Gig review: Tyga, Glasgow
ABC
**
There was a certain pop gloss to his presentation too, thanks to a distracting display of kaleidoscopic graphics on the big screen, providing stylised accompaniment as he jumped nimbly from track to track with a pretty consistent flow.
Titles such as Dope, Rack City and Badass Bitches suggest that Tyga is hardly trying to blow the doors off hip-hop’s tired lyrical preoccupations. At least Palm Trees provided some laidback funk respite from the barrage of bragging.
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Hide AdIn lieu of any great musical excitement, his DJ fired off periodic klaxon blasts, and there were belated attempts to engage with the fans on a brief trip into the crowd where he was borne aloft on sturdy shoulders. A line of girls were invited onstage, presumably to gyrate, though most of them used their moment in the spotlight to film Tyga on their phones.
A tribute to the late Tupac Shakur was not a misty-eyed elegy, more a bid to posit himself as a successor. But Tyga didn’t quite have the charisma, abilities or – the aggressive hook of closing number Molly aside – the material to maintain energy and interest throughout his hour-long set.