Album Info
| Artist: | 21 Savage |
| Album: | American Dream |
| Released: | Worldwide, 15 Mar 2024 |
Tracklist:
| A1 | 21 Savage - American Dream | |
| Keyboards - James Owens Jr. | ||
| Mixed By - Miles Walker | ||
| Performer - Heather Carmilia Joseph | ||
| A2 | 21 Savage - All Of Me | |
| Hihat - Noc | ||
| Keyboards [Auxiliary Keys] - Jalen Jackson | ||
| Mixed By - Miles Walker | ||
| Programmed By, Recorded By - Isaiah "ibmixing" Brown | ||
| A3 | 21 Savage - Redrum | |
| Co-producer - AyoPeeb | ||
| Mixed By - Miles Walker | ||
| Producer - London On Da track | ||
| Recorded By - Isaiah "ibmixing" Brown | ||
| Recorded By [Assisted] - Shawn Pedan | ||
| Recorded By [Usher Raymond IV] - Kevin Janes | ||
| Vocals [Additional] - Usher Raymond IV | ||
| A4 | 21 Savage With Doja Cat - N.H.I.E. | |
| Keyboards [Additional] - Paul "Nineteen85" Jefferies | ||
| Mixed By - Miles Walker | ||
| Producer - Jonah, Kurtis McKenzie , Scribz Riley | ||
| Recorded By - Isaiah "ibmixing" Brown | ||
| Recorded By [Assisted] - Shawn Pedan | ||
| B1 | 21 Savage - Sneaky | |
| Mixed By - Miles Walker | ||
| Mixed By [Assisted] - Shawn Pedan | ||
| Producer - Coupe | ||
| Recorded By - Isaiah "ibmixing" Brown | ||
| B2 | 21 Savage With Young Thug & Metro Boomin - Pop Ur Shit | |
| Mixed By - A. "Bainz" Bains, Ethan Stevens | ||
| Producer - Allen Ritter, Metro Boomin | ||
| Recorded By - Ethan Stevens | ||
| Strings [Additional] - Peter Lee Johnson | ||
| B3 | 21 Savage - Letter To My Brudda | |
| Dialog - 21 Lil Harold | ||
| Mixed By - Alex Tumay | ||
| Mixed By [Assisted] - Shawn Pedan | ||
| Producer - G06beatz, KXVI, Lil Tyh | ||
| Recorded By - Isaiah "ibmixing" Brown | ||
| Vocals [Additional] - 21 Lil Harold, Paola Barba | ||
| B4 | 21 Savage With Lil Durk & Metro Boomin - Dangerous | |
| Co-producer - Cashmere Brown | ||
| Mixed By - Ethan Stevens | ||
| Mixed By [Assisted] - Shawn Pedan | ||
| Producer - Boogzdabeast, Metro Boomin | ||
| Recorded By - Ethan Stevens, Isaiah "ibmixing" Brown | ||
| Vocals [Additional] - 21 Lil Harold | ||
| C1 | 21 Savage With travis Scott & Metro Boomin - Née-nah | |
| Mixed By - Ethan Stevens | ||
| Producer - Metro Boomin | ||
| Recorded By - Ethan Stevens, Isaiah "ibmixing" Brown | ||
| C2 | 21 Savage - See The Real | |
| Mixed By - Alex Tumay, Teezio | ||
| Producer - 10 Rock, OG Parker, Smash | ||
| Recorded By - Isaiah "ibmixing" Brown | ||
| C3 | 21 Savage With Summer Walker - Prove It | |
| Mixed By - David "Dosdias" Bishop, Isaiah "ibmixing" Brown | ||
| Producer - Coupe , Isaiah "ibmixing" Brown, Tye Beats | ||
| Recorded By - David "Dosdias" Bishop, Isaiah "ibmixing" Brown | ||
| C4 | 21 Savage With Brent Faiyaz - Should've Wore A Bonnet | |
| Mixed By - Miles Walker | ||
| Producer - Cardo Got Wings, Dpat, Esta., Johnny Juliano | ||
| Recorded By - Isaiah "ibmixing" Brown | ||
| D1 | 21 Savage With Burna Boy & Metro Boomin - Just Like Me | |
| Choir [Additional] - Higher Learning | ||
| Mixed By - Ethan Stevens | ||
| Producer - Boogzdabeast, FNZ, Metro Boomin | ||
| Recorded By - Isaiah "ibmixing" Brown, William "Bilz" Dougan | ||
| Recorded By [Burna Boy] - Ethan Stevens | ||
| D2 | 21 Savage With Tommy Newport & Mikky Ekko - Red Sky | |
| Co-producer - Blaqsmurph | ||
| Keyboards [Additional] - Blaqsmurph | ||
| Mixed By - Alex Tumay | ||
| Producer - Honorable C.N.O.T.E. | ||
| Recorded By - Isaiah "ibmixing" Brown | ||
| D3 | 21 Savage With Mariah the Scientist - Dark Days | |
| Mixed By - Miles Walker | ||
| Producer - Jonas Lee, KXVI, Kid Hazel, Yousef Sameh | ||
| Recorded By - Isaiah "ibmixing" Brown, Natalie D'Orlando | ||
| Recorded By [Assisted] - Shawn Pedan | ||
