From 'Live.Love.A$AP' to recent singles, his sound pulls in collaborators across genres.
For a quick sense of his style, check out 'Praise The Lord (Da Shine)' with Skepta or 'A$AP Forever' with Moby. They show how he fits rap into bigger, sometimes weirder, productions.
He broke out with 'Live.Love.A$AP' in 2011, and tracks like 'Peso' put his Harlem flow on the map. You can hear him working with everyone from Skrillex on 'Wild For The Night' to M.I.A. on 'Fine Whine,' which keeps his albums from feeling stuck in one lane. That mix of rap and other sounds, plus his fashion work, makes him more than just another mixtape guy.
He started with the A$AP Mob in Harlem and dropped 'Live.Love.A$AP' in 2011. After that came studio albums like 'Long.Live.A$AP' in 2013 and 'At.Long.Last.A$AP' in 2015. The 2019 assault case in Sweden and his prison sentence there added a public layer beyond the music.
Keep it compact: a lyric you come back to, a live memory, or the part of the catalog you would point someone toward first.
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