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Friday, January 2, 2015

Top 5 Hip-Hop Albums of 2014



           Being a Hip-Hop Head in the internet age is nothing short of amazing and frustrating. On every site, video, and forum you will encounter flame wars over who is the best and why so and so is terrible. On the flip side you get the chance to be exposed to so many different types of artists and sounds that if you ignore all the negative comments what you get is the core of Hip-Hop; you get to learn and explore culture through music. This year I decided to take my love of the music to the next level and create a top 5 list of 2014’s finest Hip-Hop Music. I formulated the idea in summer, but it was not really set in stone until I included two of my best friends and fellow rap lovers Alex & Aiyana into the discussion. However this was no simple task since we all have been listening to an abundance of artists new and old this year, constantly sending each other new music hoping the other would enjoy it. It was in the midst of finals week in December (a great time to get caught up in a new project mind you) that we put an official plan into action (The plan is detailed below this paragraph). So with this in mind we each sifted through a wiki list of all 2014 hip-hop releases which has hundreds of albums, picked a good chunk of music to listen to and just went to town on 2014. There were upsets and debates, and before we get into the actual list I think it is important to understand all of our musical backgrounds. This is NOT an objective list and is a combination of all of our tastes in interests. I love to think that we have good taste in music but if you disagree that is your right. We each put a lot of effort and thought into our own lists and putting them together is no easy feat. We listened to a good 35+ albums to make this list, and anything you could recommend one of us has probably listened to (Ab-Soul, Big K.R.I.T, Common, Isaiah Rashad, Wiz, Eminem, Wu Tang, T.I, Iggy Azalea, and it goes on). Past the Top Five you will see honorable mentions of albums that did not make the list. Let us begin

Here is the process as I posted in the Facebook group I made for the 3 of us:

1.) Come up with your own top 10 list of albums by the time you get home from break (or close to there)

2.) Have reasons why you picked albums because there will be a short write up of each

3.) Send list to other members of this group so we have a chance to maybe listen to albums that we haven’t had the chance to hear yet

4.) We will all meet up in person over break and make this list
for reference here is the list of 2014 hip hop albums: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2014_in_hip_hop_music#Released_albums




Musical Taste:

Zeke “Zk” Starling- I have grown up around soul, jazz, funk, and early rap for the majority of my life. Childhood consisted of Diana Ross, MJ, Sly and the family stone, Lauren Hill, etc. It was not until I started dancing that I got to develop my own love of rap music. I was always a big fan of Eminem and my mom loved Tupac so of course I drifted to rap with a message or conscious rap. Here I found my love of rap as a form of musical poetry that can be recited over soulful instrumentals to send a personal message or positive vibes with a powerful bass and snare that makes a club banger we can all jam to. As my dancing love grew so did my desire to find more and more music. Now I am as deep in the Hip-Hop world as I have ever been, keeping up with the latest albums, watching interviews, studying chords and sounds within the actual songs (I have been playing music for 10 or so years if that matters) and I think I have a pretty refined taste. A few of my favorite rappers are: Childish Gambino, Kendrick Lamar, Tyler the Creator, Chance the rapper, and Logic.

Alex “Trap 3 House” Elms-  I grew up on pretty much everything but hip hop and rap. My early music taste was shaped almost exclusively by movie soundtracks and my dad's collection of 60s-80s rock. I enjoyed the Beatles, The Who, Electric Light Orchestra, and a lot of mainstream pop music that I had heard from various other places. It wasn't until college that I started branching out into rap, hip-hop, and trap music. Thanks to friends, both new from college and old from high school, I had a wealth of suggestions for classics and more recent releases. Once I understood that rap was about more than just songs about big money, drugs, and women, I gained an appreciation for it that I never would have thought possible. I fell in love with the complex narratives, concept albums, and addictive beats that hip hop provided. I started with artists like Kanye, Eminem, and BoB and let my ear go from there. I'm still finding out more about my style as I find more music, but as of now some of my favorite artists are Childish Gambino, Chance the Rapper, Kanye West, Kid Cudi, and Drake.

