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Zentronix: Dubwise
& Hiphopcentric

Friday, November 16, 2007

The Jig Ain’t Up

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Jay-Z dropped American Gangster last week – the film inspiring the album was just released in France two days ago – and what to say about it? Jermaine Hall, the king of King, told me young’uns aren’t any more impressed with the record than last year’s mature (for hiphop) comeback Kingdom Come; it’s the thirtysomethings who vividly remember the Reasonable Doubt days of the mid-90s that feel it most. Ironic, given that Kingdom Come was meant to appeal to listeners more Jigga’s age. Turns out oldheads prefer the Gangster shit.

Jay decided not to offer the music diced up as 99¢ songs on iTunes, to underscore the importance of hearing the whole thing as an uninterrupted work of art. (The decision recalls Prince’s Lovesexy CD, maddeningly programmed as a single track for a forced single-listening experience.) Well, my brother Kyle hit me off for free through a transatlantic AOL IM file transfer. For such a hustler, Jay’s obviously missing the boat if he thinks mandatory album purchasing will raise sales. If I wanted “Blue Magic” that badly, fuck iTunes, I’d just go over to eMule.

How is American Gangster? I was pleasantly surprised by all the 70s-soulful Puffy production, I thought he quietly retired from the boards to sell cologne. The Neptunes-produced “Blue Magic” is much better than that forgettable lead single from Kingdom Come: it breathes like Snoop Dogg’s “Drop It Like It’s Hot,” and the En Vogue hook from “Hold On” is just great. There’s a few pointed disses toward the whole Don Imus-sparked rap-lyric controversy; the greatest rapper alive finally addressed hiphop’s hot-button issue of 2007, though it’s got nothing to do with Jay’s supposed inspiration, American Gangster the film. There’s nothing as stellar here as “99 Problems,” but the record is still better than The Black Album. This is Jigga’s best since The Blueprint.

“[T]hat’s what I’m supposed to be doing—whether it’s accepted by everybody or not. I’m supposed to be pushing the envelope and trying new things,” Jay told Elliott Wilson at good-ol’ XXL magazine recently, discussing Kingdom Come. American Gangster is still a better album, but I agree with Jay on that point, and I’m glad that’s how he feels about it. (And for the record, “Beach Chair,” the Kingdom Come collaboration with Coldplay’s Chris Martin, is not horrible at all; on first listen, I thought Martin’s production was Dr. Dre.) As decent as American Gangster is, we’ve still heard it all before. I’m getting far more repeated listening out of Saul Williams’s The Inevitable Rise and Liberation of NiggyTardust!, with the Trent Reznor/Nine Inch Nails production. Hiphop needs to take more chances and the audience needs to grow the fuck up a little.

Jay-Z on Charlie Rose:

Comments

Michael A. Gonzales at 5:09 PM on 11/16/07:

hip-hop hasn’t taken any real chances in years, but you know that jay record is my s**t. check for the upcoming stop smiling magazine cover story written by your truly.

MML at 5:53 PM on 11/16/07:

stop smiling magazine seems to be killin it right now, quiet as kept. i’ll keep eyes peeled for your piece, mike. lord knows it must be hard to write 3,000 interesting words about jay-z at this point!

carlito at 6:10 PM on 11/16/07:

haven’t heard it. sorta/kinda looking forward to it (as much as i look forward to ANY hip-hop nowadays).

but that speaks as much to my own progression (not necessarily “growth,” but not necessarily NOT, dig me?) as it does to the widening gap in the taste difference between those of us old enough to remember Reasonable Doubt (and other landmark joints from that “era”) and appreciate it for what it represented to us and to that era.

and knowing me as you do (over ten strong, my dude) THAT’s saying something.

i can’t tell you what happened. i know me leaving the plantation when i did (2002) played a part, but so did all the bullshit that had been bubbling in the (figurehead) massa’s house since before i got there and came to full boil after i bounced.

i know that my willingness to expand my own tastes beyond my superNY-centric, anything-else-hating 88-91 mind-state helped me to grow, both as a hip-hop head and as a critic. but that expansion also kinda fucked me up, bcuz i think at some point, i’d decided that i was tired of being a critic. that the absurdity of applying objective analysis to ultimately subjective content finally caught me with a mean uppercut.

i’m probably taking a potential check out of my hands by saying that too. ha! haa! ceezalito the music critic doesn’t wanna do music criticism anymore.

but it suddenly (and recently, i might add) dawned on me that maybe the so-called criticism, the analysis, the dissection of our oft-professed favorite musical form merits our involvement because —for those of us old enough to remember AND appreciate Reasonable Doubt and Ready to Die and All Eyez on Me and Infamous and Illmatic and Doggystyle and Efil4zaggin and a gang of others because of what they represented in our lives at that time— we’d always shouted from the highest rooftop and believed in the deepest bottom staircases of our hearts, that to us, this hip-hop shit was a lot more than music.

and that by digging for the “whys” as much as the “whats” behind the beats and rhymes, we can somehow, someway, make some sense out of this world we’ve inherited and that we’re eventually gonna leave behind.

carlito at 6:11 PM on 11/16/07:

re: above, meant to write:

“…as it does to the widening gap in the taste difference between those of us old enough to remember Reasonable Doubt (and other landmark joints from that “era”) and appreciate it for what it represented to us and to that era AND THEYOUNGUNS WHO CAME AFTER, WHO MIGHT JUST SEE IT AS ‘JAY-Z’S FIRST ALBUMAND NOTHING MORE.’”

m’baaaaaad…!

=)

MML at 8:25 PM on 11/16/07:

carlito rodriguez, your voice is missed, grasshopper. imagine all the original rolling stone critics who reported on woodstock and were used to back-to-back albums by the beatles, hendrix, the rolling stones, the doors… and suddenly 10 years later, rock music is kiss, laura nyro & the village people. no dis to kiss, but they ain’t the beatles. (no dis to kanye, but he ain’t nas.) keep shoutin your opinions into the conversation, ceezalito. if not us, who?

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