DRAKE – RAP’S MVP
The Guardian, April 28 2016
by Simon Reynolds
If
there’s a single word that describes Drake, probably it would be diffuse. It’s a catch-all that captures the way his
tracks seep out the radio like glistening vapour and conveys also the slippery
drift of his voice back-and-forth between rapping and singing. “Diffuse” fits Drake’s indistinct aura too:
half-black and half-Jewish, he’s the all-pervading master of an American street
art who’ll nonetheless always be an outsider on account of his Canadian
nationality and middle class upbringing.
Drake’s vagueness carries through to his unfixed lyrics: endless
celebrations of his own success and stature that are almost always creased with
unease and ambivalence, plus his patent brand of not-quite-love songs that
combine suppurating sensitivity and emotional evasiveness.
Take
his inescapable megahit of 2015 “Hotline Bling”, whose woozy lilt and hang-dog
sensuality walked such a fine line (like everything Drake’s done) between
addictive and annoying. What would you
even call the emotion in this song? Drake pines for a former sexual arrangement
that seems to have been at best undefined; he expresses mild distress that the
girl appears to be flourishing in his absence, or at least going out partying a
lot. As pop romance goes, it’s not
exactly “Reach Out (I’ll Be There)”. It’s not even “One In A Million” by
Aaliyah, the Nineties R&B princess whose minimalist R&B was such an
influence on Drake and his principal producer Noah “40” Shebib.
As
determined as he is indeterminate, Drake has diffused himself all across the
rap ‘n’ R&B radioscape this past half-decade, maintaining ubiquity not just
with the steady stream of his own hit singles but with innumerable “feat.”
appearances in other people’s songs, ranging from superstars like Rihanna to
rising MCs like ILoveMakonnen to the ghost of Aaliyah herself. Last year’s
collaborations with Future - “Where Ya At” and “Jumpman” – have remained
staples of US urban radio deep into 2016.
Drake’s
success at spreading his sound and self far and wide owes much to his actor-ly
adaptability and seeming desire to be everything to everybody. He’ll swagger baleful
and paranoid on a moody, bare-bones track like “Energy”. He’ll quiet-storm it
on moist ‘n’ misty ballads like “Marvin’s Room”. He’ll put out a boppy ditty
not a million miles from Justin Bieber’s recent “tropical house” hits with his
new single “One Dance”, which samples an old track by UK funky diva Kyla.
But
the diffusion of Drake also has something to do with the way he has defused hip
hop, uncoupled it from the explosive content once at the core of the genre. Raised primarily in an affluent Toronto
suburb, a successful TV actor in his teens, Drake shrewdly avoids street
realities like crime as song topics. (Whenever he’s got even close to this
subject matter – referencing lawyers and the prison commissary on “Where Ya
At,” claiming to have “Started From the Bottom” - it’s been jarring and
unconvincing). But nor is Drake a
conscious rapper. As a mix-race Canadian, he probably feels it’s not his place
to comment on American racial conflicts: Ferguson, Black Lives Matter, the sort
of issues an MC like Kendrick Lamar can address and is driven to address.
Drake
has plenty of company in rap when it comes to being resolutely apolitical.
Still, even the most party-hard, commodity-fetishising gangsta rappers have
still communicated some sense of the social backdrop that explains their feral drive
for success and all its spoils. Jay-Z, DMX, Lil Wayne, 50 Cent, T.I., Future – always
there’s been somewhere in the back of their music an idea of overcoming: the rap game was usually chosen
as an alternative to destructive (to others and ultimately to yourself) outlaw
ways of making money and making a name. That didn’t make the tyrannical postures
and gruesome threats, the callous sexism and name-brands flaunting, any less
ugly, or even justify it, exactly. But it at least provided a context. Gangsta
rap wasn’t about The Struggle, but it had struggle in it.
Drake’s
innovation as a rapper is that the only adversity he’s ever really claimed to
have faced is the adversity of fame itself. It is virtually his only subject.
Even the not-really-love songs are part of this, since they stem from the fracturing
of relationships that comes about when someone is constantly travelling and
constantly tempted. In “Doing It Wrong”
Drake croons ruefully about how “we live in a generation of not being in love
and not being together”. And apparently millennials do find the lyrics of
Drake’s softer songs - which have the
pleading, needy tone ‘n’ texture of R&B ballads but are resolutely
irresolute and emotionally non-committal - highly relatable.
