Volpe first gained recognition producing tracks for impressionistic rapper-turned-Tony Robbins-type Lil B, but the artist that's most closely aligned himself with the Clams Casino sound is A$AP Rocky, who drenched himself in Volpe's sticky fog for his star-making 2011 mixtape LIVELOVEA$AP. (The wave of Clams Casino imitators was once at such a high tide that an entire genre was formed out of the lazily drawn, tab-tripping micro-phenomenon that followed-'cloud rap'-but like so many cultural fads in the internet age, its prevalence was mercifully brief.) UK producer Evian Christ, first heard as the latest in a legion of bedroom producers to ride Volpe's coattails, was one of the many cooks in the kitchen that brewed Kanye West's energizing latest LP Yeezus, where the fuzzy belches and moaning yawps associated with the strongest Clams Casino material ripped the sky open on the sex-drenched, electric 'I'm In It'. You can hear the ghostly, amniotic thrum of Clams Casino's style in the strongest work by Drake and Noah '40' Shebib, two artists who made one of the only albums to sell more than a million copies in the U.S.