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J-core albums
J-core albums













  1. #J CORE ALBUMS HOW TO#
  2. #J CORE ALBUMS FULL#

Sign up for the 10 to Hear newsletter here. By taking a step back on The Off-Season, Cole mostly avoids that, even if he still doesn’t have a spot in those conversations he dreams of.Ĭatch up every Saturday with 10 of our best-reviewed albums of the week. Lots of finger-wagging and résumé raps about their accomplishments and outside endeavors. It happened to Jay on The Blueprint 3, Nas back during his “Hip Hop is Dead” era, and Kanye sometime before or after The Life of Pablo. Many hugely successful rappers have struggled through this phase, not because they became worse lyricists, but they were clinging to the old days instead of reflecting this change. But actually getting older in rap is difficult because life is not the same. In the build-up to this album, Cole put out a mini-documentary that asks the question: Why is it so hard to be great in rap as you get older? Cole, now 36, believes that he’s solved it, though his answer is actually meaningless motivational speak about hunger and putting in the work and other sayings that belong on a Nike T-shirt. None of this works, because no one cares about this beef, especially Diddy, who instead uses his studio time to promote his rebrand into Tony Robbins. In what is supposed to be a sincere moment, he reveals that he once got into a scuffle with Diddy and in the very same song, Diddy shows up to speak some sort of fake enlightened prayer. Likewise “Let Go My Hand” would probably fall similarly flat if it wasn’t so funny. Most notably the intro where he squeezes some cliché flexing in between a half-assed Cam’ron monologue and the jarring tonal shift into Lil Jon chants. “Applying Pressure” feels tense, made worse by a lifeless self-produced boom-bap instrumental that sounds like the background music for a ’90s UPN sitcom and some bars that have become expected of the out of touch rap elite: “If you broke and clownin’ a millionaire, the joke is on you.” (Nas, would approve of this one.) Some choices feel incredibly forced as well. The same could be said for “Pride Is the Devil,” where, annoying-Cole-singing aside, his thoughtfulness is complemented by Lil Baby being much less thoughtful: “Got my feet up, I paid silly bands to have sex on the jet.”īut you can still subtly feel that weight on Cole’s shoulders. This gives him the freedom to pour most of his energy into his verse, which catches a nice balance between the sort of shallow but earnest introspection he’s known for and more trivial things that just sound cool: “Wanna be in the spot like where every bitch want me like Rihanna droppin’ new Fenty,” he raps. On “My Life,” Fayetteville crooner Morray’s hook repurposes Pharoahe Monch lyrics through vocals that sound like he’s leading a church choir, 21 Savage’s guest appearance is filled with the warmest death threats, and the smoky beat is done by Cole with help from Jake One and Wu10. That liveliness comes out on the album’s collaborations. This switch doesn’t suddenly turn him into a Flint rapper, but it does sound like he’s having fun for once. He pulls back slightly from the narrative form of writing (sorry, to the “ Wet Dreamz” heads but no virginity tales on this one) in favor of more punchlines and wordplay. The Off-Season is a much-needed break from the heavy-handed preachiness that made KOD and 4 Your Eyez Only such slogs to get through. Refreshingly, his latest album The Off-Season isn’t so damn uptight. Imagine not letting yourself binge-watch Bob’s Burgers or whatever because you’re too busy trying to make the next The Blueprint! Sounds terrible! Well, finally he’s come to the realization he needs to chill out.

#J CORE ALBUMS FULL#

In a recent interview with Slam, he opened up about how he was once so tormented by aspirations to make long-lasting music that he wouldn’t even allow himself to complete watching a full season of television. It’s just that he’s so deadly serious that he can make rap sound like studying for the SATs. He’s a clever lyricist who can make lines stick for both good and bad reasons, the type of a storyteller who could get you to pull up a chair and listen, and his beats may sound familiar but they have this warmth to them that can produce the rare Billboard hit that feels intimate. It never quite happened, but it had nothing to do with his skill.

#J CORE ALBUMS HOW TO#

It was like he read a copy of How to Make a Classic Rap Album for Dummies and has been trying to replicate it ever since. Cole album has been completely obsessed with being the one that earns him his place on the podium next to his idols Biggie, Jay, and Nas. Since 2011’s Cole World: The Sideline Story, every J.















J-core albums