Latest Release
- AUG 16, 2024
- 27 Songs
- I Had Some Help (feat. Morgan Wallen) - Single · 2024
- Stoney (Deluxe) · 2015
- Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse (Soundtrack From & Inspired by the Motion Picture) · 2018
- beerbongs & bentleys · 2017
- Hollywood's Bleeding · 2019
- beerbongs & bentleys · 2018
- Stoney (Deluxe) · 2016
- F-1 Trillion · 2024
- The Diamond Collection (Deluxe) · 2016
- Wow. - Single · 2018
Essential Albums
- “I’m not trying to make anything massive, I’m not trying to make hit records,” Post Malone tells Apple Music’s Zane Lowe. It’s somewhat unconvincing coming from one of the most popular artists on the planet, but whatever he’s doing, it’s working. His third full-length album, Hollywood’s Bleeding, is bright and adventurous. Sure, it’s filled with all the flexing and bravado he’s known for, and features from Meek Mill, Travis Scott, Young Thug, Swae Lee, and more prove that Post hasn’t veered too far from hip-hop. But it’s also more sentimental, gentle, and pop-focused than ever. “Allergic” and “A Thousand Bad Times” are bouncy and melodic, and “I’m Gonna Be” is a joyous celebration of having fun and living your own truth. It’s fun to hear about Post’s opulent lifestyle, but he knows his fans, and he knows how to connect with them on a more grounded level. “It means a lot that if somebody is hundreds of thousands of miles away, they can sit and relate to the music,” he says. “And they come up to me to say something like, ‘Hey, I don’t want a picture, I just wanted to say your song saved my life.’” Beneath the Versace boxers and mink coats, Post is clearly wounded, and breakup tracks abound on the album’s more down-to-earth, relatable side. Future and Halsey feature on album highlight “Die For Me,” a slick, bitter attack on a lying ex-lover. Each artist takes turns airing dirty laundry and singing the chorus: “Said you’d take a bullet, told me you would die for me/I had a really bad feeling you been lying to me.” “Staring at the Sun” is a gorgeous synth-pop collaboration with SZA about the final throes of a doomed relationship: “If you keep staring at the sun, you won’t see what you have become/This can’t be everything you thought it was, blinded by the thought of us.” “I want to do something weird and funky,” he tells Lowe, preparing listeners for the album’s more surprising moments. Kanye West cowrote (but doesn’t appear on) “Internet,” a rejection of social media and technology which blooms into a majestic orchestral arrangement. But the most unlikely collaboration on the album—and possibly of 2019 as a whole—can be found on “Take What You Want,” featuring Travis Scott and Ozzy Osbourne. Scott’s smoky Auto-Tune isn’t the most natural accompaniment to an eerie Black Sabbath-esque riff and scorching guitar solo, but, somehow, it works.
- In 2018, no one could tell Austin Post what to do. The cloud-rap-rock imprimatur and irreverent frat boy persona the Texas-reared singer had cultivated since his initial monolithic breakthrough, the 2015 featherweight trap anthem “White Iverson,” had already drawn in millions of listeners across the world. Singles like the celebratory, Quavo-assisted “Congratulations” solidified his status as a hit maker, with cosigns and collaborators from across pop and rap. beerbongs & bentleys, Post’s sophomore release after his 2016 Top 5 album Stoney, was positioned to not just be a chart juggernaut but his first auteur statement—done on the highest scale and fully on his own terms. Outfitted with guest spots from some of 2010s hip-hop’s most celebrated names—Nicki Minaj, YG, Ty Dolla $ign—beerbongs & bentleys is an extensive project that relies on Post’s characteristic dichotomy of stylistic playfulness and ruminations on substance abuse and heartbreak. It feels unfettered and confident, with a greater cohesiveness than his previous recordings, gaining him—for the first time—some critical respect. Opening track “Paranoid” launches the listener immediately into a world where every struggle assumes an equal weight, bemoaned earnestly in Post’s plaintive croon. In his delivery, an image of sitting up at night with a gun, fearing for his life, feels as trenchant as his descriptions of granular fallouts of a breakup on “Better Now” (“You’re not even speaking to my friends, no/You knew all my uncles and my aunts, though”). Post didn’t necessarily need a smash to build his crossover audience, but beerbongs & bentleys yielded several, including the No. 1 “Psycho” with Ty Dolla Sign, built on one of Post’s most unabashed singsong earworms. Meanwhile, the uncanny trap creeper “rockstar,” assisted by 21 Savage, not only topped the charts but broke industry records. The muted, lightly gothic track about the depths of celebrity excess might initially have seemed a strange pick for one of the highest-streaming songs of the early 21st century. However, its hook, hedonistic attitude, and the sly interplay between the two rising stars made it an inescapable banger writ large.
