The name Blaketheman1000 might not ring a bell unless you live inside the creative echo chambers of New York or Los Angeles. But true to his handle, which reads more like a screen name than an alias, he’s an artist born of the internet. Online, Blake’s sense of humor can sometimes overshadow his music, making him come across more like an alt-comedian. But it’s his work that combines his two personas—Blake the Content Creator and Blake the Musician—that have caught on to wider audiences. His tribute song to the nation’s largest bike-sharing program, Citi Bike, was named by New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani as one one of the five songs that defined his campaign, and his 2022 single “Dean Kissick” is a winking homage to the micro-celeb art critic who even cameoed in the music video. The track plays like an inside joke for those who are extremely-online: brief, funny, and tailor-made to entertain you exactly once, the way a TikTok catches your attention between scrolls. He’s an artist suspended in that strange tension between genuine feeling and the performance of knowingness.
Yet all the bit‑posting and irony have always been in service of his true passion, which is making lo‑fi bedroom pop that’s soaked in post‑adolescent heartbreak. His songwriting maintains the tenderness of youth with the perspective of someone who never quite moved on from the first crush that broke him: He’s still logging on every day with a fractured heart, trying to translate unresolved feelings into digital connection, one post at a time. Blake’s full-length debut, City of Careless Angels, follows a pair of 2025 EPs: the vocally experimental For Those With Eyes to See and the surprisingly poignant It Could Be Nice. My favorite moments happen when Blake leans into the goofiness of his online persona while moving away from the type of gimmicky rap he’s known for and digging deeper into the pop-rap and guitar-driver melodies he’s always explored.
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Tracks like “Reno Moon,” with the shapeshifting Nikki Nair, and album closer “Teeshirt dec 8 2020,” could only have been written by someone as embarrassingly tender as Blake. Other songs land with less emotional nuance. “Crush” reminds me of the early 2000s one-hit wonders you might hear at the end of poorly aged teenage romps like American Pie 2, and the aptly-titled “Fall Asleep” seems designed to soundtrack H&M dressing rooms. Yet there’s enough personal detail sprinkled throughout City of Careless Angels to make it singular, mostly avoiding the pretension that oozes out of similar “creators” who wind up in a purgatory of posting and social media clout. In the heartfelt “Temple City,” Blake delivers warm anecdotes about his grandmother and an uncle who apparently looked like Snoopy’s brother Spike. Across the album, Blake uses hyper-specific details like this to make the project feel personal without being obvious or cliche.
The production is handled entirely by Blake and Al Carlson, a Brooklyn producer who’s quietly become a go-to architect for artists including A$AP Rocky, Jessica Pratt, 454, Surf Gang, and Chanel Beads. His work is unified by a blend of hi‑fi clarity and restless, genre‑agnostic curiosity that makes these records feel both intimate and experimentally widescreen. The canvas he provides here is certainly grander and more polished than Blake’s past work, which was characterized by his high-pitched vocals and arcade game noises. Nonetheless, Blake and Carlson stick to the minimalist sound Blake’s been honing for years. Small touches like the flute on “Reno Moon,” the sneaky-synth on “2 Dollar Bill,” or the doo-wop inspired swing to “Imaginary Woman” elevate Blake’s lyrical and sonic limitations. These highlights come closest to the kinds of sleepy pop hits Blake seems to have been grasping at since watching Clairo go 2x-platinum from her bedroom desktop webcam in 2017. City of Careless Angels is uneven, sprinkled with boilerplate indie signifiers and sometimes juvenile fixations on heartbreak. But its disarming sincerity is hard to shake. Blake stuffs these songs with enough self-effacing anecdotes, clever turns of phrase, and sticky hooks that you catch yourself humming along long after the jokes fade.

