Classic Review: My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy - Kanye West
CLASSIC/10
Background: If you are the type of person that takes issue when writers refer to artists by their first name,
just stop reading here. Kanye is a household name, and I guarantee he's
the only Kanye you know. You know who I'm talking about when I refer to him as Kanye. That's the man's name.
Deal with it. Anyways. Kanye West is an American rapper/singer/songwriter/producer/multi instrumentalist/fashion designer/record label president, and philanthropist. He began his career as a producer for stars such as Jay Z and Ludacris. West's early production featured samples taken from classic soul records, but sped up to
chipmunk pitches and laid over easy going beats. West earned a reputation as a perfectionist, which showed up quite apparently in his meticulously produced songs. West eventually branched out into his own rapping career and overcame the public perception that producers couldn't rap with his debut album, the classic The College Dropout. This album, as well as the
CRIMINALLY underrated and superior followup Late Registration, featured what would be known as the classic Kanye sound, with every song taking its base in a repeated vocal sample. The lyrics also turned away from what was conventional at the time for rap music, which was rapping about
gangster stuff and general
thuggery (possibly NSFW). Kanye's lyrics had their fair share of bragging, but also featured moments of insecurity and introspection that revealed his ego was simply a coping mechanism for the fight West felt on the inside. The next album, Graduation, was a slight downturn in quality from the the first two albums, in my opinion, and featured Kanye's classic sound readjusted to fit the stadium setting. These songs were bigger, louder, more dynamic, and somehow even more incredibly well produced. They took influence from EDM, classic rock, and even pop/soft rock and were even more popular than his previous works. Shortly after this, West's mother died unexpectedly after complications resulting from breast reduction surgery. The subject of many of his songs, the death of his mother devastated West. Shortly after that, Kanye and his fiance divorced. This also took a strong emotional toll on West. Kanye responded with the
sleeper 808s & Heartbreaks, which was West's first album to receive any "
negative" critical response. 808s featured almost no rapping and rather saw West singing in a mechanical, autotuned voice. West used the technology to augment his already dejected vocals and give the album an incredibly sad and personal feel. It would later prove to be
vastly influential in the years after its release, but at the time it was the
low point of Ye's career. Kanye followed that album up with the
Taylor Swift incident and a canceled tour. West was possibly the most hated man in popular culture, had his first mixed critical reception, and was at the
low point of his career. The man who had once been the most successful hip hop artist in the world was watching his world quickly
rush away from him, and responded to his sadness in the only way he knew how. Just as how Kanye's ego and public antics served as a way to deal with his insecurities, Kanye released this album just to show the world what he could do when cornered. West flew himself to Hawaii and took six months to work with a machine-like focus. Engineers were kept
on the boards nearly twenty-four hours a day, with guests from all walks of music flying into Hawaii to help assist with the album's creation. West slept in short increments and worked his featured artists the same, demanding that they re-write their verses until they were exactly how West envisioned them. Individual songs took thousands of hours to perfect, and the
writing credits on this album are simply astounding. Finally, in November 2010, West released what would become his comeback album, as well
as the most critically acclaimed album of the past decade.
Review: Now, I am fully aware that nobody reads my reviews. They skim the posts just enough to have something on which to base their comments so they can get their grade during the completion check and that's it. I don't expect people to read this but as I write I like to imagine that I am writing to hundreds of thousands of readers who will take time out of their lives to discuss my writings in the comment section. Just as every kid plays air guitar in front of the mirror and imagines a stadium before him or how every teenager likes to pretend that his last shot before heading inside for dinner is a championship winning buzzer beater, I like to pretend that a few people read my stupid little blog. I can imagine that in my fantasy if I was writing and people actually cared, there would be considerable outcry that I am labeling an album from 2010 as a classic. My previous modern classic is actually older than this classic. However, there is a major difference. Deerhunter
is not Kanye West. Nobody is Kanye West, for that matter. For all its brilliance, nobody will be talking about
Halcyon Digest in fifteen years. In fifteen years people will be sick of
My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy because it is still discussed with such frequency. It is an album fully deserving of its praise, so monumental in its own existence that it forces itself to be considered an instant classic.
