How Old Is Kanye West
How Old Is Kanye
West
Kanye Omari West
(pronounced /'kʌn jeɪ)/) (born June 8, 1977 in Atlanta,
Georgia) is an American record producer and rapper. He has
released his debut album The College Dropout, his second album
Late Registration, and is working on a third album coming out
in 2007 called Graduation. Both The College Dropout and Late
Registration have received numerous awards. Kanye West also
runs his own record label, GOOD Music. West's mascot is a teddy
bear, which has appeared on the covers of his two albums as
well as the single cover for his song Stronger.
Chicago-bred,
soul sampling, producer wunderkind, Kanye West's music is
inarguably the most exciting thing going on in hip-hop
right now. He is the man that helped make Jay-Z's The
Blueprint the soul-drenched nostalgic masterpiece that it
was. He has produced a consistent array of chart-topping
inspirational beats for artists as diverse as Ludacris
("Stand Up"), Scarface ("In Cold Blood"), and Talib Kweli
("Get By"); and, did I mention that the man raps like
there's no tomorrow?
Given the fact
that he has a resume this dazzling, and is seemingly
overflowing with potential, when word came that he had decided
to put out a solo record, The College Dropout, it evoked little
surprise, and a whole lot of anticipation. It also served as an
incredibly unorthodox, and taboo-stricken move for a "heralded"
producer of his stature, that only seemed to highlight his
incredible ambitions and fans' adoration. The only thing is,
The College Dropout was supposed to come out months ago; first,
in August, then October, then January, and now, the fine folks
at Roc-A-Fella are saying February (let's keep our fingers
crossed). So, as the collective patience of avid hip-hop
aficionados across the globe grows thinner and thinner,
anticipation for Kanye's alleged-masterpiece debut is reaching
a fever pitch.
In a typically
savvy marketing move (like only those folks in hip-hop
know how) serving to add only more fuel to the collective
fire, a couple of Kanye West mix-tapes have been
circulating around that not only showcase a collection of
his finest chart-topping production moments from his
previous work, but also preview a number of new selections
from off of The College Dropout. Now, while in the
surprisingly stringent circles of music criticism
reviewing a mix-tape greets about the same level of
enthusiasm as the release of a Backstreet Boy solo record,
the two mix-tapes in question, Get Well Soon (released
shortly after Kanye's much-publicized, near-fatal car
accident), and I'm Good, prove to be among the best new
hip-hop music released in 2003. However, in a level of
irony seemingly only reserved for this delightful mess
called the music business, since these releases are
mix-tapes and not traditional albums (whatever that means
these days), don't expect them to be making an appearance
on many "best of" lists this year. In light of this
fiasco, your trusty review has taken it upon himself to
shine some much-deserved light on these enigmatic jewels,
because given Roc-A-Fella's inconsistencies these tapes
might be the closest we ever get to witnessing Kanye's
abundant solo genius.
While both mixes
serve as a well-represented document featuring a mish-mash
of snippets from Kanye's earlier work, on both Get Well
Soon and I'm Good Kanye's new material undoubtedly steals
the show. The best of these new tracks is the
unrelentingly rousing modern-day hip-hop epic, "2 Words",
which features guest appearances from Mos Def, Freeway,
and the Harlem Boys' Choir. Over the rolling thump of a
thunderous drum kit, harpsichord lines tumble into
butter-smooth electric guitar licks, while frenetic
soulful wails provide the perfect canvas for Mos',
Kanye's, and Freeway's relentless rhymes. However, this is
all before Kanye breaks the song down for a stirring a
cappela section from the Harlem Boys' Choir, which gives
way to a frenzied stutter-step hip-hop hoe-down featuring
a turbulent violin solo to close (that's right, I did say
violin solo!).
The most amazing aspect of the track, though,
is that it marks Kanye's characteristic mastery of
balancing an "underground" hip-hop aesthetic, with
elements from the mainstream. Kanye has infamously labeled
himself the "self-proclaimed first nigga with Benz and a
backpack", but it is rightly the consistent merging of
these two diametric worlds in Kanye's music, which makes
his sound so unabashedly unique. Tracks like "Heavy
Hitters", which imparts a bouncing electro-funk bass riff
straight out of the Timbaland handbook and joins it with a
debonair classical piano motif, and the soulful ode to
girl-trouble "The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly", which
cloaks Consequence's and Kanye's playerific verses in a
dusty sample-heavy instrumental, perfectly reconcile
Kanye's aesthetic contradictions.
However, while there may be
little doubt left in anybody's mind if Kanye's beats are
inspired, the real question that these two mix-tapes come to
resolve is that if Kanye can handle himself on the mic.
Thankfully, the answer is unresoundingly yes. Kanye has always
attested to the fact that he was an emcee before he got into
producing, and it was only his startling success as a
beat-maker that took him away from first love of rhyming. This
fact is abundantly clear on these mixes, as Kanye imparts a
charmingly laconic vocal delivery, equal parts Mos Def and
Snoop Dogg that is brimming with radiant wit, and agile word
play. On The College Dropout's alleged first single, "Through
the Wire" (an earnest recounting of the emotional toll of his
horrific car accident), over a rolling motivational Chaka Kahn
sample, Kanye cleverly attests, "In the same hospital where BIG
and Tupac died, the Doctor said I had a blood clot, but I ain't
Jamaican man, story on MTV, but I ain't trying to make a band."
While over the old-school soul of "Home", Kanye personifies his
relationship with his hometown of Chicago in the vain of
Common's ode to hip-hop "I Used to Love Her", and through a
wildly sincere monologue recounts their lengthy turbulent
history; Kanye's cleverly rhymes, "I guess that's why last
winter she got so cold on me, she said 'Ye keep making that
platinum and gold for me."
On the closing track off Get Well
Soon, the bitter-sweetly nostalgic, "My Way", a speed up vocal
sample reflects, "I've lived a life that's full, I've traveled
each and every highway, and what's more than this, I did it my
way." The track serves as the perfect summation of every aspect
that makes Kanye West such a rarity amongst the excess-laden
caricatures that seem to dominate the hip-hop world; over a
lush instrumental of sweeping syrupy string melodies, West
earnestly recounts his hip-hop typical ambitions of making a
dollar. However, when he states, "I'm not a Kennedy, but I'm
good rich," it feels like a miracle. Finally a rapper who is
equal parts ambitious and humble, aggressive and empathetic,
and witty while still being genuine. He's Kanye West, and he's
just put out the best hip-hop album of next year... his own
way.
How Old Is
Kanye West
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