very focused on his work with the Sad Boys and his solo material.

Personal Life

Berlander, as well as the other members of the Sad Boys group, have described living in Stockholm as "boring" and "miserable".[2] While he has resided in the city for most of his life, Berlander had once lived in a small urban area called Gnesta, which he opined to be a Swedish equivalent to Kentucky: "Stupid people and alcohol problems, I don't know. It sucks of over there. It's so boring."[1] He said that his mother "liked to spoil me."[1] He did not do well in school, dropping out to pursue a career in music, and his father has always been mixed on this decision; he had always encouraged him to "just go to school and be a good person", saying that “You can't make music without a guitar.”[1] However, Berlander said in a 2014 interview that his dad had been getting a little more supportive and into what he had been doing so far.[1] He also claimed in that same interview that he is sober, although he said that he was wanting to try promethazine "because it's medicine. But the weeds and the speeds – no, not that."[1]

Sad Boys

Main article: Yung Lean
Yung Lean in Stockholm in 2013.

As Yung Gud described in how he first met Yung Lean, "My friend was fucking his friend at the moment. And she introduced him to my friend and me and basically that's how I met him. We'd drank some beer in a park and were like, “We like the same music, we should do something sometime.”"[1] The two had always thought of creating material together, but the two didn't start doing so until around October 2012 with the track “Oreomilkshake": "I think we were drunk in his basement and we made “Oreomilkshake.” Then I just made some beats when I had the time."[1] He explained how the name of Sad Boys came about: "I was going to buy some clothes at a store with Yung Sherman, and it was closed, and I got sad, and basically that's that."[2] As for the stage name Yung Gud, Berlander came up with simply the word Gud, then decided to change it into Yung Gud to make it funnier, which he described as "a stupid decision."[2] While he does hope to collaborate with other artists, he said in 2014 that he has been very much focused with his work for Sad Boys and his solo material.[1] Yung Gud's production for Yung Lean's works has garnered favorable responses from critics, with some spotlighting how it complements Lean's rapping.[3][4][5][6][7][8]

Yung Gud has admitted to liking Yung Lean, and that he has gotten more "secure" as a rapper as time goes on. He thinks that "He makes people feel some type of way".[1] He disagrees with Lean's common comparison to Lil B, although he does comprehend why this comparison is made.[1] However, he has also said that "there is always something wrong about him. It's like something wrong about the whole Sad Boys thing. People get really, really angry or really happy when they hear it. That's his main attraction. He's going to make people feel some type of way."[1]

Solo career

Yung Gud has done production work for acts including Halsey (left) and remix work for songs by artists including Tinashe (centre).

A Complex magazine critic made note of the lack of popularity of Yung Gud's career outside of Sad Boys, writing that "There’s no reason this should be on the low, though, because the works are fire."[9]

Beautiful, Wonderful

Yung Gud made a track called "Crushed", a song that's part of a genre he made up called "crushcore". This was "So people won’t call it post-witchhouse-chill-step or dub-core with emo influences. Or they won’t say, “This track is cool, but can you make it more based?” It's like, “This is crushcore. Fuck off.”"[1] On 5 June 2014, Yung Gud announced that he had finished his debut extended play the past week, and had been looking for a label to release it: "I don't want to keep people waiting anymore. I don't want to keep myself waiting."[1] He had also stated he was thinking of naming the record either Wonderful or Beautiful.[1] The now-titled four-track Wonderful, Beautiful was available for streaming worldwide via The Fader on 24 November 2014. That same day, the Sky Team label released it in European stores that same day, and to markets in the United States on 25 November.[10] As Yung Gud described, "I've always wanted to make a product of some sort. So with this EP, I'm finally selling a specific sound and look to the people that have been supporting my music for the past year and a half."[10] Beautiful, Wonderful received a positive review from Andrew Ryce of Resident Advisor, who scored the release a 3.5 out of five: "His solo tracks have a stargazing majesty to them, but the melodies are nailed down with grandiose percussion that makes it feel almost symphonic."[11] The EP was promoted with a ten-day European tour lasting from 12–22 November.[12]

