Kanye West – Unsung Sundays https://unsungsundays.com What you should be listening to. Sat, 25 May 2019 01:09:55 +0000 en-CA hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.2.1 Best of 2016 https://unsungsundays.com/lists/best-of-2016/ Thu, 09 Feb 2017 18:43:38 +0000 http://unsungsundays.com/?post_type=list_post_type&p=1644 2016 was an astounding year for music: chock full of amazing records, this list could have easily stretched to twenty-five or thirty and still not included anywhere near the best records of the year. We agonized over this list, and we know we’re missing some people’s favourites.

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As our tradition is starting to dictate, we couldn’t stop at ten or twenty records though. A round number like that feels arbitrary. We wanted to stop when it felt right. And we think we got the mix just right, more or less.

Parker Millsap

The Very Last Day

Parker Millsap’s sophomore album is filled with some of 2016’s rowdiest country-influenced folk tracks. Telling the story of the end of the world, it sees Parker wrestle with everything from his faith to our culture. Often funny, sometimes irreverent, and full of charm, The Very Last Day isn’t worth missing. Read our full review.

Listen: Amazon / Apple Music / iTunes / Spotify

School of Seven Bells

SVIIB

SVIIB is this year’s most authentic pop record. Born of tragedy, the record is vocalist Alejandra Deheza’s way of saying farewell to her best friend and former bandmate, Benjamin Curtis. Curtis passed away shortly after completing SVIIB in 2012, and Deheza spent time tinkering with it for years after the fact before finally releasing it as School of Seven Bells’ final parting letter.

SVIIB is one of the saddest records I’ve heard all year, but Deheza manages to find optimism in even the worst situations. While the album doesn’t break ground musically the way that some of the other albums on this list do, it’s filled with such emotional catharsis that it’s impossible to ignore. Sad, beautiful, and optimistic, SVIIB is a hidden treasure you need to hear. Read our full review.

Listen: Amazon / Apple Music / iTunes / Spotify

Kaytranada

99.9%

Kaytranada is the king of the electronica pack right now. With 99.9%, he’s put almost everybody else in the genre to shame. It’s a tremendous record for anybody who likes bits and bops in their music, but it’s also one of those albums that just indicates a total prodigy is at work behind the scenes. Read our full review.

Listen: Amazon / Apple Music / iTunes / Spotify

A Tribe Called Quest

We Got It From Here... Thank You 4 Your Service

We Got It From Here isn’t a comeback for ATCQ. It’s a farewell. This is the group’s final album, largely because of the death of Phife earlier in 2016. But more importantly, it’s a reminder of the “service” of ATCQ throughout years. When Kanye guests on “The Killing Season”, it’s a reminder that ATCQ was one of his progenitors, one of the groups that birthed modern hip hop.

It’s not so much that We Got It Here is bringing anything new to the table; rather, it’s reminding us of what used to be. It’s like eating a meal with an old friend who just happens to be in town for a little while. It’s nice to reminisce.

Listen: Amazon / Apple Music / iTunes / Spotify

Angel Olsen

My Woman

Angel Olsen’s latest record is her best yet. Olsen is an enigma, and My Woman doesn’t change that. But it does reveal that Olsen is getting better and better at her craft.

If Olsen is anything, she’s a woman who deserves to be celebrated for being a woman. At this point, it feels like she represents women everywhere. She’s the feminist in all of us. Read our full review here.

Listen: Amazon / Apple Music / iTunes / Spotify

Kanye West

The Life of Pablo

The Life of Pablo is a good record, but it’s ranking on this list for reasons other than just its music. I believe Kanye has stumbled upon the future of music with The Life of Pablo. I love the way he changed the music after release, often changing the production or verses on certain tracks. (You can read our piece on that here.)

That being said, the album was originally noted for combining hip hop and gospel. But Chance the Rapper ended up doing that much better only a few weeks later with Coloring Book, dethroning The Life of Pablo in the process. What we’re left with is an excellent record that nonetheless proves Kanye isn’t the king of hip hop anymore.