MBDTF is not a perfect album by any means, yet any score other than a 10/10 just feels inadequate. To not call it a classic is not fitting for an album of this scope and grandeur.
Now, it would have been very easy for West to
kick the listener's teeth in and open the album with
"Power". Given his position in life, it would have been all too simple to jump out of the gate aiming for the listener's (ear) throat. Yet West shows the album's only real moment of restraint, devoid of decadence and excess of emotion and sound. "Dark Fantasy," the album's opener, begins with Nicki Minaj putting on a British accent for a brief narration, which leads into the aforementioned decadence with a full choir singing "Could we get much higher?" It is ironic that these lyrics open the album, as West had never been lower in his career. Yet, in West's mind, he is never down. The song then
swaggers into its first beat, co-produced by the Wu Tang Clan's RZA. West sounds as confident as ever, yet still sounds as if he is
warming up. His raps are clever, and his flow is slick as can be, yet he is still just jogging. The real star of this song is the production, in which RZA delivers his best beat since the early days of the Wu. The chorus then ends the song with the same refrain that begins. Immediately the listener is given a taste of what this album will represent: West is using decadence to compensate for his insecurity, and, unbeknownst to the listener, his maximalism is still relatively subdued for the time being.
If "Dark Fantasy" was West warming up, the next track "Gorgeous" is West hitting
a full sprint (yes, that is the actual race after the previous video of Bolt warming up). West throws down the best bars of his career, all the while tackling topics like as racial inequality and commercialism. His lyrics have rarely before or since been more clever and well written. Throughout Kanye's career he has faced criticism for his
rapping, which has typically been regarded as second rate when compared to his production and songwriting. "Gorgeous" is usually mentioned as the song that proved West could rap with the best of them. RZA jumps on the back end of the track and delivers a stellar verse yet is still out-rapped by West. The idea that Kanye West would one day outrap RZA on a track was unfathomable at one point in hip hop history, yet on "Gorgeous" it happens. The song unfolds over a guitar led beat, with subtle drums and piano in the background. Kid Cudi delivers an excellent hook (my favorite of his career), and I still wish for the days before Cudi completely lost his marbles when I hear it.
You know that teeth kicking I mentioned earlier? Here is where it shows up. The third track is the aforementioned "Power." That full sprint from "Gorgeous" is maintained,
but now West is running downhill. With the wind behind his back. In nicer shoes. Yeah, that fast. Nobody really gets excited by this song any more because of its popularity, but there is a reason for that. West is at his most confident (arrogant?) here, and over the most bombastic beat of his career up until this point. West's lyrics address his fame and egoistic personality. West raps with such
conviction here that it is hard to do anything but give him a pass for his eccentricity. Lines like "I embody every characteristic of the egotistic / He knows, he's so, f***ing gifted" prove that West has a sense of self awareness about his attitude yet chooses to maintain it anyways. In addition to his confidence, however, is a sense of paranoia. West almost sounds as if he is convincing himself, in addition to us, of his greatness. Given the low point he was at, it almost seems as if Kanye may have needed a confidence boost and this song is serving as just that. Perhaps West chooses to
go so hard here to prove to himself that he still has it. The song takes a sample from "21st Century Schizoid Man" by
Emerson, Lake, and Palmer, a song about a man with conflicting morals and thoughts. West paints himself as this "Schizoid Man" with his alternating rushes of confidence and paranoia, perfectionism and insecurity. West feels the pressure of his fame, of his ego, of his reputation, and of his personal life and again turns to braggadocio in order to fool himself into confidence. As mentioned, the beat here is of immense scale, with booming bass and drums to accentuate the giant guitar stabs and the chanting. West's maximalism is
showing quite strongly and the song is all the much better for it.
