Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Watch the Throne Review

Remember back when Jay-Z did that collabo with R. Kelly? As a matter of fact, remember the TWO they did together? Or how about when Jigga did that mash up with Linkin Park? Clearly, Hov isn't afraid to put his genius to the test and push his ego to the side to share the spotlight with another artist on a full project. Well, what if the next artist he was to collab with on a full fledged album was none other than his protege Kanye West? Talk about an ego eheck. "Watch the Throne" started as a tweet from Mr. West himself saying him and Jay were gonna do a 5 track album. Being the huge fan that I am, I was ecstatic.
As time went on, the idea grew to the point where they were set to do a full album. Let the hype begin. I couldn't remember anticipating an album quite like that. The worst was how little we heard about it. Songs were coming out like "The Joy," "Thats my Bitch," and "H.A.M." and we weren't sure if those were songs from the album or what. There was no leak, no huge single, or any sort of advertisement. Yet they still break the record on iTunes for first week sales. Go figure.

1. No Church in the Wild (Feat. Frank Ocean) 

Let me start by saying I was extremely excited to see that Frank Ocean was going to be featured on two songs on the album. I've recently become a huge fan of his and was VERY impressed with his "nostalgia, ULTRA" mixtape which I highly recommend. But this song starts off with eery guitar riffs as Frank Ocean comes in and sets the tone right away. Jays verse is filled with religious, historical references comparing to drug dealing and his rap career. Fits the beat very well and does what Hova does best. "Hova flow the Holy Ghost, get the hell up out your seats. Preach." After another hook from Frank Ocean it cuts to a very high pitched, auto-tuned out, The Dream. Which is strange because he isn't mentioned as a feature on the song. Led many to believe that it was actually Kanye West doing the singing. Kanye's verse is probably what I consider his best lyrically on the album. A lot of times its Kanye's passion that captures the listeners attention, but him and Jay were very mellow on this track. Adds to the deep, dark feeling you get from it. 


2. Lift Off (Feat. Beyonce)


What a disappointment this was. Anytime I see "Featuring Beyonce" and Jay or Kanye is involved I get a little excited. But when ALL THREE of them are going to be on a track together? 6 to 12 intstantly. Not that Beyonce doesn't sound beautifully on the song, but I think Ye and Jigga spit a combined 10 bars. IF that. I still listen to it now because the album is still fresh, but as the months go on, I feel like this will be one that I skip. The only one that is. 

3. Ni**as In Paris


Let me go ahead and start the review of this song with a quote from my good friend Ramon Ugarte. "Dog the beat is just seducing my ears, idk how that makes sense but it is." This is probably the best beat on the album. It also has two Will Ferrell samples in here from "Blades of Glory" which adds a little humor to it as well. But this is a very braggadocious, swagged out, well produced piece of art these men put together. Numerous quotables highlighted by "What's 50 grand to a muhfucka like me, can you please remind me?" by Jigga and "Prince Williams ain't do it right if you ask me, cause if I was him I woulda married Kate and Ashley." by Yeezy. The beat has you head nodding all through it and even has you switch up your pace when the beat drops and Kanye reassures us that we are "Now watching the throne," and warns us "Don't let me get in my zone." We're glad you were in the zone gentleman. 


4. Otis (Feat. Otis Redding)

We've all had our share to digest this one now, considering it was the only song to come out before the album. I've loved it since it came out and still don't skip it on the album. Very unorthodox with the fact they had this be the "single" yet there was no catchy hook or any sort of sign of it being a club hit. The way they exchange verses and the fitting Otis Redding sample is beautiful though. "Sophisticated ignorance, write my curses in cursive." Yup, Yeezy taught me. 


5. Gotta Have It

If somebody told me the first line of this song (Lolololol to white America, assassinate my character.) and asked me who it was before I heard it, I would already know that it was Kanye.  But Jay's first two lines in the song? Double entendre's for days. Kanye sets him up with "I'ma need a day off, I think I'll call Ferris up." Jay hits us with "Bueller had a Mueller, but I switched it for a Miele, cause I'm richer, and prior to this shit was movin' freebase."  Another very braggadocious, upbeat, high energy type song thats, again, filled with quotables. Love this song, and its short but sweet. 

6. New Day

I was very excited to hear this song and see that it was produced by the RZA. Far from what I expected, but in no way is that a bad thing. For some reason I knew it was going to be a story telling song, but didn't expect how deep it was going to be. Kanye promising that is unborn son isn't going to be anything like him. "I will never let me son have an ego, he'll be nice to everyone wherever we go." He continues to make promises that he will avoid all the mistakes Mr. West himself made. Jay goes on to apologize to his unborn son about the years of paparazzi and the pressure he's going to have on him. Definitely the most personal song on the album. Thumbs up.

