Archive for the 'Jay-Z' Category

The ignorant shit that you love

You want fanfare? You want to be entertained?

I have to admit, other than a few choice schwacks and swats on Kingdom Come, last year really kinda felt like Jigga should have followed his self-heralded path of having “dropped the black album and then backed out”.

Cue the muse. Granted, “the muse” here is a Denzel film, but, hey, in a year when people are listening to Souljah Boy, anything that brings Jigga back to his full game, and here: though the beats aren’t cold and stoic like the pop-culture sponge may have expected, this is what we are, officially, calling a comeback in the best way.

 Jay-Z ft Beanie Sigel: Ignorant Shit

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One of the most powerful moments on the album other than the first real track “Pray”, Jigga jumps into the fray in a most dangerous way-taking on both the O’Reillys and the Souljah Boys of the world, offering a vulgar, curse-laden hook and the explanation that he’s just bringing “the ignorant shit you want”-status quo for those looking for nothing else. The end, though, when he declares that “scarface the movie did more than scarface the rapper for me” and actually pulls it OFF? It’s proof that Jay-Z can’t suck even when he wants to.

  Jay-Z ft Nas: Success

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Gotta love anything that starts with Jay-Z letting Nas know, over the smooth-as-silk beat, that he has to let the whole track “breathe”. Jesus, this is as good as braggadocio gets, with Jigga’s bost that he has “watches he hasn’t seen in days”…

Yeah, this whole thing is a winner. More later. Holla atcha boy.





Anyone make real shit any more? Part two of two

I’m not going to give any declarative “oh, I’ve been doing X and Y and Z” disclaimers to begin this as a way of “apologizing” for my absence from these parts. Ah, well-that, in and of itself, is an acknowledgement of guilt, isn’t it? I’m aware that I’ve been the nom-de-plume’d prodigal son-don’t worry, it doesn’t hurt that I wasn’t missed. I’m not up-to-date on the Black Were-Jaguar GhostNakedBrothers Band, anyway-that stuff rings cold to me, but warm to y’all. My mind’s elsewhere. In fact, my headspace looks a little something like this:

Recently, I’ve been attempting to wrap my head around Kanye West’s Graduation album. As I have (apparently been quoted in a few assorted places as having) said, Kanye was the thinking person’s Dave Eggers of rap-those first two records were near-masterpieces, with Late Registration (yes, that one, flat-bootied white girl with a taste for top-shelf vodka, THAT one) coming the closest to tell-your-friends-and-neighbors-though-they’ll-know-already brilliance. I don’t genuinely believe I need do more than hum the(uncleared at first, natch, that’s the way Ye rolls) Shirley Bassey sample that swells with orchestral perfection to form the base of “Diamonds From Sierra Leone” to conjure a feeling of how utterly important that whole damn album was (quoth the Jigga, who popped up with a show-stopping few verses on the “Diamonds” remix: “Shirley Bassey’s in the rear saying exactly what I’ve been sayin’ practically my whole career”. Diamonds are forever? Kanye is forever.).

Kanye knew that, too-and he spent a few years before and twice as many after making sure we, the general music-listening public, knew he knew that we should know.

What an initially mixed bag, then, his Graduation is. Can samples and Daft Punk samples and no skits (unless you count what most people view as a grotesque mis-step, the Mos Def collab ‘Drunk and Hot Girls”) and nothing as immediately grabbing to the shiny shirt crew as “Gold Digger” and nothing as immediately looming and threatening as “Diamonds” and.

And, and, and. We’ll play a little game that may be familiar to the ADHD crowd in the audience: Line up your criticisms and critiques in single file, potentially alphabetically or in order of track list, write ‘em out, and then stick ‘em in your back pocket and come to Graduation with a fresh brain. And no, I don’t mean “brain” like how them hip-hoppers mean “brain”, either-for this I’ll require some genuine grey matter.

In part one of this two-part piece ( you know, the first section that doesn’t yet exist), there’ll be a level guide, a cheat sheet, if you will, with some a+b+a+b+l+r+l+r+start codes to let the genius, the self-absorbed self-deprecating piece of ecstasy that is Graduation reveal itself song-by-song.

(Right. Now, again, I’m going to be saying “oh hey watch for this” and then something shiny or sparkly or something about drugs by Lil’ Wayne or a noise jamarama by Deerhunter will distract me and it’ll never get done.)