Aiyana “Shmoney” H.G- I started listening to rap music in middle school, when my favorite rapper was Lil Wayne. The only rap and hip-hop scene I was familiar with at the time centered around they hyphy movement and mainstream rap music. Thanks to friends with broader music tastes, my curiosity to branch out and find new music to fill my one-dimensional itunes selection, and the greater availability and awareness of underground, underappreciated, and alternative hip-hop, my music taste and knowledge has expanded. My favorite rappers list has changed and increased to include Childish Gambino, Logic, J. Cole, Eminem, and Chance the Rapper. I look forward to continuing my music collection and listening to as many artists and styles as possible.


The Top Five

5.)

ScHoolboy Q- Oxymoron. Recommended listening: Collard Greens

            ScHoolboy Q is quite an interesting individual, being part of Black Hippy and TDE along with rappers such as Ab-Soul and Kendrick Lamar you would expect him to be skilled but this album approaches popular rap techniques and practices with a unique flair that gives Q his own sound. The production could easily be something off of any mainstream rappers album but the way Q utilizes instrumentals and infuses his own over the top lyrical style to tell a story of a gangster lifestyle, drug use and addiction, and fatherhood. You can hear snippets of his daughter throughout the album if you listen properly which goes along with Q’s musical style. The album tends to suck you in and before you know it you can hear how Q has create his own niche of the gangster rap story. At first glance he may just seem like a typical rapper but upon a closer listening you can hear a man using hip-hop in a positive way to escape a devilish lifestyle. This is also a 2015 Grammy Nominee so congrats to Q for getting his work recognized.


4.)

Childish Gambino- STN MTN/Kauai. Recommended: Dream & Retro


          All three of us love Gambino, he is such a talented individual who has been able to release quality work every year since 2008. However the reason this isn’t higher on the list is because it requires being a Gambino fan to truly appreciate. That is not to say you won’t like any song unless you are a prior fan, this is a good collection of music one way or another. But to truly understand the context of this release and how it fits into the complex multimedia narrative you need to listen to his other work. This album is all about the transition of a character from their fictional dream life running the Atlanta rap scene to that same character waking up having to reminisce on better times past. This is probably one of the most original ideas I have ever encountered in rap, because it stems from an ongoing story told partially through music, but it hold up as its own project. This has everything from Gambino spitting over famous southern rap songs, to beautiful spoken word and insight, and Bino’s amazing vocal prowess. Listen to the songs and see if you like them, then do yourself a favor and start from the beginning of Gambino’s albums and discover the genius that is Donald Glover.



3.)

Nicki Minaj- The Pink Print. Recommended: All things go

            This album is one the reasons I have such a problem with how the Grammys are run. The cutoff dates for nominations is somewhere in November so things that come out in the last two months are just forgotten about or left alone until the next year (The Heist was released in 2012 and won best rap album of 2013 in 2014). This album took me by surprise so much so that it prompted me to recruit Alex to officially starting this list. We were both up until 3am listening to this album shocked by how honest and good it was. Now Nicki Minaj is probably best known for work such as Anaconda and Super Bass, either hyper sexual or pop like music that most people write off as shallow. However Nicki’s albums show a side of realness that she publicly never shows. She commands power and carries herself high but the Pink Print shows she is vulnerable just like the rest of us. In fact the recommended song is the title track off the album because right from the beginning she draws you in with smooth sounds and meaningful lyrics. Her style of music does have heavy influence of pop, bit it is done so in such a way that it still carries positive messages or honesty. This album has club bangers, smooth musical jams, and there is a track called “Grand Piano” which is just Nicki singing over a piano and violin. This is the artists more prominent showing to date and you owe it to yourself to listen. If more mainstream rap was like this album I would have no problem with the state of hip-hop today. She is one of the most original figures in rap today and after this album I have even more respect for her trying to be a powerful female figure in a male dominated industry.


2.)

