USA TODAY's best songs of 2018 (so far) -

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Pickle Dick

JUNAY
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https://www.usatoday.com/story/life/music/2018/06/26/usa-todays-best-songs-2018-so-far/732225002/

2018 is almost halfway behind us, and the passing months have brought a wealth of new music that already ranks among the year's best.

USA TODAY's list includes superstar singles by Drake and Childish Gambino and breakthrough tracks from Snail Mail and Troye Sivan, as well as other sleeper classics listeners may have missed.

"Nice for What," Drake

From giving away wads of cash in his "God’s Plan" video to reuniting the cast of "Degrassi" for "I’m Upset," Drake’s 2018 has largely been defined by the rapper staging headline-grabbing stunts to distract from middling singles and a very embarrassing feud with Pusha T. That is, with the exception of "Nice for What," a deliriously addictive single that gets its melody from a Lauryn Hill sample and its spirit from its New Orleans bounce influences, its working-girls lyrics enough to win back even the most skeptical Drake fan. — Maeve McDermott


“God’s Favorite Customer,” Father John Misty

Not only is "Customer" the title track off his latest album, it’s also one of the best ballads Father John Misty (real name: Josh Tillman) has released. Here, the folk-rock singer poetically wrestles with his abandoned Christianity, pairing his tender croon with Natalie Mering’s angelic harmonies as he begs for forgiveness. — Patrick Ryan


"Heat Wave," Snail Mail

The best song from one of the year’s very best rock albums, 19-year-old Lindsey Jordan’s ode to a green-eyed heartbreaker is equal parts salty and sweet, meticulously constructed for emotional devastation. — McDermott


“This Is America,” Childish Gambino

Arguably the most vital music video since Kendrick Lamar’s “Humble” last year, “America” paints a visceral portrait of gun violence in the United States and a loss of black innocence. Equal parts disturbing and entrancing, it’s a trap-gospel hymn that takes Gambino (stage name of actor/rapper Donald Glover) to new creative heights. — Ryan


"Drip," Cardi B

Any number of songs from Cardi B’s debut album, "Invasion of Privacy," could belong on this list — especially her J Balvin/Bad Bunny-featuring summertime stunner "I Like It." But a favorite is "Drip," the perfect union between Cardi, her husband, Offset, and her brothers-in-law of Migos, a biting rhyme-off in which Takeoff’s verse has the audacity to steal the whole show. — McDermott


“My My My!,” Troye Sivan

No song in recent memory has better captured the euphoria of first love than this catchy-as-hell, unabashedly queer anthem. Released in January as the first single from Sivan’s new album, “Bloom” (out Aug. 31), it’s a shame this never got the love it deserved on pop radio. — Ryan


"Into It," Camila Cabello

"Havana" and "Never Be the Same" may have been the record label-anointed singles from Cabello's debut, but "Into It" is the album's sleeper hit, another smash single that never was. Borrowing from Ariana Grande's coy sensuality and Carly Rae Jepsen's pop slickness, the track is an intriguing taste of Cabello's potential. — McDermott


"Wasted Times," The Weeknd

After fully leaning into glittering '80s-style pop on 2016 album "Starboy," The Weeknd went back to his sad-boy ways on surprise EP "My Dear Melancholy" — and he's much better for it. This particularly hypnotic, woozy track makes us wish that every high-profile breakup inspired music this good. — Ryan


"Sad!," XXXTentacion

"Sad!," which vaulted to No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 following the 20-year-old rapper's murder last week, is an unlikely hit: melancholy and sparse, with mumbled lyrics about loneliness and suicidal thoughts. But in light of his troubled childhood, domestic-abuse allegations and efforts to turn his life around in his final months, it's an eerily poignant reminder of a life cut short. — Ryan


“Oh, What a World,” Kacey Musgraves

Trying to single out just one track from Musgraves’ exquisite country-pop crossover “Golden Hour” is a Herculean task. But "World," with its delicate banjo licks and vocoder-enhanced chorus, makes what could have been a cheesy tune about life's beauty into one of the dreamiest songs you've ever heard. — Ryan

 

Fareal

will definitely consider what you have said
True & Honest Fan
kiwifarms.net
Nice For What might be better but God’s Plan has the basement dweller lyric of the year:

she say do you love me, I tell her only partly
I only love my bed and my mom, I’m sorry
 

PantsFreeZone

Smartest monkey on the spinning space rock
kiwifarms.net
I don't listen to new music but, if the past has taught me anything, the best song of 2018 is definitely a Taylor Swift song.
 

m0rnutz

Not a furry
kiwifarms.net
"a biting rhyme-off"

Ah yes. Some dope fire rhymes such as
Shit on these hoes (shit)
Light up my wrist on these hoes (wrist)
Now I look down on these bitches (down)
I feel like I'm on stilts on these hoes (woo)
 

Red Sun

kiwifarms.net
"a biting rhyme-off"

Ah yes. Some dope fire rhymes such as

Shit on these hoes (shit)
Light up my wrist on these hoes (wrist)
Now I look down on these bitches (down)
I feel like I'm on stilts on these hoes (woo)

I'm not into rap or anything, so I need someone to help me give the benefit of the doubt here. Do these guys start out writing genuinely great rhymes and then start putting out lazy shit like this due to complacency, or do record labels actually give anything with "hoe" used 3 times in 4 lines a deal?
 

protomartyr

Weebfinder General
kiwifarms.net
They didn't even get the right FJM song. Mr Tillman makes God's Favourite Customer sound like shit.
 

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