I’ve never understood why, in contemporary Rock, b-sides/outtakes/tapes lost in someone’s Basement are allowed to be considered masterworks, when in hip-hop the b-side song doesn’t exist to the collective conscious. It’s fitting, for the strange and smart dichotomy that is Kanye, for some of the best moments of Graduation to have been casually left off the record itself, scattered amongst throwaway mixtapes and alternate release pressings. And so, to answer his own question in “Stronger”-you, Kanye, YOU make real shit. Here’s some of the real shit that wasn’t on that copy of Graduation you copped at Target for a tenner.

Kanye West & John Mayer: Bittersweet Poetry

 

We’ll leave the slagging on John Mayer to other places other faces. What matters here is how a thematic element of “Graduation” of Ye’s stardom causing his relationships to suffer a falsity that aches and cuts to the bone (see also: “Flashing Lights”). It’s a beautiful wonk of a three-tissue jam, and that chorus is a stumbling mess-and that makes it all the better.

Kanye West ft Mos Def: Good Night

Ye has never been one to let a thematic element peeter off and die prematurely. Granted, his themes usually encompass a few set subjects: himself, his awesomeness, his insecurity regarding his awesomeness…see 1 and 2…and, uh, I think that’s about it. However, the “Good Morning” opening of Graduation was, in fact, meant to be book-ended with this-a pretty, sleepy ballad, featuring Mos Def’s velvet crooning pipes (whodathunk it) in what is the utter polar opposite of Mos’s other appearance on Graduation (for the record, I find “Drunk and Hot Girls” to be total and utter inappropriate Kanye, channeling “40 Year Old Virgin”-and I love it).

Cue these last two up, in this order, right at the end of “Grad” in your iTunes, and then realize:

THAT’S the director’s cut.

Now, imagine: if YOUR copy of “Graduation” ended here, would you feel a little bit more fulfilled? Yeah, thought so. Fitting, though, that the “proper” end to Graduation is scattered across the web-putting the damn album together properly is like following Kanye’s own version of clues to LOST.

This song’s also been cited as proof Mos Def needs to release an all-singing album. I’ll second.

Kanye West: Stronger (Jay-Z Remix)

Hey, white kids: NOT A RMX KTHX. No, seriously, this isn’t something for your not-raves, this is “Stronger” with Jay grabbing the mic and, basically, turning in what is (I assume) essentially a favor to Kanye. Not as destructive to the brilliance of the original as when he claimed “Diamonds” for himself, but still a nice piece of work. Crappy quality, though.

Kanye West ft ODB: Weak Shit

From one of the two flawless underGrad mixtapes, the origins of the “real shit” inquiry, and a total victory.

Kanye West: Flashing Lights(Benzi refix)

Benzi, apparently a fave around here (who knew?) but most known in my little (and preferred) world as a beatsmithmuse to Resonator 2006 faves Clipse, cobbles Kanye and the aforementioned Clipse together to form something…euphoric? Euphoric.

Kanye West: Flashing Lights (Jr Sanchez’s Strobelight Honey remix)

See also: Euphoric. This remix has taken some heat, but it does what Junior has always done, so well-sweat it out by taking a song that needs to be 4/4 and placing it smack-dab in the middle of the dancefloor and forcing it to work out its’ own damn problems. There are two nights-into-mornings soundtracked by Junior Sanchez sets in my lifetime, and these two nights blur together into some strange hotel room conversation about Power Rangers and ‘Sister Christian”…but that’s neither here nor there.
Kanye West ft Lil Wayne, Busta Rhymes & Young Jeezy: Can’t Tell Me Nothin (rmx)

Attacking Graduation’s darkest, most intense and bleakest track, Busta and Jeey are essentially throwaways here. The name you’re gunning for is Weezy-who, prior to this had left me unimpressed, but after his little “LMAO” verse on here has suddenly been able to do absolutely no wrong to these ears.

Child Rebel Soldiers/CRS (Lupe Fiasco, Kanye West & Pharrell): Us Placers

Finally like CeCe. A quality rip of what has become the dream-haunter for me as of late, and by far the song that keeps stomping around the top 5 of my “best songs of 2007″ list-Lupe, Kanye and Skateboard P’s minimal, ice and rasp step-by-hesitant-footfall walk through the perils of fame, hand-held by Thom Yorke’s voice as a too-soft-for-salvation siren, the angel perched just out of reach. Not that you’d listen even if you heard…

Quoth Kanye, in his most chilling and understated moment yet:

“How many people almost famous
You almost remember what they name is..”

