The Pink Lavalamp (album)

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ReleasedDecember 8, 2008
Length70:18
The Pink Lavalamp
Studio album by
ReleasedDecember 8, 2008
Studio Frederick Douglass Academy Music Lab (Harlem, New York)
GenreHip hop
Length70:18
LabelSelf-released
Charles Hamilton chronology
Sonic The Hamilton
(2008)
The Pink Lavalamp
(2008)
Hamilton, Charles
(2016)
10 Year Anniversary reissue cover

The Pink Lavalamp is the debut studio album by American hip hop recording artist Charles Hamilton, released December 8, 2008, by Hamilton himself, due to disagreements with his former label, Interscope Records. It was produced entirely by Hamilton.

In August 2008, Charles Hamilton announced via interview that he had signed to Interscope Records.[1] After beginning a series of mixtapes known as the Hamiltonization Process, Hamilton released his debut single "Brooklyn Girls" on November 11, 2008, which proved to be a hit.[2] Hamilton was rumored to be recording his major-label debut and was under pressure from the label to include "Brooklyn Girls" on the album. He later disagreed with this idea and chose to release his debut effort independently. The album did not include new material and was actually recorded during Hamilton's notorious bout of homelessness in the recording studio of the Frederick Douglass Academy in Harlem, New York, which Charles and other members of Demevolist Music Group dubbed "The Lab".[3]

Music and lyrics

The Pink Lavalamp is an introspective, loose concept album detailing Hamilton's thoughts and emotions leading up to an attempted suicide.[4] The production is rooted in soulful samples mixed with down-tempo grooves and draw influence from jazz, psychedelic funk, R&B, and rock.[5] Lyrically, the album concerns themes of depression, substance abuse, infidelity, and individuality. It was the final project in the Hamiltonization Process.[6]

Critical reception

Track listing

References

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