A restless soul navigating life’s complexities, Mac Miller created a body of work that turned the messiness of human existence into something movingly profound. His death, in September 2018, aged just 26, left a void in hip-hop that felt impossible to fill – but his voice would not be silenced for long. Released in January 2020, Miller’s first posthumous album, Circles, was full of soft-spoken wisdom summoned from a psychedelic netherworld, its soulful exploration of life’s highs and lows soothing the collective grief of a generation. Far from being a goodbye, Circles pulled us back into Miller’s orbit of swirling intimacy, proving that even death could not dim the light of his gifts to the world.
Here, then, is the story of Circles, and how producer Jon Brion closed the loop on Mac Miller’s all-too-short but remarkably influential career.
Listen to ‘Circles’ here.
The backstory: “He got more and more comfortable”
In August 2018, Mac Miller’s fifth album, Swimming, was being showered with critical acclaim. Marking the start of a whole new phase in the rapper’s career, it revealed that Miller’s lyrics were growing deeper and more introspective, and his songwriting was becoming increasingly mature. Stepping away from his underground hip-hop roots and into a more expansive, genre-spanning style of jazzy melodicism, Miller had begun to explore new territory in the shape of softly sung blue-eyed soul.
For his next offering, the rapper intended to double down on this, telling his co-producer Jon Brion that Swimming’s follow-up, Circles, would be more song-based and form the second part of a trilogy. “It was going to be a three-album cycle,” Brion said in an interview with Vulture. “He’d picked the stuff he picked for Swimming, and then we had this other pile.” Brion and Miller had formed a strong creative partnership by this point, with a large amount of the material for Circles having already been recorded.