Listen: Apple Music / iTunes / Spotify

Noname

Telefone

Telefone is one of the best hip hop debuts of recent years. Coming from the same crowd as Raury, Noname is quickly making a name for herself in the scene. She’s a clear example of the Chicago sound throughout her record, and not unlike Raury, wears all her influences clearly on her sleeve.

What makes Telefone work so well is its accessibility Telefone is one of the few albums this year that you could put on at a chill party without anybody raising an eye. Read our full review.

Listen: Apple Music / iTunes / Spotify

Esperanza Spalding

Emily's D+Evolution

Esperanza Spalding’s second record is a huge turnaround for her. No longer traditional jazz, Esperanza is making jazz-influenced rock. With Evolution, she’s at the forefront of the jazz fusion revival.

But more importantly, she’s making a statement about the validity of traditional jazz. Like when Bob Dylan went electric, she’s saying there isn’t a lot left for her to mine in that genre, and it’s time for her to go on to more exciting pastures. I think D+ Evolution is a brave step in a bold direction, and I’m excited to hear what’s next from Spalding. Read our full review here.

Listen: Amazon / Apple Music / iTunes / Spotify

Run the Jewels

Run the Jewels 3

I think most “Best Of” lists were written too late to include RTJ3, which was a late December surprise and one of the best hip hop records of the year. It’s a stronger record than RTJ2, with tracks that are more approachable despite the fact that the band isn’t losing their edge at all.

At this point, it feels like Run the Jewels might be one of the most important hip hop acts in our new political era. They speak their minds and don’t care what you think, and they’re willing to get involved on the ground floor (Killer Mike campaigned for Bernie Sanders in the 2016 presidential campaign). But most importantly, they’re completely fearless. RTJ3 was my favourite surprise album this year. Read our full review here.

Listen: Amazon / Apple Music / iTunes / Spotify

Blood Orange

Freetown Sound

Freetown Sound is authentic black music. When I was in university, I took a course on modern music history. The course started with slave music, which was music that the slaves used to sing together while they worked. The rhythm helped them stay on track with their work, and the singing made them feel a sense of solidarity despite their awful working conditions.

Much of Freetown Sound reminds me of that record — not because it has a lot in common with the rhythms of slave music, but because it feels like it’s music that’s meant to create solidarity. It’s not a protest record, but it’s a record that is birthed out of protest. Freetown Sound is an important record, and one that sadly still feels necessary in 2016. Read our full review.

Listen: Amazon / Apple Music / iTunes / Spotify

Hamilton Leithauser + Rostam

I Had a Dream That You Were Mine

In lieu of a new Vampire Weekend record, I Had a Dream That You Were Mine stood in nicely this year. Leithauser’s vocal performance, may be an acquired taste, but Rostam’s music is clearly coming from his work at Vampire Weekend. It’s a beautiful album that I hope begets more work from the duo. They work together so naturally you’d think they’d been playing in a band together for years. Read our full review.

Listen: Amazon / Apple Music / iTunes / Spotify

The Lemon Twigs

Do Hollywood

I think Do Hollywood might be the best debut of the year. The Lemon Twigs are clearly Beatles fans, but their music feels so modern — despite its retro leanings — that it’s impossible to draw the comparison too strongly.

If anything, Do Hollywood is an astonishing record because it proves that there’s still room for unique voices in indie rock. The perfect driving record, Do Hollywood is the sort of album that gives you hope for rock again. And it’s only The Lemon Twigs’ debut! Read our full review.

Listen: Amazon / Apple Music / iTunes / Spotify

Kendrick Lamar

Untitled Unmastered

I mean, seriously, how much does it say about Kendrick Lamar’s clear and obvious talent when his B-sides are better than all of his contemporaries’ real albums this year? The rap star is an unequivocal genius whose voice is only becoming more important.