Next up is "All of the Lights (Interlude)" and "All of the Lights". The interlude takes the melody of the main track and translates it to a beautiful piano and string led interlude. This morphs into "All of the Lights." The weird thing about "All of the Lights" is that it is the worst, and simultaneously one of the best, songs on the album. On one hand, the drums sound like they were mixed by a
cokehead during a particularly fervant trip. On the other hand,
Sir Elton John is featured on the track. On another hand, Fergie has a god-awful little interlude about three minutes in about doing cocaine and being broke. On the other, other hand Rihanna's hooks do more than compensate for Fergie. Kid Cudi drops the ball here and comes off as annoying. The horns are excellent. There is plenty to hate about this song, yet I can't bring myself to dislike it.
Next up is the album's middle centerpiece, "Monster". The song opens with an absolutely blood chilling intro from Bon Iver,
who is just about the least scary dude ever. But, for Kanye West, Vernon (Bon Iver) bares his fangs and kicks this song off with a bang. Rick Ross then joins in with a very short verse, one that is at once completely unnecessary yet is absolutely essential to the track. The beat kicks in,
full of bass, and West begins rapping, delivering one of his best, albeit conceited and downright uncomfortable, verses. Jay Z takes the next verse, and then attempts
to name drop as many monsters as he knows (link has language), and then admits his primary weakness is love.
Beyonce needs to step it up. Nicki Minaj then jumps into the song and basically
shoves a pink high heel point into the song's face. Cycling through as many voices as she knows while alternating between mocking falsetto and maniacal growling, Nicki drops what is easily the best verse of her career up until that point and through the present as well. Anybody who doubts Minaj's skill as a rapper due to her recent questionable pop concessions (that's a nice way to say that she sold out and only releases throwaway pop now) needs to check this verse out. If it wasn't for Rick Ross' verse later in the album, there is no question that Nicki Minaj wins the prize for "most clutch verse," as I doubt anybody was expecting much from her when the song began. The song closes with a nicely produced outro, and that's it. The track is over six minutes long, yet feels barely over three due to the frantic pace of the beat and Nicki Minaj's verse.
Following "Monster" is "So Appalled," a
posse cut that features five guests, including West himself, over a dramatic, string led beat. Discussing
the merits of fame, West steps up to the plate first and hits a double, with a very solid but not mind blowing verse. Jay Z then reminds us
why he could be considered the greatest of all time with a verse that does more than compensate for his fairly lame verse on "Monster." Funny, aggressive, bragging, emotive, and technically skilled, Jay Z is in peak form here. After another chorus, it is Pusha T's turn to rap. Considered a has-been who once ruled the game in the duo Clipse but hadn't delivered as a solo artist, Pusha hits a home run (to stick with the baseball theme.) Pusha T outraps everybody on this track, and makes it sound easy. Brimming with malice (
no pun intended), Pusha spits out his words with a disturbing calm, yet keeps his teeth gritted enough to know he means business. With Pusha T, another famous old timer again delivers a peak level verse. Cyhi the Prince, who actually was not supposed to be on the track but snuck his verse on while West was sleeping, puts up the best verse of his career as well, a verse strong enough to convince Kanye to keep his addition. If you haven't noticed yet, a large part of this album's legacy is that it teased the best out of nearly all of its contributors.
MBDTF sees the best verses of more than a few careers, and
even forces Bon Iver out of his folksy tear stained comfort zone. The track ends with RZA repeating a few variations of the song's hook in his most obnoxious voice possible.