7. That's My Bitch

This threw me off just a bit. Back when Kanye was doing the G.O.O.D. Fridays, and in midst of all the Watch the Throne talk, this song was released by Kanye. I even remember hearing it on the radio for like 2 weeks. Then inexplicably it disappeared. I continued listening to it though cause I love the song. Has a very old school vibe and a solid verse from both of them. They didn't change much from the leaked version which I was also glad about. They made it a tad bit shorter and Jay switched up a couple of the names he drops, but thats about it. Overall, and again, I listen to this one all the way through.

8. Welcome to the Jungle

The ending of "That's my Bitch" leads into this track very well. The beat is crazy and Swizzy does a great job with the production, but I have one problem with it. Why does Swizz Beats always find it necessary to be in the songs he produces? We could have done without his annoying ad libs and "Goddammit!" Like really? The song is dominated by Hov, with only a few lines from Kanye. No chorus in this song which is a good thing. I wasn't ready to hear another Swizz Beats chorus and woulda enjoyed this song a lot more if he decided to stay outta the booth. Regardless the song is a banger and Jay rips it up. 


9. Who Gon Stop Me?

What do you get when you mix hip hop with some dubstep? Well, you get Who Gon Stop Me. This song is craaaaazy. First time I heard this, the beat dropped and I was like wait, what? I still kinda cringe every time I hear Kanye say "This is something like the holocaust, millions of our people lost." No, Kanye. This is actually not a thing like the holocaust. Jay-Z dominates this song, but the parts that Kanye does rap are great. With lines like "I heard you fucked the doorman, well thats cool I fucked the waitress," and "I heard Kanye was racist, but thats only on one basis, I only like green faces." The Throne continue to assure us that we are not as rich as them, but unlike a few other reviews I read, it doesn't bother me. That's their life so they rap about it. Jay-Z's verse at the end is one that I still find myself listening to closely to pick up on anything that I missed. That's God body flow right there. 

10. Murder to Excellence

This song is literally two songs in one. There's the first part which is "Murder" and then the beat switches and it turns to "Excellence." Murder was produced by Swizz Beats and I'm glad to say we didn't hear him vocally on this song. I really like how they switched it up and even the whole tone of the song changes, but yet you're still aware of the "Murder" part being in their past. This song reminds us that regardless of what they are doing today, they still both came from a shaky background that could have led them in a completely different direction. We're glad that it didn't. 

11. Made in America (Feat. Frank Ocean)



From what I hear, this song and "No Church in the Wild" were actually supposed to be on "My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy," but Kanye changed his mind. The parts that Frank Ocean sings on these two songs were also originally sung by Mr. West himself. Luckily for us he changed his mind when he decided to add Jigga to the song and have Frank Ocean sing the choruses instead. A very easy going song that touches on family and Jay-Z's days of cooking crack in his grandmas kitchen. I found it funny how Kanye mentions that he'll get a request from someone to make a beat, but he'll end up keeping it for himself or giving it to his big brother Shawn Carter. A slower song, but on an album where there are very few of them I wasn't mad at it. 


12. Why I Love you (Feat. Mr. Hudson)

Another solid feature from Mr. Hudson. With another heart warming song similar to "Forever Young" he adds a solid feel of love and nostalgia with the hook. You almost forget Kanye is in this song, because all he does is go back and forth with Jay for a few lines. Love Jay's 2nd verse though. Goes into old school Hov mode with some fast rapping, while assuring us that we ripped out his heart and stepped on it. A great way to end the album (besides the bonus songs)

13. Illest MothaF**ka Alive

I think this is my favorite song on the album. It has a stadium feel to it and when I close my eyes I picture being in the crowd at the "Watch the Throne" tour. Some great word play from Kanye. "You in line behind currency, yeah you AFTER money." And Hov comparing himself to Jordan and Bill Russell in the same verse? Yeah, this song is swagged out. Not only does he do that, BUT he also drops a Chappelle's Show reference, "Fuck your awards like Eddy Murphy's couch." HAHA! 


15. Primetime

This is one of those under the radar songs. I really like the beat and how it allows them to each have their respective flows evident. Hov calling himself a "40 year old phenom" is also quite hysterical. Lyrically I think these dudes are both on point and it's quite a relief to hear this song after "H.A.M." because they go back into lyricism. A solid bonus song, and I actually wouldn't have minded if they replaced this song on the album with "Lift Off." 

The Verdict

I left out my reviews of "HAM" and "The Joy" because those songs have been out so long lol. Overall, I was so prepared for this album to be over-hyped that I didn't set any sort of Reasonable Doubt/College Dropout type expectations. With that being said I absolutely love the album. The production was top-notch and although Jay-Z did standout lyrically, there wasn't any song where I felt Kanye was COMPLETELY overshadowed. The songs that Hov did destroy, you heard very little of Kanye anyway haha. I give it a solid 9 out of 10. Given the circumstances of where hip hop is today, you gotta respect that these dudes put a lot of time and effort into this and even avoided it leaking. Now we look forward to their future solo work. It's the Roc. 



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