| Vocals [Additional] - Atia "Ink" Boggs |
Related Content:
Info About Buying Vinyl From Our Record Store
- We are a small independent record store located at 91 Plenty Rd, Preston in Melbourne, Australia (North of Northcote, between Thornbury & Reservoir)
- We buy and sell new and used vinyl records - if you have a collection you'd like to sell please click here.
- We ship Australia wide for a flat rate of $10 for standard shipping or $15 for express post.
- Free Shipping for orders $150 and over.
- You can also pick up your order in store, just select Local Pickup at the checkout.
- We also ship internationally - prices vary depending on weight and location.
- We ship vinyls in thick, rigid carboard mailers with a crushable zone on either side, and for extra safety we bubble wrap the records.
- In stock vinyl is usally shipped next business day, please check the availability field at the top of the product page to see whether the record is currently in stock or if it is available from the supplier as well as estimated shipping times.
- If you order an in stock item together with a pre order or back order (listed as available from supplier rather than in stock) then the order will be shipped together when all items arrive. If you would like the in stock items shipped first please place two separate orders or contact us to arrange shipping items separately.
- We are strongly committed to customer satisfaction. If you experience any problems with your order contact us so we can rectify the situation. If the record arrives damaged or doesn't arrive we will cover the cost of replacing or returning the record.
- If you change your mind you have 30 days to return your record but you must cover the cost of returning it to the store.
- You can contact our Melbourne record shop at (03) 9939 3807 or at info@funkyduckvinyl.com
- Happy Listening!
Description
2LP - Limited Edition Red Vinyl.
21 Savage’s third solo album, American Dream, begins with his mother, Heather Joseph, describing her family’s emigration from Britain to America during his childhood. “Every path that I walked was for my son,” she tells us. (Big Rube of Dungeon Family fame penned her introduction.) It’s a concept many others have used before, most famously by Jay-Z and his mother Gloria Carter on “December 4th” from 2003’s The Black Album. But longtime fans worried about the Atlanta rapper veering into maudlin self-aggrandisement shouldn’t worry. “Memories in my head, God talking to me/I know Satan in my head but God walking with me,” he raps on the next track, “All of Me.” But he hastens to add, “Bulletproof my cars/Meet a homebody, fuck it, kill him in his yard.”
By now, it’s clear that there’s a stark difference between 21 Savage the wealthy musician, father of three children, and humanitarian known for his charitable works; and 21 Savage the avatar, whose deadpan boasts about murdering rivals, stunting on X bitches, and bullying snitches has thrilled listeners for nearly a decade. His assertion that these tales are informed by youthful, real-life adventures in the streets may contribute to their verisimilitude, but it doesn’t address the dissonance between his two personas, and whether his audience would accept him any other way. Jay-Z thrived in an era when rappers who hit gold were encouraged to evolve from their hustler origins and embrace less fraught themes like partying in clubs, buying expensive toys, and building successful businesses. Today, it seems artists who attempt to break character — see Gucci Mane, Killer Mike, T.I., and other rehabilitated trappers — risk losing hardcore fans turned off by anything that smacks of pop compromise.