Future Inspires Musicians to Take Part in Incredible #MaskOffChallenge

The #MaskOffChallenge has musicians covering Future's "Mask Off" using every imaginable instrument.

The flute is finally getting the respect it deserves. Thanks to Future's "Mask Off," taken from this year's very good self-titled album, a single sampled flute has inspired a new social media challenge. The growing #MaskOffChallenge hashtag puts black musicians in the spotlight with flute, recorder, violin, and piano covers of the Metro Boomin and Southside-produced cut.

The covers, spotted early by Fader, range from mind-blowingly great to hilariously tongue-in-cheek. Check out some of our favorites:

seen this an had to try it #MaskOffChallenge pic.twitter.com/32XrzTbV3o

— Mr. Highway (@Leeduhleeduhlee) March 15, 2017

She murked "Mask Off" #MaskOffChallenge 😩🙌🏾 https://t.co/q1BB2Eeftb

— Jeune Nègre (@1Papaxan) March 29, 2017

#MaskOffChallenge 🎹🌞 pic.twitter.com/AyFJuSAcHq

— Yo Zay Waddup 🎹💫 (@zayvalmont) March 30, 2017

Future's #MaskOff by yours truly 😭🎶 pic.twitter.com/QgX8GiVHhH

— Netta (@NettaBrielle) March 30, 2017

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The particular flute section in question comes from Tommy Butler's "Prison Song," a selection off the 1976 release Selma Album: A Musical Tribute to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr

Both Future's self-titled album, home to "Mask Off," and its immediate follow-up HNDRXX topped the Billboard 200. The back-to-back No. 1 debuts made history, giving Future the distinction of being the first artist in the chart's six-decade history to pull it off. HNDRXX debuted with 121,00 equivalent units, while the self-titled release opened with 140,000.

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