Right
from the start, with his 2009 breakthrough mix-tape So Far Gone, Drake was writing about the problems caused by
celebrity. Whether this was an act of
imaginative anticipation, or because he been pre-famed
through playing disabled basketball star Jimmy Brooks in the popular teensoap Degrassi: The Next Generation, it’s hard
to say. But on songs like “The Calm” Drake was already moaning about feeling
over-stretched and cut-off: “to keep
everybody happy I think I would need a clone.... feeling so distant from
everyone I’ve known.... all my first
dates are interrupted by my fame”.
Drake
has repeated the same themes, the same mood (bi-polar oscillation between
triumph and torment) across his subsequent albums Thank Me Later, Take Care,
his masterwork Nothing Was the Same,
and If You’re Reading This It’s Too Late.
He will almost certainly return to those themes and that mood on his imminent Views From the 6. Authenticity matters as much for Drake as for
any rapper, and authenticity means writing about what you know. Fame is pretty
much all Drake knows.
It’s
a tribute to his powers of invention, his strange and grotesque genius, that Drake
has so far managed to find so many compelling variations on such a restricted
set of themes : the dream that turns out
not be not as dreamy as you’d expected;
feeling alone even in the midst of an entourage and a wild party;
plaints, already fairly familiar in rap, about how money changes everything and
creates mo’ problems than its absence. Haters and gold-diggers were long
established in rap as inevitable accoutrements of fame about which you could whinge-boast
(hip hop’s equivalent of the humble-brag).
But Drake went the next step and talked about the hollow-inside feeling
that came with conquering the throne and acquiring all the trophies. As he
croons in “All Me”, “Got everything, I got everything/ I cannot complain, I
cannot” – but still, still, he complains: about feeing empty, feeling
numb. Picking up on pointers left by
Kanye West on 808s & Heartbreak
but pushing further ahead, Drake made having a spiritual void into rap’s new
status symbol. Morose and maudlin became the mark of mega-stardom, not Maybach
and Margiela.
From
the Clipse to T.I., the trap was rap’s reigning metaphor during the first
decade of the 21st Century, a reference to the place where drugs are
sold but also the idea of that life as a dead-end (along with the related idea
of luring and enslaving the clientele, mostly members of the dealer’s own race,
class, community). In Drake’s decade, the 2010’s, fame itself – the escape-route
alternative to crime pursued by gangsta rappers – has become a trap of its own.
The godfathers of gangsta, NWA talked about “reality rap”; Drake’s
self-invented genre is unreality rap, or perhaps hyper-reality rap. Both the mise-en-scene and the topics of his
songs – penthouse suites, after-show parties , VIP rooms, award shows, inter-celebrity dating, internet
gossip, the proliferation of the public self as an image and a meme – are remote
from the life-world most of us inhabit. We gawp at it from the outside. Drake’s art is all about achieving access to
this hyper-real world – a realm of front, rumour, bravado, optics, public
relations – and then bemoaning how unreal it feels to live inside it. As spun by 40 and Drake’s other producers
like Boi-1da, the glittering insubstantiality of the
music – which resembles Harold Budd, Aphex Twin, Radiohead circa Kid A as much as Timbaland, the Weeknd or
DJ Mustard – is the perfect aural match for the mirrored maze of modern celebreality. The airless sound evokes the sealed vacuum of
loneliness-at-the-top.
Drake’s
ascendance happened so instantly it felt effortless, achieved without struggle,
almost to the point of seeming unearned.
In “Thank Me Now”, Drake rapped about how he “can relate to kids going
straight to the league” - a reference to high-school players so talented they
skip the stage of playing college basketball and go straight to the NBA. In the
same song, Drake declares “damn, I swear sports and music are so
synonymous.”
Drake
does love his sports analogies and allusions.
“30 for 30 Freestyle,” from the Future collaboration What A Time To Be Alive, is named after a celebrated ESPN series of
sports documentaries. Drake even framed
his feud with Philadelphia rapper Meek Mill using baseball and basketball
references. He named “Back To Back,” the second of his counter-attack tracks,
after the Toronto Blue Jays’s serial defeats of the Philadelphia Phillies in
1993, and namechecked the basketball consultant / power-broker William Wesley
in the song’s second line.
The
rise of Drake shows that rap has become a merit-based system that works just
like sports. The old metrics of credibility and authority – based around where
you came from, your experience, “the strength of street knowledge” as NWA put
it, as well as around technique and chutzpah– no longer counted as much as
sheer proficiency: the skill with which
an MC could manipulate the tropes of a genre that is codified almost to the
point of having rules. Like sports, rap
has become a self-perpetuating and enclosed system in which star players and
rival teams compete for the pole position and for superior stats. We follow rap
like we follow sports: as excited onlookers thrilling vicariously to the clashes,
the victories, the glory. It’s got
nothing to do with real life.
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