Kanye West's new 2018 album

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reed richards' superpower is to do a fucking great guest spot on one mf doom song and then disappear forever

― Arch Bacon (rushomancy), Tuesday, June 5, 2018 12:26 PM (yesterday)

also one King Geedorah song

we used to get our kicks reading surfing MAGAzines (sic), Tuesday, 5 June 2018 20:20 (eight years ago)

lol for a second I was like "they give out pendants? I want in"

nevertheless, he stopped (flamboyant goon tie included), Tuesday, 5 June 2018 20:29 (eight years ago)

"What we have instead is the most insular and impenetrable album from a man whose art has always gloriously been dedicated to the self. ye, as its cover makes clear, is his most bracingly personal album, a documentation of his increasingly public wrestling with his mental health and corroded life. (It’s also a nearly instant one at that—West claims he scrapped an entire album to record ye in the last month.) He has also never felt more distant; locked away in self-created prisons in Calabasas and Wyoming, the rapper whose relatability made him a cross-demographic superstar now has problems and solutions that are almost completely unrecognizable to the common man."

https://www.spin.com/2018/06/kanye-west-ye-review/

The Harsh Tutelage of Michael McDonald (Raymond Cummings), Tuesday, 5 June 2018 21:34 (eight years ago)

that review is OTM

Joe Gargan (dandydonweiner), Tuesday, 5 June 2018 23:39 (eight years ago)

idk if its been linked but i also like rawiya's review in fader

Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Tuesday, 5 June 2018 23:47 (eight years ago)

nice work by j0 tho, v dense read

Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Tuesday, 5 June 2018 23:47 (eight years ago)

Ah, is that ILM's "J0rdan"?

i’m still stanning (morrisp), Tuesday, 5 June 2018 23:49 (eight years ago)

(er, sorry if I wasn't supposed to use full handle on same page as link, or something)

i’m still stanning (morrisp), Tuesday, 5 June 2018 23:50 (eight years ago)

anyway, great writing

i’m still stanning (morrisp), Tuesday, 5 June 2018 23:51 (eight years ago)

it's fire

morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 6 June 2018 00:18 (eight years ago)

Sounds like Kanye needs a high dose of psilocybin. Disassociate that ego forcefully.

octobeard, Wednesday, 6 June 2018 00:45 (eight years ago)

jOrdan's review excellent and I'd like to read a much longer version of it.

Heavy Messages (jed_), Wednesday, 6 June 2018 00:56 (eight years ago)

some beautiful writing in there.

Heavy Messages (jed_), Wednesday, 6 June 2018 00:57 (eight years ago)

idk if its been linked but i also like rawiya's review in fader

― Listen to my homeboy Fantano (D-40), Tuesday, June 5, 2018 6:47 PM (one hour ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

I don't think we linked it and I wasn't aware of it. Here it is, and it's fire:

"Across ye’s seven tracks, Kanye digs his heels in — no apologies, no regrets or introspection, just barely coherent thoughts and barely complete songs. In fact, its single most original idea, and the only one I hope seeps into the culture is its brevity, though even that is wielded unsuccessfully. The album’s clearest ideological precursor is “Facts,” the “Jumpman” facsimile first released on SoundCloud in late 2015. Just as on that song, which eventually ended up on The Life of Pablo, Kanye is defensive to the point of hysteria. When he references one of his recent most offensive comments on “Wouldn’t Leave” — “I say slavery a choice / They say, ‘how, Ye? ’/ Just imagine if they caught me on a wild day” — he conveniently treats his words as just another Kanye controversy, not an actual hurtful, damaging statement."

http://www.thefader.com/2018/06/04/kanye-west-ye-review

The Harsh Tutelage of Michael McDonald (Raymond Cummings), Wednesday, 6 June 2018 01:25 (eight years ago)

thanks for the kind words, everyone :-)

J0rdan S., Wednesday, 6 June 2018 01:53 (eight years ago)

The most generous reading of ye is that West wants us to witness his public breakdown and the slow-motion implosion of his reputation. The album would then theoretically be a unique document of what happens at the intersection of mental health and celebrity. He would, maybe, accomplish his mission of asking the public to examine their expectations of artists. But in order for us to watch the spectacle of his life going up in flames, and to think about what has caused it and why, and to extend our empathy to him as a victim, we have to descend to the depths of West’s subterranean nihilism—to live where he lives. Alas, ye is in no way fascinating enough for that journey to be justified.

Still, the music at times almost makes it worth it.

