Recommended
Listening: Paper Trail$, Like Me, O.C.B
Oh
can this be? Is Zeke finally getting around to talking about the
album he should have done literally a month ago? Yes my beautiful readers miracles do happen and wishes do come true. Today I am going
to be talk about the debut album of Joey Bada$$ very cutely stylized
B4.DA.$$. With this I can start with the trend of talking about 2015
albums so when I make my end of the year list the write ups can
simply refer back to my Thoughts On post. This of course implying
that I'm so confident that all my top albums will already have
Thoughts On written about them that I am willing to bet future Zeke's
workload on it. I'm so good to myself. Dry wit aside I actually heard
this album the moment it dropped, Joey is a very popular rapper from
Bed Stuy, New York, and many people claim him to be one of the best
lyrically in the game right now. So Naturally I had to check him out.
After listening to his album and going back to his '1999' mixtape
that was released a few years back I can see why there is so much
hype around this rapper. In his young life he has manage to become a
new golden child of rap and the potential new future of hip-hop, also
did I mention he just turned 20?
It
is not uncommon to hear people talk about how garbage hip-hop is now
and how the future of rap looks murky and all that negativity. While
there is reason to believe some of this if you only listen to what
the mainstream thinks is good or important, but putting any effort
into a search will lead you to numerous results of amazing talent
just below the surface. Joey is one of those talents. Just turning 20
on the day of his album release (Jan 20th) he is one of
the youngest rappers in the public eye, making him a target for
praise and harsh criticism in different ways. Joey is part of the
third major generation of mainstream rap. With the First of course
being the major 80's-early 90's trendsetters like NWA and Nas, the
second generation from late 90'-2000's being people like Kanye,
Common, Lupe, and Eminem, and the third generation from post Drake
until now has people like Chance, Vic Mensa, Earl Sweatshirt, and
Joey Bada$$ keep rap alive. So whenever Joey puts out work it is not
only analyzed on its own but how it relates to hip-hop culture as a
whole. For example Joey's music has a very jazzy smooth sound to it.
It is not overly bass heavy or filled with a ton of electronic
effects like a lot of mainstream rappers have steered toward. He does
not try to make hits, rather he has a very artistic and seamless way
of rapping over beats like it is what he is meant to do. So of course
he is criticized for simply trying to re-create the golden age sound
of rap and not being original enough, and if he ever strays then he
is called a sellout. Putting all this pressure aside this young man
has managed to put together some amazing projects in his few years as
an MC and his debut album does not disappoint.
What
does the album sound like though? Well for a last bit of information
Joey is part of the Pro-Era group, a rap collective that he helped
found back in 2009. During the recording course of the B4 album his
cousin and fellow pro-era member Junior B passed away. Hearing him
talk to Peter Rosenburg on Hot 97 about the after math (He and
Rosenburg are very close, with Rosenburg often referring to him as
little brother or nephew) and it was clear how much passion went into
this album. Now a lot of albums can claim the same thing but B4 hits
in a different way. This album is one of the most lyrically dense
albums I have heard since J.Cole's 'Born Sinner' or Logic's 'Under
Pressure'. It may not be as conscious or deep as Lupe's new 'Tetsuo &
Youth' album (which Joey actually outsold in the first week) but
there is just so much lyrical content in this album. There are 16
songs on the full version of this project and just about each one is
lyrically handled solo by Joey. That is a lot of words and ton of
talent to be able to handle solo. The albums starts with the Song
'Save The Children', a great intro that plays off the theme of, you
guessed it, saving the children. It is all about saving this
generation so that they can save the next one. I believe this is
Joey's way of stating his musical mission and desire to share his
story. It is a cocky yet inspirational way of opening album with the
theme of making music before money ruined the industry (thus the
album title). In the next song 'Paper Trail$' he claims that “before
the money there was love/ but before the money it was tough”, and
“they say money is the root of all evil but I say money is the root
of all people”. This of course expressing the more modern blown up
ideals of making art for the sake of profit and not expression.
However the idea that money is the root of all people strikes me as
interesting. Joey is clearly aware that selfishness is an inherit
part of being human and is torn between his desire to be clean of
money but also help his mother out financially. This young artist
continues to lyrically express wisdom beyond his years, which is why
he has often been compared to a young Nas. His poetic delivery is
often accompanied by simple yet pronounced instrumentals. Traditional
kicks and snares combined with tight bass rifts and catchy Keyboard
chord progressions and flourishes flow so well together that they have
become Joey's style. This is not Run The Jewels 2, it is not really meant
to bring a house down or get you super hyped up, rather it is meant
for you to listen to. Like just sit and vibe and allow the narrative
to unfold. In the vein of narratives, on the song 'Like Me' (my
favorite song on the album) Joey tells a straight forward tale of
what he goes through on the daily. From women to how people treat him
to what he thinks of the police and how he prays for his future. This
song was performed with the Roots and BJ the Chicago on Jimmy
Fallon's stage and I fell in love with it. It has such a mysterious
chord progression that reminds me of lounge jazz and is just a
beautiful song overall. On one of his more upbeat tracks 'No.99' he
talks about the negative police view on African-Americans and how he
rebels against them. It is a reflection of tense minority relations
that as of last year got more and more attention but is not
necessarily news. He takes a very personal anti-cop stating that you
can't trust the pigs. As harsh people may think it is it goings along
with the album idea of creating for yourself and not depending on
others to look out for you, or at the very least that is my opinion.
Lastly in 'O.C.B' which stands for only child blues Joey sums up his
journey and where he has had to come from being the only child to
provide for his mother. How his dreams started with him staring at
his walls alone in his room. Meanwhile a delightful ring of sustained
chords, what sounds like a tuba, and saxophone plays in the
background. Just a great track overall. I only touched on a few
tracks but each song has so much going on in it that you should
really experience for yourself.
Joey's
first album certainly not dissapoint, with a myriad of lyrics to go
though and perfect instrumentals that go with them I think it may be
a while before the full depth of this album is understood. It is
clear to me that rap has a bright future, for as long as there are
words to be said there will be MC's to come along and say them. Here
in this album we have the label beginnings of a young poet who may
just come to be one of the greatest of his time. He still has a ways
to go but the ground work is all there and he seems to have a good
head on his shoulders. At the end of the day what you have is a
fantastic album in which a young rapper is able to catch onto the
very foundation of what Hip-Hop means and spread that message to a
newer younger audience. I recommend that you all: Listen Soon.
Phew I finally did it, and it
was just as poorly written as all the others. Next week I will be
review Big Sean's new album in an attempt to stay more current before
I inevitably review things from years prior.