
Monk eventually moved into her New Jersey house which served as a sanctuary for ageing jazz musicians.
New West End Company BRANDPOST | PAID CONTENT. What is a society without music criticism? Shall it shrivel into oblivion or persist through the dry cracks of rubble? To all my sisters and brothers in the struggle, “May Allah bless your career as a music critic” and remember to wash your hands for 20 seconds. In the days ahead, we can all learn from Jay, Jay, and Joe. “That guilt trip ain’t gon’ work, don’t put your luggage on we / You ain’t keep the same energy for the du Ponts and Carnegies” he offers on “Universal Soldier,” setting aside the fact that his listeners were not alive during the Gilded Age. I would’ve stayed on the sidelines if they could’ve tackled the shit themselves” - “Flux Capacitor”ĭespite his billionaire status, across the album, Jay seems intent to simultaneously rebuke his detractors within the black community, while explaining his way of thinking. Got more money than Goodell, a whole NFL benchĭid it one-handed like Odell handcuffed to a jail “Why would I sell out? I’m already rich, don’t make no sense “I could never sell my soul, they sold they soul to me,” he begins the album before breaking down his thought process behind Roc Nation’s NFL deal five songs later. At the time, Jay’s latest business venture was rightfully seen as hypocritical after the rapper spent the majority of the rollout for 2017’s 4:44, supporting Colin Kaepernick, only to partner with the same organization that still refuses to hire him. This is a version of Jay with some points to make, and he sounds more defiant than he has in ages.Įver since Jay-Z’s Roc Nation became the NFL’s “live music entertainment strategist” in August 2019, the rapper/mogul has been on the defensive. In fairness to all involved, if you’re going to call A Written Testimony a Jay Z album, it’s important to note that it’s a very good Jay Z album, in part because he came to this album ready to defend himself. J A Y E L E C T R O N I C A March 17, 2020 may Allah bless your career as a journalist. May Allah bless your career as a journalist.” In response, Electronica replied with words that slightly crushed the soul of every journalist forced to work from home for the foreseeable future: “I never heard your albums bro. “I never got absolutely mopped around on my own project either,” Budden tweeted after the rapper tagged one of the podcast’s co-hosts, Rory. “The caliber of rapping that’s on ‘Exhibit C’ is not exhibited here.” Then Jay and Joe’s beef transitioned to social media. Joe Budden - part-time podcast provocateur, full-time retired rapper - entered the fray to take a few shots at how Jay Z-heavy A Written Testimony was. “As a rapper, I’m telling you he got smacked around,” Budden said on the latest episode of The Joe Budden Podcast. Predictably, Electronica spent the better part of his weekend basking in praise and defending himself against criticism.
If you starve a fandom long enough, even a loaf of bread (as good as that bread may sound) can seem like manna. Across A Written Testimony, Jay-Z turns in enough bars, verses, and outros to make a convincing argument that Electronica’s new project is something like Jay’s 14th studio album or, at least, his sixth collaborative one. Instead, the scripture delivered from the Roc Nation perch on high comes from Hotep Hov. Yet, the first Jay listeners hear on Electronica’s debut is not Electronica. Last Friday, Jay Electronica finally released his debut album - it came after a decade of rap bloggers hailing “Exhibit C” as the second coming (of what, no one is quite sure).
As a pandemic besieges the globe, hip-hop fans are the only group asking the important questions: Did Jay-Z wash Jay Electronica on the latter’s debut album?