I read: my empathy for this man’s mental health situation is dependent upon how much I appreciate his music

Can’t say I don’t feel the same, but this is kind of the crux, no?

nevertheless, he stopped (flamboyant goon tie included), Wednesday, 6 June 2018 02:16 (eight years ago)

Like, it’s the experience of anybody who has suffered from depression (i.e.) that one is at their neediest-for-validation-and-understanding when they are also at their most depressed-and-unlikeable

Diamanda Galas: “the truth about mental illness is that it’s the loneliness that kills you”

nevertheless, he stopped (flamboyant goon tie included), Wednesday, 6 June 2018 02:21 (eight years ago)

yeah i feel that. tho i do think we have to remember we’re talking about an album... it still has to have a utility to the listener as a piece of music. this is not kanye’s essay about his mental health. the spoken word opening of “i thought about killing you” is gripping but then... the rest of the song happens.

also i do think there’s a version of this album where kanye more honestly grapples with himself & his celebrity (i realize i’m wading into choppy waters here)

J0rdan S., Wednesday, 6 June 2018 05:09 (eight years ago)

I'm privy to some behind-closed-doors shit about previous albums but not this one, but I'd be interested to hear that

And yeah re: "killing" that really is the problem with this record is the constant pivoting of subject/object/audience, it doesn't feel as if any stanza was written in the same headspace, like "you" is clearly Kim but seconds later he's casually making out with not-his-wife and commenting on her coke breath

nevertheless, he stopped (flamboyant goon tie included), Wednesday, 6 June 2018 05:42 (eight years ago)

lol for a second I was like "they give out pendants? I want in"

― nevertheless, he stopped (flamboyant goon tie included), Tuesday, June 5, 2018 4:29 PM (yesterday) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

some 12 step groups do give out medallions!

cr.ht (crüt), Wednesday, 6 June 2018 06:03 (eight years ago)

Kanye is either not willing, not coherent or not smart enough to actually articulate his mental health issues. I wouldn't begrudge him whichever of those are true in any way.

But I don't buy the idea that it's more empathetic/helpful and less self serving to fill in the gaps where we think he falls short.

This,

I read: my empathy for this man’s mental health situation is dependent upon how much I appreciate his music

doesn't scan as fair at all.

There's no reason why the albums that make you feel most for an artist, have to be the ones you like more. I don't really revisit Carrie and Lowell but none of the Sufjan albums I do rinse made me feel for him anything like that did.

Ye could've been sonically unpleasant, which it isn't and still have evoked greater relatability than any of his other albums. That it utterly fails in this regard says nothing about our ability to feel beyond our own interests and everything about how fervent belief in your own genius, cripples your ability to express meaningful solidarity.

Yet this, in his words, is what he thinks he's doing,

“I believe ‘ye’ is the most commonly used word in the Bible, and in the Bible it means ‘you,’ so I’m you, I’m us, it’s us,” he said. “It went from Kanye, which means the only one, to being ye—just being a reflection of our good, our bad, our confused, everything. The album is a reflection of who we are.”

Maybe in light of everything else we know it isn't fair to take that at face value but either way, dude doesn't seem to be putting any more thought into this than he did into "slavery was a choice".

tsrobodo, Wednesday, 6 June 2018 06:28 (eight years ago)

But in order for us to watch the spectacle of his life going up in flames, and to think about what has caused it and why, and to extend our empathy to him as a victim, we have to descend to the depths of West’s subterranean nihilism—to live where he lives. Alas, ye is in no way fascinating enough for that journey to be justified.

fgti otm in criticizing this. But the other thing I want to point out, again, is that for people like me, who has been forced to as it says 'live where he lives' - who has witnessed a similar breakdown in real life up close - this is very much besides the point, and the whole thing seems like the most generous gift he could give. And if other people don't think the music is good enough to make up for having to deal with the darkness, that's absolutely okay, but then the record is not for you. For me, it was really, really needed.

Frederik B, Wednesday, 6 June 2018 11:37 (eight years ago)

Lol how is his life going up in flames he just crapped out another shitty album for nerds, it took him two weeks, it’s not even a half hour of material, and he’s made a million bucks while accidentally raising bipolar disorder awareness by an order of magnitude more than Stephen Fry and a hundred charities ever could

El Tomboto, Wednesday, 6 June 2018 11:53 (eight years ago)

I mean yeah everyone feels sorry for him and/or hates his guts but it would not appear that those are sensations he is unprepared to deal with

El Tomboto, Wednesday, 6 June 2018 11:55 (eight years ago)

has Frederick literally ever made a post that wasn't scolding someone?