Even if, even if, nothing else here moves you, this CRS one-off is godsend proof of the coldness, the reality, the schaffel-ache that lies just underneath everything Ye does. The sort of song that, if put conveniently at the end of Graduation, would have the jury of bloggers and esteemed mustachioed “print” critics discussing its brilliance, but as a net easter egg, something to be passed from hard drive to hard drive, is nothing more than a flicker, a half-spark, to be downloaded and ignored. Maybe you’re just not listening hard enough, or expecting to see something entirely different, or more obvious.. Look, and listen, close. This should be like oil to water, but instead it’s like gasoline to a smoldering fire-or, more accurately, this is the sound of the rainbow of colors when that water hits the oil. Black smudged with fluorescent, beautiful in its’ bleakness.

Again, does anyone make real shit any more? There’s nothing more real than that.


 






No clouds tonight in my storms, no clouds tonight in my tea

This is a bit overdue here, I know.

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There was something about listening to this song yesterday (as opposed to the eight billion other times it’s been on my iTunes playlist over the past few months) that suddenly hit me as both “vital” and “epic”.
There’s something about that low end…that bass…seemingly an exchange between Atlanta’s own Tricky Stewart’s genius behind the knobs and Rihanna’s own floodlike desire to express a vow of forever from her plum-colored lips.

Rihanna: Umbrella (original mix)

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It’s easy to miss the conspicuous importance behind Jay-Z’s appearance on the intro here, and the implications of Rihanna’s lyrics. In case you’ve been under a rock or without TMZ or some other such suffering, there’s been a little of a love triangle between Jigga, Beyonce (aka the woman who owns his ass) and Lil’ Miss Sunshine. While the three have kept it quiet on the full-disclosure front, take one listen to Beyonce’s bat-shit “Ring The Alarm” as a full-on assault on her would-be contender, and then check Rihanna’s little “Umbrella” note about staying dry (suuuuure):

You had my heartand we’ll never be world apart
Maybe in magazines
but you’ll still be my star
Baby cause in the Dark
You can see shiny Cars
And that’s when you need me there
With you I’ll always share
Because
When the sun shines
We’ll shine together
Told you I’ll be here forever
Said I’ll always be your friend
Took an oath
I’ma stick it out ’till the end

Yeeaaah. That’s, uh, innocent.

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Now, my money’s on Beyonce for the fist-fight, but regardless of how utterly insane “Ring The Alarm” was, “Umbrella” is, make no mistake, the song of the summer-as it blows up at the end by essentially repeating itself, only a little heavier, this is a rare but shining example of what happens when pop, rock, r&b, rap and electronic music all work together. So much so, that I’ve yet to hear a remix that messes with the musical formula and works-the original’s utterly untouchable, even by former Res posterboy JLC/TWD/Stuart Price.

(Read as: DJS: GIVE. IT. UP. Find a way to get the original into your set or just. Don’t. Try. You can’t top that bass line, so admit defeat in its’ wake.)

Rihanna: Umbrella (Lil Mama Remix)

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However, this refix from Res fave Lil’ Mama certainly works (as does Chris “Run It” Brown’s “let me holla atcha” version). Granted, Mama does what she does on all her remixes-basically she goes in with claws, teeth and flow bared, probably a little too hungry and sound all the more like Jean Grae’s younger sis for it, but that’s not a bad thing. “Umbrella”’s epic, Rihanna’s a robot forged in the epic Dance Party wars, Rihanna’s the Sarah Connor sent in to kick ass and, on occasion, take names/apply lipgloss.

Even the “Umbrella” video goes all minimal on us:

It’s only a matter of time, hopefully, before Mayer, Allien or someone in either camp get their mitts and paws all over this. If there’s anyone who understand the subtle nuances of a bassline that kicks the rest of the elements in a track to the backseat, it’s the German tech kids.

Speaking of living in the backseat: Jigga, you had your shot. Our girl B will. Kill. You. (And don’t try to deny: Rihanna’s album, other than “Umbrella”, sounds and smells entirely of perfume on your shirt and Beyonce knock-offs.) You’d best be CCing all those girls girls girls girls you’re see-seeing, and get yourself out from under Rihanna’s umbrella.





RES <3 FOB 4EV 4 RLY.

It’s a fucking shame, it really is, that one of the most exciting records I’ve heard this year has the sheeny, kiss-off texture of a mall-punk band making good on the hook-laden promise and skinny jeans + haircuts look of their previous releases.

Of course, I’m talking about Fall Out Boy.

