For the second time in the seven years since his death, Mac Miller fans have the chance to listen to a new album. The US rapper was 26 when he died from an accidental overdose in 2018. Friends say he was lost in his prime and fans' hunger for new music has remained.
Mac Miller was a rapper, singer, producer and songwriter who was very active in the 2010s. It could be said that he was a defining force of the decade with his creativity and artistic prowess.
Sitting in the back of the screening of director Samuel Jerome Mason’s Balloonerism: A Film Based on the Album by Mac Miller, I thought about how Malcolm would’ve loved this animated companion piece soundtracked by his not-quite-lost 2014 album,
Mac Miller's second posthumous album, Balloonerism, arrived on Friday (Jan. 17). The project lands exactly five years to the day Circles was released in 2020 and just two days shy of what would have been Mac's 33rd birthday.
SZA is reflecting on her friendship with Mac Miller after the release of his posthumous album, Balloonerism. On Friday (Jan. 17), the 35-year-old Grammy-winning artist honored the late Pittsburgh rapper, urging fans to listen to the new project, which dropped on what would have been Miller’s 33rd birthday.
Mac Miller's family is releasing another posthumous album five years after "Circles" came out. "Balloonerism" will be accompanied by a short film.
Written and recorded primarily in 2014, Balloonerism marks the musician’s second posthumous LP and is set to arrive this Friday, January, 17: two days ahead of Mac’s 33rd birthday and exactly five years since the release of his first posthumous album, Circles.
Amazon has released exclusive vinyl and merch in honor of Mac Miller's posthumous album "Balloonerism." Shop Balloonerism vinyl online.
Southerners love macaroni and cheese in nearly all of its forms, but this recipe rises to the top, thanks to a special ingredient—creamed corn!
SZA recently posted a heartfelt tribute to Mac Miller in the wake of his recent posthumous release, 'Balloonerism'.
For hardcore fans, the bulk of Balloonerism is nothing new. The songs have not been reinvented or seemingly dabbled with. Instead, the album sounds like outtakes from Miller’s 2013 sophomore effort, Watching Movies with the Sound Off, and Faces, the self-released mixtape that followed a year later.