The Desus & Mero Chain (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 6 June 2018 12:34 (eight years ago)

if he is indeed bipolar I hope Kanye gets help, he certainly has the resources to do so unlike so many people in my life I've seen go through incredible struggled with no safety net or finances.

I sympathize in the abstract but I don't know Kanye, he cares nothing about me and does not know I exist, or any of you. so I hope he can ease and suffering he has, I hope all people can, but J0rd's job was to write about the album, the public piece of art that was released through a corporation. he's under no obligation to pull his punches because of the public's perception of what Kanye's mental state is (and we still don't know for a fact that he is bipolar if we are not professionals who've evaluated him)

The Desus & Mero Chain (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 6 June 2018 12:44 (eight years ago)

also really enjoyed all the reviews posted itt, great writing

The Desus & Mero Chain (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Wednesday, 6 June 2018 12:46 (eight years ago)

yeah there's more effort evident in the reviews (and some of the reflections itt) than in the album itself

Simon H., Wednesday, 6 June 2018 12:49 (eight years ago)

^^otm

niels, Wednesday, 6 June 2018 13:10 (eight years ago)

UMS completely otm.

morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 6 June 2018 13:11 (eight years ago)

yea been wanting to have a go at this on my page but I'm not really interested in grappling with the mental health & celebrity ideas. it's just kind of a boring, shitty album, in a year where so much great stuff has already been released.

I get that he doesn't actually reference Trump here but I can't help but think he's morphed into that in some sense. see Trump's "Fake News Awards" which was this confusing and massively hyped up event that just wound up being a simple HTML page where he gripes about minor errors in reporting. ye is sort of the album equivalent of that. he's been called a genius so many times, now he's convinced that what the people really want is just whatever comes off the top of his brain.

frogbs, Wednesday, 6 June 2018 13:13 (eight years ago)

some 12 step groups do give out medallions!

― cr.ht (crüt)

"ocarina of time" actually about link's recovery from alcoholism

I get that he doesn't actually reference Trump here but I can't help but think he's morphed into that in some sense. see Trump's "Fake News Awards" which was this confusing and massively hyped up event that just wound up being a simple HTML page where he gripes about minor errors in reporting. ye is sort of the album equivalent of that. he's been called a genius so many times, now he's convinced that what the people really want is just whatever comes off the top of his brain.

― frogbs

this is a well-known and long-standing problem with genius. genius has great idea, is told "that's stupid/crazy/will never work", proves those people wrong, never accepts criticism from anybody again, spends next 40 years attempting to transmute lead into gold or trying to persuade the world of the truth of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion. more and more i'm wondering to what extent "genius" is even a helpful concept.

Arch Bacon (rushomancy), Wednesday, 6 June 2018 13:28 (eight years ago)

It's not

Frederik B, Wednesday, 6 June 2018 13:38 (eight years ago)

Not criticizing J0rdan's review-- I said "I feel the same way"-- or more precisely, "can't say I don't feel the same"--

Maybe this is a boring conversation for some but it's interesting for me (and I hope, others too)

it still has to have a utility to the listener as a piece of music.

This is an interesting statement. An album does have to have utility-to-the-listener in order to garner replay value, sell tickets, get good reviews. But I lots of the most effective albums (especially those about mental illness or tragedy) lack utility. I'm thinking about A Crow Looked At Me or Carrie And Lowell or even The Drift, all three of them albums I've listened to exactly once and all three of them albums I remember literally every moment of, albums that will not soundtrack my days but have stimulated my discourse

I think I need to unpack my thoughts a little more I'm trying to type a response but it's too many threads to collate properly rn

nevertheless, he stopped (flamboyant goon tie included), Wednesday, 6 June 2018 13:42 (eight years ago)

yeah Carrie & Lowell is a good example there. I've heard it twice and I think it's incredible, probably "better" than the Sufjans I've listened to dozens of times, but I never really want to hear it again. ye isn't quite like that though, I don't want to hear it again because it just didn't engage me at all, and all the memorable bits were (to me) incredibly stupid.

frogbs, Wednesday, 6 June 2018 13:51 (eight years ago)

if the point of making a record about mental illness is to make the listener realize how boring it is to be mentally ill, then Kanye West succeeded

droit au butt (Euler), Wednesday, 6 June 2018 13:54 (eight years ago)

I just really want to quibble with what 'the listener' means in this discussion.

