(And he's aided by keyboard and co-writing from another psych/pop blender, Andrew VanWyngarden of MGMT.) By the time Testing gets to stuff like "CALLDROPS," Rocky starts really getting out there. Songs like "Fukk Sleep" show Rocky getting better at balancing his pop side and his psych side that one's got an addictive hook, but it's not a "banger." It literally sounds like he recorded it on a lack of sleep, and the FKA twigs guest vocal takes it almost into Portishead territory.
And the only time Testing really sounds like anything on the radio is when Playboi Carti and Smooky MarGielaa show up for an auto-tune fest on "Buck Shots." For the most part, Rocky is in his own lane. He's got a few zeitgeist-y moments in his lyrics, like the couple times he calls Trump an asshole, or when it seems like he's paying attention to the #MeToo movement when he raps "would say 'suck my dick' but that's sexual harassment" on "Tony Tone" (though any wokeness on that topic is perhaps cancelled out by featuring Kodak Black - who is heard recording his verse over the phone from prison - on "CALLDROPS"), but you certainly can't pigeonhole Testing as a political album. Edan isn't a reference point that comes up too often in contemporary mainstream rap, but it's clearer than ever that Rocky is not concerned with current trends. It's a moment that reminds me of Edan's underground psych-rap classic Beauty and the Beat, and it's not the only time Testing echoes that album. Then, Rocky starts slurring like he's stoned, and then Khloe Anna comes in to sing a bridge that sounds like '60s psych-soul. Testing plays out like a trip, and the acid kicks in about halfway through track two, "A$AP Forever REMIX." It prominently samples Moby's "Porcelain" and starts out with Rocky once again rapping circles around the competition, until the drums cut out. Rocky himself has a co-production credit on most songs, and it's clear that he is getting more and more invested in that side of things, and in singing too. It's the trippiest music he's made yet, and while he remains at the top of his game as a rapper when he wants to (as on "Distorted Records"), the album is often more focused on music that doesn't have rapping at all. As weirder followups often do, it lacked the cultural impact of its predecessor, but that didn't deter Rocky, who is sticking to his guns and diving even deeper into psychedelia on Testing. ASAP (most overtly on "L$D" and "Pharsyde" but also on a handful of other songs). But instead of further exploring pop-rap appeal, Rocky eschewed many of the sounds that made him accessible and instead explored psychedelia on his next LP, 2015's At. It was jam-packed with bangers, proved that Rocky could easily trade verses with Kendrick Lamar and Drake, and a handful of its songs remain generation-defining songs today. After first picking up buzz as one of the leaders of the short-lived "cloud rap" movement - which was sort of like rap's own chillwave era - Rocky established himself as a leader of rap music in general with 2013's Long.