The Internet made their proper debut with the 2011 release of "Love Song - 1," a tender, left-of-center ballad that had more in common with
Meshell Ndegeocello than with the year's pop-R&B hits by the likes of
Kelly Rowland and
Chris Brown. "They Say," a sparser cut featuring Tay Walker, appeared on the 12 Odd Future Songs label compilation just ahead of Purple Naked Ladies, an album released digitally that December and on compact disc the following January. Follow-up Feel Good, highlighted by the loose disco groove "Dontcha," arrived digitally in September 2013 -- and five months later on CD -- with a more organic, sometimes seemingly improvised approach.
Ego Death, issued in June 2015, boasted refined and yet characteristically frank songwriting from Bennett, as well as increased input from the group's additional members: bassist Patrick Paige II, guitarist
Steve Lacy, drummer Christopher Allan Smith, and keyboardist Jameel Bruner, the brother of Stephen "Thundercat" Bruner and
Ronald Bruner, Jr. Guest appearances came from
Janelle MonĂ¡e,
Vic Mensa, and
Kaytranada, the last of whom co-produced the lovelorn gem "Girl" with Bruner. While the group's two previous albums had registered on Billboard's Heatseekers chart, this one debuted within the Top Ten of Billboard's R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart and hit the top half of the all-genre Billboard 200. It affirmed the group's high standing in Los Angeles' vibrant community of young R&B, rap, jazz, and electronic acts, which had been bubbling for years but was wincing from a spotlight due to recent major releases from the likes of
Flying Lotus,
Kamasi Washington,
Kendrick Lamar,
Miguel, and
Thundercat. ~ Andy Kellman, Rovi