Frederik B, Wednesday, 6 June 2018 14:09 (eight years ago)

yeah there's more effort evident in the reviews (and some of the reflections itt) than in the album itself

OTM.

The album is so sleight and the songs so thin that it can be frustrating to read the mental gyrations that attempt to derive deeper meaning. This is, of course, a longtime luxury afforded to iconic artists but I don't like it.

Joe Gargan (dandydonweiner), Wednesday, 6 June 2018 15:29 (eight years ago)

https://www.tinymixtapes.com/music-review/kanye-west-ye

Hm

Vapor waif (uptown churl), Wednesday, 6 June 2018 17:16 (eight years ago)

why would you do that

flamenco blorf (BradNelson), Wednesday, 6 June 2018 17:18 (eight years ago)

Is it possible to have taken so many girls to the titty shop that you’ve lost count and also strive to become a good, protective father? Of course it is — that’s what makes us human, that we’re capable of change.

So what’s the difference between Kanye and the rest of us?

morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 6 June 2018 17:18 (eight years ago)

that is some serious gyrating

Οὖτις, Wednesday, 6 June 2018 17:19 (eight years ago)

paragraph 2: hey just in case you didn't know, xenophobia and lacking empathy is bad

paragraph 3: what about kanye using his public platform to excuse slavery is wrong?

lowercase (eric), Wednesday, 6 June 2018 17:28 (eight years ago)

I'm thinking about A Crow Looked At Me or Carrie And Lowell or even The Drift, all three of them albums I've listened to exactly once and all three of them albums I remember literally every moment of, albums that will not soundtrack my days but have stimulated my discourse

I think I need to unpack my thoughts a little more I'm trying to type a response but it's too many threads to collate properly rn

― nevertheless, he stopped (flamboyant goon tie included), Wednesday, June 6, 2018 9:42 AM (three hours ago) Bookmark

i respect being able to have this level of connection w/ an album off one listen

J0rdan S., Wednesday, 6 June 2018 17:29 (eight years ago)

Oof, that's really bad.

The title of Kanye West’s eighth studio album ye refers to “Ye,” Kanye’s nickname, but it can also be read as “ye,” the old English pronoun for “you,” which can mean either one person or a group of people. It’s an interesting ambiguity, one that gets directly to the heart of his recent work: it brings up the relationship between the singular and the plural, the alienation between the individual and the world, the friction at the intersection of Kanye and everyone else. This double meaning of “ye” asks a crucial question that’s haunted most of Western civilization’s Kanye discourse for the past decade: What’s the difference between Kanye and the rest of us?

It can be read that way, but it's not meant like that. By all means though found your whole review on that false premise.

Intrsting ambiguity and western civilization, amirite guys?

lbi's life of limitless european glamour (Le Bateau Ivre), Wednesday, 6 June 2018 17:29 (eight years ago)

J0rdan your review is *extremely* excellent, and also:

also i do think there’s a version of this album where kanye more honestly grapples with himself & his celebrity (i realize i’m wading into choppy waters here)

― J0rdan S., Tuesday, June 5, 2018 10:09 PM (yesterday) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

I think it's possible and he has the talent to do so, but i also think his particular "brand" of celebrity at this moment in time is the least interesting kind. not that there isn't something interesting about marrying into a monstrously vapid and historically-unhealthy-for-outsiders clan, but i don't think he's at the point where he'd examine that honestly. i would actually suggest it's not just possible but probable he will someday do just that, though.

omar little, Wednesday, 6 June 2018 17:31 (eight years ago)

xp kanye mentioned in an interview that he meant it in a similar way in an interview w big boy: "I believe ‘ye’ is the most commonly used word in the Bible, and in the Bible it means ‘you,’ so I’m you, I’m us, it’s us"

lowercase (eric), Wednesday, 6 June 2018 17:33 (eight years ago)

I believe ‘ye’ is the most commonly used word in the Bible

...

Οὖτις, Wednesday, 6 June 2018 17:39 (eight years ago)

this guy is such a fucking moron, stop wasting time on him

Οὖτις, Wednesday, 6 June 2018 17:39 (eight years ago)

Did not know that, Eric. Still seems like a stretch tbh.

'Ye' though, really? My bible classes are well in the past but...

xp

lbi's life of limitless european glamour (Le Bateau Ivre), Wednesday, 6 June 2018 17:40 (eight years ago)


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