Albums
Artist Playlists
- Explore the pop-rap rockstar's biggest tracks.
- A testament to the power of shape-shifting onscreen identities.
- Post Malone opens up about his new album Twelve Carat Toothache.
- Lean back and relax with some of their mellowest cuts.
- The rapper turned rock star turned Nashville darling went on the road again.
- Post Malone takes his fifth album, AUSTIN, on the road. Get the set list here.
- A deeper dive into F-1 Trillion (Long Bed).
- A deep dive into the tracks from Post’s studio in LA.
- Zane Lowe, Nadeska, Dotty, and guests in Las Vegas.
- Conversation around his latest album, 'AUSTIN.'
- The artist on “I Like You (A Happier Song) [feat. Doja Cat]."
- Conversation around his album 'Twelve Carat Toothache.'
- The artist on "Cooped Up (feat. Roddy Ricch)."
More To See
About Post Malone
When Austin Post uploaded “White Iverson” to social media in early 2015, he was 19, scrounging for ramen and sleeping in a friend’s wardrobe. Plenty has changed, but Post’s appeal is more or less the same. No matter how platinum the records go, he still has the air of an ordinary guy, a Crocs-and-Bud-Light kid from the suburbs who stumbled backward into fame just by strumming what was in his heart. Post Malone (he let a rap name generator give him his alias) didn’t just look beyond genre; he broke it down, mixing the dark grandeur of trap with the anthemic release of classic rock and country. His signature tracks—“rockstar,” “Sunflower,” “Congratulations”—were both bleak and beautiful, spaced-out and mainstream, hip-hop but not quite. The bass boomed, the melodies soared and there was Post Malone in the middle, rap-singing his woes like a lonely prince self-exiled in the castle. At live shows, there were no dancers, no pyrotechnics, just Post, in a baggy football jersey with a cigarette in his hand, bringing 60,000 people into his bedroom: the pop star as moody teen. Born in 1995 in Syracuse, New York, and raised in the suburbs of Dallas, Post Malone grew up on a mix of country, classic rock, and rap: In one well-circulated anecdote, young Post would get called into the living room to entertain Dad and friends with the dance to Terror Squad’s “Lean Back.” He turned a love for the video game Guitar Hero into a love of actual guitar, playing in a metal band during school while also starting to explore hip-hop. “White Iverson” led to his 2016 debut album, Stoney; beerbongs & bentleys burrowed further into Post’s luxurious, messy melancholy, while 2019’s Hollywood’s Bleeding found him buttoning up and moving closer to the conventions of mainstream pop, all while retaining his peculiar touch. He only fortified his repertoire with Twelve Carat Toothache (2022) and AUSTIN (2023). Those projects saw him collaborate with songwriters like Max Martin and artists like Doja Cat and The Kid LAROI, with Post continuing to bring his idiosyncrasies to the mainstream. But his biggest about-face thus far may have come in 2024 when he turned toward country, first appearing on Beyoncé’s “LEVII’S JEANS” (from COWBOY CARTER), and then releasing his own F-1 Trillion, which featured Hank Williams, Jr., Tim McGraw, Morgan Wallen, and even Dolly Parton.
- HOMETOWN
- Syracuse, NY, United States
- BORN
- July 4, 1995
- GENRE
- Hip-Hop/Rap