Untitled Unmastered also succeeded in the difficult measure of following up To Pimp a Butterfly, largely thanks to its non-title and the clear attitude towards each track. Kendrick and Co. know that Untitled Unmastered isn’t going to become anybody’s favourite over TPAB, so they released it without fanfare and removed some of the weight from the difficulty of being a follow-up. The strategy worked. Read our full review.

Listen: Amazon / Apple Music / iTunes / Spotify

Radiohead

A Moon Shaped Pool

There’s no way we could avoid putting the latest Radiohead release in the list. But A Moon Shaped Pool is seriously one of the best records of the year. There isn’t a single track that feels like filler, and the band hasn’t lost their edge even as they’ve aged.

The true pride and joy of A Moon Shaped Pool is the inclusion of fan favourite, “True Love Waits”. The song has been a live staple for over a decade, and Radiohead finally made an album they felt it was a good fit for. An impeccable song that truly captures the mood of the whole record. Read our full review.

Listen: Amazon / Apple Music / iTunes / Spotify

Leonard Cohen

You Want It Darker

Another one of the greats lost. You Want It Darker will be, for obvious reasons, Cohen’s final record. Even at the end, he continued to wrestle with his spirituality and all his inner demons. Maybe because it was the end for him.

As it is, You Want It Darker is the best Cohen record in a long time. Impeccably produced with beautiful songwriting and an unbelievable performance from Cohen, it’s easily one of the year’s standouts in a year filled with great music.

Listen: Amazon / Apple Music / iTunes / Spotify

Solange

A Seat at the Table

What is their left to say about this record that hasn’t already been said? A Seat at the Table is simply tremendous. There’s a reason Solange is on this list, but Beyonce is not: at this point, Solange has overtaken her sister’s music. A Seat at the Table is that good.

There’s nothing more to say. (Frankly, we said it all in our full review.)

Listen: Amazon / Apple Music / iTunes / Spotify

Sturgill Simpson

A Sailor's Guide to Earth

You don’t have to like country to love Sturgill Simpson. I still can’t get over his cover of Nirvana’s “In Bloom”. But beyond that single track, what makes A Sailor’s Guide to Earth so special is its dedication to Simpson’s son. From the opening track on, you know that Guide to Earth is going to be something special.

And what Simpson is doing is special: beyond the dedication, and beyond the “hip dad” Nirvana cover, he’s expanding the language of country. He’s proved that the genre still has lots of room to grow. And he’s done all that without going down the pop road that country went down in the ‘90s. This is an alternative country album that any diehard country fan will love, and any non-country listener will find approachable. Read our full review.

Listen: Amazon / Apple Music / iTunes / Spotify

Frank Ocean

Blonde

Frank Ocean made us wait too long for this. And while it can be a little long on occasion, it’s hard to be irritated that Ocean gave us more music than we originally wanted. There are so many great tracks here that it’s hard to recommend just a few.

Blonde proves that, no matter how many imitators come along, there’s nobody else who can be like Frank Ocean. Read our full review.

Listen: Apple Music / iTunes / Spotify

Anderson .Paak

Malibu

Malibu is an album that doesn’t care about genre, position, or what’s hip. .Paak knows none of that matters, because he’s the future. It’s absolutely one of the most exciting records of the year (if not the most exciting), because of the classy ways it blends hip hop and R&B without missing a beat (pun not intended).

There are sixteen tracks on the record, but it doesn’t feel too long or like there’s a lot of filler. This is just Anderson .Paak, making it clear to the world that he’s here to stay and to show us the way. Read our full review.

Listen: Amazon / Apple Music / iTunes / Spotify

Chance the Rapper

Coloring Book

Coloring Book is Chance the Rapper coming into himself. It’s also a pure representation of what the future of hip hop looks like. Kendrick and Chance have come to take over the world, and Coloring Book is Chance’s stake in the ground.