Collaborations

Yung Gud collaborated with S-Type of the LuckyMe record label for the song "Fire", which was released on The Fader on 9 February 2015 as a single off S-Type's EP SV8.[13] "Fire" was also the opener for Astrid Anderson's FW15 show, which S-Type soundtracked for.[13] The two talked about making a track together when they first met each other at one of the Sad Boys concerts, and Gud made some drum parts and sent them to S-Type for him to "do my thing with" two weeks later.[13] Production credits have included rapper Deniro Farrar's single "World On My Shoulders 3.0", which premiered on 27 April 2015,[14] "Blue Prada" by Prada Mane[15] and additional production on "Strange Love", a track by singer Halsey off the deluxe edition of her debut album Badlands.[16]

Remixes

In 2014, Yung Gud released two remixes of "No Excuse", a track by Canadian producer Jacques Greene. On 30 May 2014, The Fader premiered the recut that was a part of a remix extended play for Greene's three-track record Phantom Vibrate.[17] The magazine described it as a "ecstatically pattering" rework of the song that alleviates "the jagged turns and gun shot sounds of the original to reveal its lushest sonic innards."[17] Joe Price, writing for Complex magazine's website Pigeons & Planes, said that with this remix, Yung Gud had "proven once again that he has legs beyond what many coin as “meme rap.”"[18] Later on, Yung Gud did a much more harsh-sounding "VIP" remix of the track, which starts off alike to Yung Gud's first remix, and then it dives "into a deep chasm of rumbling bass complete with a hammering rhythm that rarely lets up", Price wrote.[19] It was issued on 20 December,[19] garnering 800,000 plays in eighteen days on SoundCloud.[20] Yung Gud's "spacey and dreamy" re-edit for "2 On" by Tinashe, which came out on 6 September 2014, was reviewed by a Complex magazine critic who highlighted its "interesting drum work" and Tinashe's vocal performance fitting with the beat.[9]

In 2015, Yung Gud distributed two remixes. On 28 June, Yung Gud did a remix of rapper Meek Mill's track "Monster".[21] Constant Gardner of Pigeons & Planes made note of the re-cut's "chest-shaking" bass, a layer of "icy" synth lines and "twinkling" glockenspiel-style sounds, and also said that "This is Meek Mill taken from the streets of Philly to his throne in a sparkling Arctic ice palace, and it’s awesome."[21] Yung Gud remixed Kacy Hill's "Foreign Fields", which the re-edit was released on 30 September as a promotional single of her debut EP Bloo.[22] A Pigeons & Planes journalist wrote that Yung Gud's reworking turns the original song "into a grand experience", opining that it takes it into "new heights with heavier basslines and haunting production."[23] A Stuff.co.nz critic compared it to Katy Perry's track "Dark Horse" due to its nature sound effects and a "marching band drum beat".[24]

Artistry and influences

Berlander has described his influences of music as generally "Left-field".[2] He and his sister first listened to nu metal bands like Slipknot and Korn since he was eight or nine years old. He then got into electronic music and was producing psychedelic trance since he was twelve, which the genre has always been an influence for his works[1] along with other styles of music involving ambient.[2] However, he said in a 2014 interview that he didn't start listening to hip hop until a couple of years before.[1] He first used a Sony Ericsson music application, and once he was bought an expensive computer by his mother, he started "really making shit" with the program GarageBand before moving on to Fruity Loops and other programs, and now uses Ableton Live.[1] He has stated Lil Wayne, Young Thug, Andre 3000, Nas and Lil Ugly Mane to be his favorite rappers, and hopes to collaborate with Drake, PartyNextDoor, or FKA twigs in the future.[1] Clams Casino has been a common comparison with Yung Gud's works, which he addressed in that, like Yung Lean's frequent juxtaposition with Lil B, "It's their only reference because everything else they listen to is straight hip hop. They don't know all the shit that I hear in Clams Casino. They don't hear what he's influenced by. For me, it's like he's just one of them all."[1] He has explained how often he makes his music:

