In the 2023 music video for “Sorry Not Sorry,” one of the B-sides from Call Me If You Get Lost, a soldier welcomes Tyler Okonma’s friends, family, and former lovers into a theater. CHROMAKOPIA reveals this figure to be its masked protagonist, St. Chroma. Inside the glass enclosure, after issuing a litany of apologies, a shirtless Tyler, the Creator murders his past personas—ripping off Sir Baudelaire’s pastel ushanka for the finale. Three notable figures sit front row: an anonymous couple dressed in traditional garb from Nigeria—homeland of Tyler’s estranged father—and his mother, Bonita Smith. She’s the first voice on Tyler’s eighth album, Chromakopia, offering encouragement: “You are the light. It’s not on you, it’s in you.” Tyler spends the album modulating his shine—dimming it when he takes accountability and lighting up like a supernova when it’s time to remind everyone that he could be in rap’s Big Three if he wanted.
He wastes no time getting to the latter. A flute mimicking ululations sounds like a battle cry under militaristic stomps on opener “St. Chroma.” Tyler whisper-raps as if to say, Listen close, I have something important to tell you. That, along with Daniel Caesar’s ethereal gospel vocals asking “Can you feel that fire?” and a modular synth speeding up its frequency like a kettle about to blow, makes it feel like we’re traversing space and time straight into Tyler’s psyche.
“Noid” magnifies a part of Tyler’s mind relatively shut out to the public: his worst fears. “Someone’s keeping watch,” he lilts of fans with parasocial attachments and haters dredging up his juvenile tweets, “I feel them on my shoulder.” At 33, he’s watching his friends build families while he worries that a crazed stan could break into his house at any minute. The reverberating electric guitars give the track a horror-movie feel; they’re sampled from Zamrock legends Ngozi Family’s “Nizakupanga Ngozi,” a song partially about warding off toxic energy from your life. It’s reminiscent of the Swahili song that plays when the protagonist of Get Out, Daniel Kaluuya’s Chris, goes to meet his white girlfriend’s suspiciously nice family. “Listen to your ancestors. Something bad is coming. Run,” is a rough translation of the lyrics.