Logic-Under Pressure. Recommended: Soul Food

            Logic is one of the best rappers out there right now. Period. I have heard complaints of how this album just recycles themes of a struggle and his broken home life, but Logic’s pure verbal and lyrical ability speak volumes. This is a conceptual rap autobiography that Logic uses to tell a story in his first studio album debut, and what a great tale he weaves. He mixes a relaxed yet fast rap style with serious undertones and dark messages. Gang violence, domestic abuse, drug abuse, etc are all themes covered in full in this album. Logic is clearly a student of hip-hop, with this album being reminiscent of Kendrick’s Good Kid, M.A.A.D City, with an Eminem flare, and a Gambino style charisma. Logic is no copycat however, he uses what he has learned to develop his own sound, so much so that there are a few tracks on the album that have similar instrumentals. To some this may be a turn off but it goes along with the idea that this is all one story. Logic described this album as his way of talking to everyone whereas his earlier work was directed at his niche fan base. Logic makes a statement and is telling the world he is here and has earned his right to stay. It is rappers like Logic that give me faith in the future of the younger generation of rap artists. From start to finish this is a gripping work (with no featured artists unless you have the deluxe version) because Logic wanted this to show what he could do as a rapper, and I believe he has made quite the impression.

1.) 
 J.Cole- 2014 Forest Hills Drive. Recommended: January 28th

              Last year I heard J.Cole’s Born Sinner album and it blew my mind. If not for Gambino’s release that album would have easily been my favorite of the year. With that in mind I had huge hopes for this project, especially since I had no idea it was coming until a few weeks before it dropped. When I first saw the track list I was underwhelmed, this was not going to have nearly as much music as his previous work and that worried me. This all changed when I heard the beautiful intro with the thoughts of “do you wanna be happy?” floating around in my mind. All three of us had this album in our own top 5 lists (Alex and Aiyana had it as number 1 and I had it at 3), so it was no surprise when made its way to the top of our collective list. My “low” rating aside this album is a masterpiece that shifts the focus to a personal look at Cole’s life and how came to be where he is now. Usually rappers do this as a first project but Cole took the time to step back and paint a gorgeous narrative in what could be seen as a daring move. This is Not Born Sinner, it is a new work that is musically spilt into 3 Acts, with the production and lyricism following suite and shifting with the story. The album becomes more musical when it needs to be and more lyrical when the story demands it. You find yourself getting sucked into the honesty of the work and how smooth it plays out. The last song is a 13 minute credit song where Cole thanks all the people he has worked with and even then you are just memorized by the background instrumentals and you appreciate the work he has put in. Cole is an intelligent conscious rapper who shows just how far he has traversed in his own life. He has come a long way from trying to make a radio single and this album shows that he is now confident in not just his rap ability, but who he is as a person.

Honorable Mentions!


Zeke: Mick Jenkins- The Water[S]




            Chicago has produced some of the finest rappers in the game. From legends like Common and Kanye to newcomers like Vic Mensa and Chance. This year I caught wind of new mixtape that dropped from another Chicago native: Mick Jenkins. Now out of the 3 of us I was the only one who put this album on our personal top 10 lists, and I stand by the idea that this mixtape is amazing. It carries the theme of water as an entity that we are lacking in our lives and creates songs around the idea of relaxation, finding ourselves, and Jenkins personal experiences in the music industry. It is clear that Jenkins has a message to send with songs like “Martyrs” and he wishes to bring awareness with his unique soulful/jazzy sound.



Alex: IAMSU! Sincerely Yours



This album brings a fresh West Coast flavor in his studio debut. While the album itself is noteworthy overall, 'Su's collaboration tracks are the most outstanding. E40, Wiz Kalifa, and 2Chainz all lend their talents but don't distract from 'Su's raw talent on tracks like "I Love My Squad" and "Martina." As a relatively new artist, IAMSU! leaves a lasting impression that I look forward to hearing more from.


Aiyana: Azelea Banks- Broke With Expensive Taste



Although the tone of her voice appears consistent and similar throughout the album, each song offers a different musical style. From a fast, mellow trance to an upbeat Spanish flare, Azealia Banks brings sounds that contrasts what you're used to hearing on the radio



BONUS:

So if you have read this far then congrats you have finished our list! As a little bonus we give you just a few more songs to listen to if you are interested. 2014 was an amazing year in Hip-Hop and we all cannot wait to see what 2015 has in store.Big thanks to Alex and Aiyana for making this possible!!

Best Single of 2014: Chance the Rapper and the Social Experiment- Sunday Candy


Best Hip-Hop Performance: Kendrick Lamar- Snl I love myself




           




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