TM (album)

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TM
A drawing of several scattered figures
Studio album by
ReleasedNovember 18, 2022 (2022-11-18)
RecordedEarly 2020-August 2021
Length37:30
Label
  • Question Everything
  • RCA
Producer
  • Matt Champion
  • Kiko Merley
  • Joba
  • Jonah Abraham
  • Romil Hemnani
  • Bradford Lewis
  • Jabari Manwa
  • Baird
  • William Van Zandt
  • Goldwash
  • Alex Goose
  • Dom McLennon
  • Dutra
  • Grant Lapointe
  • Merlyn Wood
  • Solomonophonic
  • John DeBold
  • Coop The Truth
  • Dylan Neustadter
  • The Kount
  • Wesley Allen
Brockhampton chronology
The Family
(2022)
TM
(2022)

TM is the eighth and final studio album by American hip hop boy band Brockhampton. It was released on November 18, 2022, one day after the release of the group's previous studio album The Family, through RCA and Question Everything. For its entire rollout, The Family was advertised as the band's final album. A surprise release, TM was announced for release alongside a promo image for The Family, and was billed by the band as a "parting gift for fans".[1]

The album was executively produced by Brockhampton member Matt Champion, marking Champion's first production credit on a Brockhampton project and making TM one of two Brockhampton albums (along with The Family) where Kevin Abstract did not serve as an executive producer or creative director.[1][2] TM is also the only Brockhampton record to not feature vocalist and producer Bearface.

Background[edit]

The Family had been advertised as the final studio album from Brockhampton. Despite this, in a promo image posted to social media alongside the release of The Family, the band announced surprise album TM in small text towards the bottom of the image, reading "Surprise album (TM) midnight local."[3]

Recording[edit]

Stated in a press release, TM is "an album made up of songs that were started by the group during a two-week stint in Ojai, California in 2021, but were never fully completed during those sessions." The album is executively produced by Brockhampton member Matt Champion.[1][2] Although he is credited on the album, TM features no vocals or production credits from group member Bearface.

"Keep It Southern" and "Man on the Moon" were previously teased as part of the band's Technical Difficulties livestreams in 2020.

Critical reception[edit]

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[4]
Clash9/10[5]
Evening Standard[6]

Clash journalist James Mellen called TM "a classic Brockhampton record" that successfully ended the Brockhampton project, featuring "immaculate production, genre shapeshifting, and some of the cleanest verses from the group in quite some time".[5]

Track listing[edit]

TM track listing
No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."FMG"
  • Kiko Merley
  • Russell Boring
  • Jonah Abraham
  • Matthew Champion[b]
2:30
2."Animal"
  • I. Simpson
  • Abraham
  • Champion
  • Ryan Beatty
  • Jabari Manwa
  • Romil Hemnani
  • Baird Acheson
  • William Van Zandt
  • Goldwash
  • Bradford Lewis
  • Romil Hemnani
  • Bradford Lewis
  • Jabari Manwa
  • Baird
  • William Van Zandt
  • Goldwash
4:22
3."Listerine"
  • Hemnani
  • Merley
  • Abraham
  • Alex Goose
  • Dominique Simpson
  • Manwa[a]
  • Jared Solomon[a]
3:06
4."New Shoes"
  • I. Simpson
  • Manwa
  • Johnny Dutra
  • Abraham
  • Champion
  • Hemnani
  • Murda Beatz
  • William Wood
  • Hemnani
  • Abraham
  • Manwa
  • Dutra
3:18
5."Keep It Southern"
  • I. Simpson
  • Merley
  • Hemnani
  • Abraham
  • Grant Lapointe
  • William Wood
  • Hemnani
  • Abraham
  • Merley
  • Grant Lapointe
  • William Wood
1:57
6."Man on the Moon"
  • I. Simpson
  • Champion
  • Lapointe
  • Boring
  • Beatty
  • Simon Newsome
  • Hemnani
  • Merley
  • Abraham
  • Jared P. Solomon
  • John DeBold
  • Merley
  • Hemnani
  • Jared Solomon
  • Abraham
  • John DeBold
4:00
7."Better Things"
  • Champion
  • Merley
  • Boring
  • I. Simpson
  • Acheson
  • Champion
  • Merley
  • Baird
2:53
8."Crucify Me"
  • Boring
  • Lapointe
  • Merley
  • Champion
  • I. Simpson
  • Abraham
  • Jordon Lumley
  • Cooper McGill
  • Teddi Jones
  • Karim Hutton
  • Abraham
  • Merley
  • Coop The Truth
  • Jordan Lumley[a]
4:22
9."Duct Tape"
  • Champion
  • Abraham
  • Boring
  • I. Simpson
  • Acheson
  • Hemnani
  • Dylan Neustadter
  • Manwa
  • D. Simpson
  • Wesley Allen
  • Koal Harrison
  • Rex Kudo
  • Hemnani
  • D. Simpson
  • Manwa
  • Dylan Neustadter
  • Baird
  • The Kount
  • Wesley Allen
4:44
10."Always Something"
  • I. Simpson
  • D. Simpson
  • Sean Matsukawa
  • Boring
  • Manwa
  • Manwa
3:29
11."Goodbye"
  • Champion
  • Boring
  • Hemnani
  • Manwa
  • Abraham
  • William Garvey
  • Hemnani
  • Manwa
  • Abraham
2:49
Total length:37:30