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(insert screams of disgust/adoration in registers so high only dogs can hear them….*here*)

2007 will forever go down in the books as the year of “Wentzy makes good” as heartTHROB slash bassist slash songwriter slash self-penile photographer and his band of not-as-hotties, including that poor unfortunate redneck trucker they enlisted to sing Wentz’s tales of hot topic lust, took that so-catchy-it’s-obnoxious Under The Cork Tree potential that catapulted them into the hearts and minds (and made them the friction in the jeans) of every under-18 year old girl in America and polished off those scattered glistening pop gems and crafted them into an entire album’s work of snarky, love-weary, high-calibre tunage with this year’s Infinity On High.

From the album’s opening moment, a call-to-arms from, of all people, H-to-tha-Izzo V-to-tha-Izzay (that’s the anthem getcha damn hands up) Jay-Z, through the stomp-and-stammer gospel beauty of “Hum Hallelujah”, the entirety of Infinity On High just works too damn well. Produced in part by motherfuckin’ BABYFACE, the album is part party jam, party emo-rock high-jump off the speakers, and party…gospel revival.

That’s right: the fat kid in the trucker hat can siiiing, folks. Like a fucking bird.

Despite all lyrics being penned by Pete “frontman-a-licious” Wentz (and his magical lil’ Wentz, no doubt), Patrick “he of the very unfortunate last name” Stump sings in the exact way he commands his audience to on the album’s first single, “This Ain’t A Scene, It’s An Arms Race”: until his lungs give out.

It’s moments like that, and others on the album, where Fall Out Boy slip into complete stadium rock crowd-control mastery that usually doesn’t come until many, many world tours and mounds of drugs later (see: Aerosmith). Like their mates in youth and anthems My Chemical Romance (but with less makeup and plastic inflatable bat toys), the boys of FOB know even on record that they’ll have their swooning fans rocking out with their low-rise jeans out, and this knowledge has given them power. Wentz’s lyrics and throbby, jangly bass lines and Stump’s choirgirl falling face first in the PBR vocals combine and create sort of super-human ability to steal all the good hooks and all the catchy melodies in the world, and deploy them like weapons on a public who was ready to write them off.

(oh yeah, there are a couple other dudes in the band, too…or something)

All in all, it just ain’t fair. It just ain’t fair that in a year with the musical release calander containing so much potential, so much epic beauty and goodness, that the only album to really stick thus far both critically and commercially was put together by a bunch of kids who still make hand-in-armpit fart noises for fun. With their self-referential, self-deprecating lyrical wit, solid musicianship, and sense of grand purpose and being, though, it would seem that Fall Out Boy is the first post-modern pop-punk-emo-rock-whatthefuckever band that can do it, do it well, say it right, and know that what they’ve done is as catch and hyperactive as sugar-coated lickable methpops. Do they DESERVE to be this good? This talented? Do they DESERVE to have Jay-Z on their record? Do they DESERVE to hang out with Pete Wentz every fucking day? The answer to the latter is “god, no, no one should have to”, but the rest are all answered with a stunningly resounding YES.

Believe me, I hate writing this as much as you, the intelligent reader, listening to your leak of the new Wilco or your super-deluxe limited edition disc of some backpackhop co-sponsored by Adult McSwimDonalds, hate reading it, but facts are facts: Fall Out Boy have created a fucking GOOD album, start to finish. And it’s unfortunate that it’s taking something like these kids to shake shake shake the scene (excuse me, arms race) into having a good time again-but there it is. We’re in Fall Out Boy’s hands now, and god bless our black hearts and save our souls-with these kids in control, this ain’t a scene, this is genocide.

Fall Out Boy ft Jay-Z: Thriller

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The opening song off of Infinity On High, and the first realization that the boys FallOut are up to something-Jay-Z turns in a few verses that crackle with more energy than his own recent phoned-in stuff, and that, in and of itself, should say all it needs to. This ain’t your sister’s Fall Out Boy any longer.

Fall Out Boy: This Ain’t A Scene, It’s An Arms Race (Kanye West remix)

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Further proof of the clout these kids are getting, Fall Out Boy gets handled into a bit of a stomper by he-who-is-the-postmodern-rapper Kanye West himself as he takes cracks on both the boys and himself.

The “This Ain’t A Scene” video-utter brilliance. The lead-in, the disgust at “Dance Dance”, every bit of this makes the video that much better-especially the hip-hop folk watching Stump as he does his thing. I’ve said it once, and I’ll say it again, as it’s the running industry mantra regarding this whole Fall Out Boy 07 thing:

this should not be this good.

Buy Infinity On High