The next song, "Devil In a New Dress", is
my personal favorite of the album. The only song not produced by Kanye West, "Dress" nonetheless features the most beautiful beat of the album. Centered around a stunning Smokey Robinson sample, West spits lyrics about his powerlessness in the hands of women, filling his verses with religious imagery and compares/contrasts the girl of his dreams and the girl using him with images of Christ and Satan, debauchery and devotion, love and lust, extravagance and uselessness, bragging and deeply seated insecurity. West ends with the question "you love me for me, could you be more phony?" Aware of his own superficiality, West states that any girl who delivers the cliche "I love you for you" to him is equally as egoistic and superficial, a flaw of having a personality such as his. This line and its host of implications could be read as a sort of thesis statement for the album. After West's second verse, the track breaks down into a guitar solo, played by Mike Dean. Featuring distorted, weeping guitars over the original beat, the jaw dropping beauty of the track is nearly overwhelming at this point. Suddenly Rick Ross jumps into the track, rapping like he has something to prove. Delivering lines like "double-headed monster with a mind of his own/Cherry red chariot, excess is just my character" and "had cyphers with Yeezy before his mouth wired/Before his jaw shattered climbin' up the Lord's ladder" Ross packs his verses with internal rhymes and alliteration like never before in his career. Ross paints a vivid image of lonely excess, ditching his usual tired lines about selling cocaine (
which he never actually did) for depictions of extreme luxury and loneliness. Yet again, the best verse of an artists career is used on this album. The track cuts out suddenly and proceeds into the album's true peak, "Runaway".
The nine minute track that follows "Devil In a New Dress" needs little to no explanation.
Here is a link to the song (censored). Listen, and listen well. You are listening to arguably the greatest individual song in modern hip hop. A stunning revelation of character and beautifully crafted apology, "Runaway" serves as West's apology to both Taylor Swift and the world in general. A third of the way through Pusha T absolutely murders his verse, as anything less would be criminal. Pusha T plays the the jerk West sings about and then some. I wanted to type out some of the lyrics here, but there are just too many in his verse that I would have to include.
Here are the lyrics. Read them. That is all I have to say about this track.
After "Runaway" is the album's worst song. "Hell of A Life" opens with a crushingly heavy bassline which it proceeds to throw away for a fairly annoying beat and a song about lust. Not love and lust. Just lust. And porn. Lots of porn. This track is essential to the album and its themes of American excess, despite being the album's weakest track. I guess it would be passable if the chorus stole its melody from a song that wasn't Black Sabbath's "Iron Man". Seriously Kanye? "Iron Man"? Really? Anyways. Next track.
The next three tracks close out the album in a gorgeous manner. First up is the epic break up track "Blame Game." After that is a stunningly gorgeous cover of
Bon Iver's "Woods" featuring the man himself. "Woods" is already a beautiful track, and Kanye does it justice.The album closes with a Gil Scott Heron spoken word piece laid over a decent beat. This serves as a brilliant
three-peat to close the album.
One would think that such a brilliant album would have had some sort of influence, yet
MBDTF has had very minimal direct influence in the world of rap other than setting the bar higher for everybody else in terms of production and thematic quality. My theory for this is because this is a highly individualized album about Kanye West, for Kanye West, made by Kanye West. This album serves almost as West's diary, as an internal examination of West's own psyche. We are simply visitors inside his mind, here to find things to relate to and be awed by. Themes and concepts spread through the album, such as love, lust, excess, consumerism/shallowness, arrogance as a means to cover insecurity, and hatred of ones tendency towards self love, are not so much intentional devices used to make a point as they are a product of who Kanye West is as a person. Usually when listening to an album, the listener feels as if they are taking a product designed by a musician for their consumption and that they are evaluating it based on some criteria that the person uses to judge music. With this album, I feel as if I am looking into somebody else's mind and am simply a guest in the space of their consciousness. The album is leading me through what it wants me to see, rather than I am looking through the album to find things to dissect and write about. Finding an album so intensely personal as this is rare, and I fully believe
My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy deserves classic status, despite its young age, because of this.
HIGHPOINTS: "Power" "Monster" "So Appalled" "Devil In a New Dress" "Runaway" "Lost In the World"
LOWPOINTS: "Hell of a Life", certain parts of "All of the Lights"
Recommended albums: Any of West's previous projects, Good Kid M.A.A.D City - Kendrick Lamar, Run The Jewels 2 - Run The Jewels, For Emma, Forever Ago - Bon Iver