Samples[edit]

  • ^[a] signifies an additional producer
  • ^[b] signifies an additional drum programmer
  • All tracks are stylized in all caps. For example, "Animal" is stylized as "ANIMAL".
  • "Listerine" contains excerpts from "Sha Na Na" as performed by El Michels Affair, written by Homer Steinweiss, Leon Michels, and Shannon Wise.[7]
  • "Keep It Southern" contains a sample from "Yesu Mahesha", by P. Susheela.
  • "Goodbye" contains excerpts from "Goodbye Horses" as performed by Q Lazzarus, written by William Garvey.[8]

Personnel[edit]

Brockhampton

  • Matt Champion – vocals (1–4, 6–9, 11), production (7), additional drum programming (1), art direction, executive production
  • Kevin Abstract – vocals (1–10)
  • Jabari Manwa – vocals (2–4, 9), production (2, 4, 9–11), additional production (3)
  • Dom McLennon – vocals (1, 3–4, 10), production (3, 9)
  • Joba – vocals (6–11), production (1)
  • Merlyn Wood – vocals (4–5), production (5)
  • Bearface (credit only)
  • Romil Hemnani – production (2–6, 9, 11), recording (1–7, 9–11)
  • Kiko Merley – production (1, 3, 5–8), arrangement (7)
  • Henock "HK" Sileshi – art direction, graphic design
  • Ashlan Grey – photography

Additional musicians

  • Ryan Beatty – vocals (2, 6)
  • August Royals – additional vocals (6)
  • Rich Hinman – slide guitar (7)
  • Jay Rudolph – drums (8)
  • Sean Matsukawa – guitar (10)
  • Brad Lewis – production (2)
  • Baird – production (2, 7, 9)
  • WilliamVanZandt– production (2)
  • Goldwash – production (2)
  • Jonah Abraham – production (3, 5–6, 8, 11), synth bass (2, 9)
  • Alex Goose – production (3)
  • Dutra – production (4)
  • Grant Lapointe – production (5), synth (1), keys (6, 8)
  • Solomonophonic – production (6), additional production (3)
  • John Debold – production (6)
  • Coop the Truth – production (8)
  • Dylan Neustadter – production (9)
  • The Kount – production (9)
  • Wesley Allen – production (9)
  • Jordon Lumley – additional production (8)

Technical personnel

  • Alex Thompson – recording engineer (1)
  • Eddie Roberts – recording engineer (1)
  • Garry Purohit – recording engineer (1–4, 7, 9, 11)
  • Jeremy Simoneaux – recording engineer (8)
  • Alex Tumay – mixing
  • Andrew Kim – mixing assistant
  • Nacor Zuluaga – mixing assistant
  • Joe LaPorta – mastering

Charts[edit]

Chart performance for TM
Chart (2022) Peak
position
US Billboard 200[9] 100

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c Anderson, Carys; Graves, Wren (November 17, 2022). "Brockhampton bow out with final album The Family: Stream". Consequence. Retrieved November 17, 2022.
  2. ^ a b Aniftos, Rania (March 9, 2024). "BLACKPINK's Jennie Teams Up With Brockhampton's Matt Champion for 'Slow Motion'". Billboard. Retrieved March 11, 2024.
  3. ^ Brockhampton [@brckhmptn] (November 17, 2022). "https://brockhampton.lnk.to/thefamily" (Tweet). Retrieved November 17, 2022 – via Twitter.
  4. ^ Yeung, Neil Z. "Brockhampton – TM". AllMusic. Retrieved January 6, 2023.
  5. ^ a b Mellen, James (November 18, 2022). "BROCKHAMPTON – TM". Clash. Retrieved November 18, 2022.
  6. ^ Smyth, David (November 25, 2022). "Brockhampton: The Family/TM albums review – plenty to unpick in the first, but better flows in the second". Evening Standard. Retrieved January 6, 2023.
  7. ^ "BROCKHAMPTON – Official Site".
  8. ^ "Credits / The Family". November 17, 2022. Retrieved November 17, 2022.
  9. ^ "Debuts on this week's #Billboard200..." Billboard on Twitter. Retrieved December 6, 2022.