KANYE WEST
Late Registration (Roc-A-Fella)
Uncut, autumn 2005
by Simon Reynolds
Last
year, Kanye West cut through rap’s standard-issue one-dimensional
personae with some refreshing complexity. Neither “conscious” nor a
bad-boy chasing bling and bitches, he was a little of both: a hungry
soul (“Jesus Walks”) trapped in a body prey to venality (“All Falls
Down”). Kanye can pull off the occasional highminded lyric without
risking sanctimony, because he’s clearly the sort of preacher who gets
caught with call-girls.
Late Registration’s
core of mixed emotion clusters around four songs that deal with themes
of worldly wealth versus gold-of-the-spirit. “Diamonds From Sierra
Leone” starts where College Dropout finished (“Last Call”). It’s
another paean to Roc-A-Fella, the label that signed West where other
A&Rs scoffed at his deceptively sloppy flow. The giddy ascending
chorus “forever ever ever EVER ever” pledges fealty to Jay-Z’s dynasty,
which rescued him from the parlous times when “I couldn’t afford/A Ford
Escort.” But when West chants “throw your diamonds in the air,” he’s
not really showing off his new status symbols so much as his aesthetic
riches, the genius-visionary’s “power to make a diamond with his bare
hands.” The song lives up to this boast and then some. Nobody deploys
vocal samples better than West, and here it’s Shirley Bassey’s “Diamonds
Are Forever” that gets shook down for hidden hooks and latent meanings.
The glittering production, laced with harpsichords and strings, matches
the lines about “Vegas on acid/Seen through Yves St Laurent glasses”.
But what about the title’s reference to “Sierra Leone”? That just got
tacked on after the fact, to fit the video, an expose of child-slavery
in African diamond mines, and has absolutely nowt to do with the lyrics!
It
would have been cool if “Gold Digger” sampled “Goldfinger”. Instead, a
Ray Charles loop powers this gritty groove, while (cute touch) Jamie
Foxx kicks it off with a faux-blues whinge about a “triflin’ bitch” who
sucks up his money and weed. West wryly observes “I ain’t saying she’s a
gold digger/But she aint’ messin’ with no broke niggas!” “Addicted”
offers a far fresher angle on exploitative heterosex. “Why everything
that’s supposed to be bad/Make me feel so good?” ponders West, before
launching into a rueful account of a mutually degrading affair that
interwines sex and drugs. The admission “and I keep coming over” is
shivered with a hiccup of pained ecstasy, hinting at the double meaning
of “come”. The song’s exquisite arrangement lends poignancy to this tale
of male weakness and shame: a glisten of Amnesiac guitar,
filtered hi-hats, a sampled chanteuse crooning “you make me smile
with my heart” (a line from “My Funny Valentine”). “Crack Music”
disconcertingly equates the analgesic powers of drugs and music, with
Kanye and The Game chanting the chorus--“That’s that crack music,
nigga/That real black music, nigga”--over an impossibly crisp
military beat. If Black Americans traffic in the best pain-killers
around, the song implies, it’s because Black America has the most pain
to kill.
It could be that Kanye West’s “honest
confusion” anti-stance will become its own kind of shtick eventually.
But judging by the mostly-brilliant Late Registration that won’t
be happening for a while yet. He might even make it unscathed to the
end of the quintology of conceptually-linked albums of which this album
is merely instalment #2.
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