The world is quite excited about Bruno Mars’ forthcoming new album 24K Magic. The lead single has been sitting comfortably in the top 5 of Billboard Hot 100 charts for a few weeks now and the follow up. Album Videos: Video Title. Watch 24k magic. Video URL Embeds. I agree to receive personalized updates and marketing messages about Bruno Mars based on my.
That's What I Like' is a song by American singer and songwriter Bruno Mars from his third studio album 24K Magic (2016). The song was released as the
That’s What I Like” is a song by American singer and songwriter Bruno Mars from his third studio album 24K Magic (2016). The song was released as the album’s second single on January 30, 2017. It is the highest charting single from Mars’ studio album 24K Magic, surpassing the single of the same nameby reaching number one on the
Bruno Mars – 24K Magic (2016)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/96 kHz | Time – 33:32 minutes | 721 MB | Genre: Pop
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download – Source: TIDAL | Front Cover
Critically-acclaimed international megastar Bruno Mars has unveiled his first piece of solo music in nearly four years. “Twenty-four Karat Magic” – emphatically – not an album with which to man the barricades, but Mars manages to deliver a lot of conspicuous consumption with more charm than boorishness. Obsessed as it is with surfaces, “24K Magic” packs considerable musical depth in its slavish attention to detail. The cold nihilism of contemporary R&B is anathema to Mars, an old-school song-and-dance man, and so 24K Magic’s vibe of choice revisits the era of Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis and new jack swing – early 90s R&B.
Released four years after the multi-platinum Unorthodox Jukebox, 24K Magic – or XXIVK Magic, if you’re foolish enough to go by the cover – might as well be considered the full-length sequel to “Uptown Funk,” Bruno Mars’ 2014 hit collaboration with Mark Ronson. On his third album, Mars, joined primarily by old comrades Philip Lawrence, Brody Brown, and James Fauntleroy, sheds the reggae and new wave inspirations and goes all-out R&B. This is less an affected retro-soul pastiche – like, say, The Return of Bruno – than it is an amusing ’80s-centric tribute to black radio. Sonically, ’80s here means the gamut and the aftershocks felt the following decade, from the sparking midtempo groove in “Chunky,” which recalls Shalamar even more than album two’s “Treasure,” to some full-blooded new jack swing moves. The clock is turned back a couple more decades to passable strutting James Brown-isms in “Perm,” while “Too Good to Say Goodbye,” co-written by Babyface, draws its structure and certain components from early-’70s Philly soul. Almost all of the material involves Mars in winking bad-boy player mode. He’s often just ampin’ like Bobby, yet the performances are undeniable, dealt out with all the determination and attitude of a kid who just bought a custom lavender Razz with his paper route money. Lead single “24K Magic” is a scrupulous compound of early-’80s funk tricks, another needed injection of good-time energy into commercial airwaves, but the album’s true triumph is buried near the end – not that it takes long to get there – and scrapes the dawn of the ’90s. In living color, decked out with a rattling breakbeat and zipping bassline, “Finesse” revisits the era when producers like Teddy Riley, Dave “Jam” Hall, and Dr. Freeze pushed their genre forward by fusing hip-hop to what they learned from electronic post-disco R&B pioneered by Leon Sylvers III, Kashif, and Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis. Like much of what precedes it, the song is a blast. Those who want their rich and modern synthesizer funk minus flash would do well to seek Bugz in the Attic’s “Consequences,” Dâm-Funk’s “Galactic Fun,” Amalia’s “Welcome to Me,” and Anderson Paak’s “Am I Wrong,” for starters.
Tracklist:
01 – 24K Magic
02 – Chunky
03 – Perm
04 – That’s What I Like
05 – Versace On The Floor
06 – Straight Up & Down
07 – Calling All My Lovelies
08 – Finesse
09 – Too Good To Say Goodbye
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