"Sometimes I don't do it for months; sometimes I do it all day every day. But it's been the only thing I can think about for six years. I don't care about anything else. [...] I care about a lot of things, but I wouldn't care about all of the other things if I didn't make music. All of the other things are based on me doing music in some shape or form. Everything else in life becomes okay or fun if I can do this. If I couldn't do this I’d lay down forever, put a pillow over my head and just lay there. I'd eat and shower maybe once a week, but I'd be posted in one spot forever."[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 Bell, Max (5 June 2014). "Interview: Yung Gud". Red Bull Music Academy. Retrieved 9 February 2016.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 Friedlander, Emilie (16 July 2014). ""Taking Arizona Iced Tea and Making It Cry": An Interview with Yung Lean and the Sad Boys". The Fader. Retrieved 9 February 2016.
  3. Platt, John (27 February 2015). "Yung Lean – Unknown Memory". The Line of Best Fit. Retrieved 12 February 2016.
  4. Levy, Pat (26 September 2014). "Yung Lean – Unknown Memory". Consequence of Sound. Retrieved 12 February 2016.
  5. Pattison, Louis (5 December 2014). "Unknown Memory". Fact. The Vinyl Factory. Retrieved 12 February 2016.
  6. Pearce, Sheldon (2 October 2014). "Yung Lean – Unknown Memory". Tiny Mix Tapes. Retrieved 12 February 2016.
  7. Bromwich, Jonah (24 September 2014). "Yung Lean: Unknown Memory". Pitchfork Media. Retrieved 12 February 2016.
  8. Levy, Pat (1 August 2013). "Yung Lean – Unknown Death 2002". Consequence of Sound. Retrieved 12 February 2016.
  9. 1 2 808s Jake (6 September 2014). "Tinashe – "2 On (Yung Gud ☹ Remix)"". Complex. Retrieved 12 February 2016.
  10. 1 2 D. McDermott, Patrick (24 November 2014). "Sad Boys Producer Yung Gud Premieres 'Beautiful, Wonderful' EP". The Fader. Retrieved 9 February 2016.
  11. Ryce, Andrew (4 December 2014). "Yung Gud – Beautiful, Wonderful". Resident Advisor. Retrieved 9 February 2016.
  12. "Sad Boy producer Yung Gud readies Beautiful, Wonderful EP — listen to ‘My Guns’". Fact. The Vinyl Factory. 10 November 2014. Retrieved 13 February 2016.
  13. 1 2 3 Saxelby, Ruth (5 February 2015). "S-Type And Yung Gud Have Made The Sonic Equivalent Of The Fire Emoji". The Fader. Retrieved 12 February 2016.
  14. Walker, Angus (27 April 2015). "Deniro Farrar – World On My Shoulders 3.0 (Prod. By Yung Gud) [New Song]". HotNewHipHop. Retrieved 12 February 2016.
  15. Lester, Paul (24 December 2014). "The playlist: the best new bands of 2014, with Shamir and Prada Mane". The Guardian. Guardian Media Group. Retrieved 12 February 2016.
  16. Badlands (Media notes). Halsey. Astralwerks . 2015. 2547360359.
  17. 1 2 Friedlander, Emilie (30 May 2014). "Jacques Greene Announces Phantom Vibrate Remixes EP, Has Yung Gud Mess with "No Excuse"". The Fader. Retrieved 12 February 2016.
  18. Price, Joe (31 May 2014). "Jacques Greene – "No Excuse (Yung Gud Remix)"". Pigeons & Planes. Retrieved 12 February 2016.
  19. 1 2 Price, Joe (20 December 2014). "Jacques Greene – "No Excuse (Yung Gud VIP RMX)". Pigeons & Planes. Retrieved 12 February 2016.
  20. Ingham, Tim (3 March 2015). "SoundCloud ads are paying out €150k a month". Music Business Worldwide. Retrieved 12 February 2016.
  21. 1 2 Gardner, Constant (28 June 2015). "Listen to Yung Gud's Icy Remix of Meek Mill's "Monster"". Pigeons & Planes. Retrieved 12 February 2016.
  22. Brewer, Dylan (30 September 2015). "Listen To Kacy Hill's Foreign Fields (Yung Gud remix) Now!". Def Jam Recordings. Retrieved 12 February 2016.
  23. Black, Adrienne (30 September 2015). "Kacy Hill – "Foreign Fields (Yung Gud Remix)"". Pigeons & Planes. Retrieved 12 February 2016.
  24. Yates, Siena (3 November 2015). "Album review: Kacy Hill, Bloo EP". Stuff.co.nz. Fairfax New Zealand. Retrieved 12 February 2016.

External links

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