However, it’s the single ‘Asura & Indra’ that sees the evolution of Blanco’s signature sound. Proclaiming that it “costs to be a boss”, the track is a sunny, boastful addition to the mixtape. featuring the Afrobeat superstar group NSG, he slows down the usual uptempo music to blend their respected genres for a delightful track to two-step to. Well, you can hear this all over ‘City of God’. One of the standout features of Blanco’s music is the ricocheting bassline of Brazilian funk – aka baile funk – found in ‘Pull Up’. But with his debut solo mixtape, he shows that he doesn’t need to rely on his signature funk to make a good song. With his solo popularity rising out of the south side of the River Thames, Blanco’s ‘Pull Up’ was a soundtrack to pre-pandemic parties and raves. Breathing life into quite a repetitive drill scene, the 22-year-old’s worldly sound and versatility is all over his debut mixtape, ‘City of God’. Hailing from one of the most notorious drill groups in the UK, Kennington’s Harlem Spartan Blanco has finally release his first mixtape, ‘City of God’, without his boys behind him.
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