Featuring an incredible roster of guests and a ton of great tracks, Coloring Book feels like the sort of album we all wish Kanye West was still making. With tracks like “How Great”, “Blessings”, and “Same Drugs”, Chance the Rapper is doing something unique with the way he’s blending his gospel roots with hip hop. He’s creating the future. Read our full review.

Listen: Apple Music / iTunes / Spotify

David Bowie

Blackstar

Before Bowie passed away, it was clear that Blackstar was easily going to be among the year’s best. Jazzy and unapologetic, Blackstar was Bowie once again experimenting with the forefront of the future of rock music. (We wrote more about that here.)

And then, Bowie suddenly passed away. Unbeknownst to almost everybody in the industry, he had been preparing for his death for a long time. The metaphor of many of Bowie’s songs on the record became much clearer in the weeks after he passed. Blackstar was meant to be a parting gift to his fans. And it’s a beautiful one. Read our full review.

Listen: Amazon / Apple Music / iTunes / Spotify

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Kanye West is Changing the Music Industry https://unsungsundays.com/features/kanye-west-changing-music-industry/ Sun, 17 Apr 2016 12:01:35 +0000 http://unsungsundays.com/?post_type=features&p=1044 Kanye West’s new album, The Life of Pablo, isn’t changing hip hop — but it’s changing the way we listen to recorded music.

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The Life of Pablo is not the most favourably-reviewed Kanye West record of all time, or his most popular. Unlike his past releases, it hasn’t generated a global conversation. But it’s still going to change the music industry — and perhaps not for the better.

The Life of Pablo features Kanye at his most confused: who does he want to be? When everybody sounds like Kanye (his words, not mine), what’s next for him? How should his music sound? If he can’t redefine hip hop anymore and he’s exorcised all his ideas, what’s his next move?

Kanye West’s next act is to make (again, in his own words) “a living breathing changing creative expression”. Since the album has been released, it has been updated multiple times on Tidal and at least once on competing music services. To my knowledge, its most recent change was on March 30th, over a month after the album’s released. And Kanye has made no bones about his continuing work on the record.

This is the next watershed moment in music. In our always-on, streaming era, we’ve hit a point where this is finally possible: constantly tweaked, alternate versions of a single song or album, changing as the artist’s intent changes.

Music was always meant to be heard this way.

Part of the thrill of the live show has always been seeing ways the music has been tweaked over time, and finding out how the artist optimized it for the live setting. Hearing medleys, new guitar solos, and the like, all because nobody likes to play the same thing every single night.

With The Life of Pablo, Kanye flips that script and says the same thing should apply to recorded music. If you aren’t releasing a physical copy of a record, you aren’t beholden to its limitations. Recorded music doesn’t have to be static. For the first time, we can treat recorded music the same way we do a live show.

We’ve hit a point where this is finally possible: constantly tweaked, alternate versions of a single song or album, changing as the artist’s intent changes.

Kanye is the first artist to do this on such a large scale, but he isn’t the first to ever make changes after the fact. We’ve been listening to remixes and remasters for years (and buying them in droves). In some cases, that’s no different than what Kanye is doing.

But in 2014, I bought a digital copy of Shad’s Flying Colours during release week. About a year later, I was thrilled to discover my iTunes copy had a couple bonus tracks retroactively added by the artist — two new singles that were attached for free.

The difference between Shad’s additions and Kanye’s tweaks is pretty simple: Kanye is changing music that we’ve already heard in an attempt to give us a better experience. Often, that might mean remixing it, but sometimes it means creating two songs where there were one, or replacing a verse.

Music was always meant to be heard this way.

If other artists start mimicking this release style, you’re going to see a lot of changes in the music industry. The first is that we’re going to see more Beyoncé-style releases, dropped without any promotion. This is a natural result of the internet (Radiohead did it first with In Rainbows, if we’re being fair), and it’s to be expected.

More importantly, a shift like this poses a cultural problem: if we begin to expect artists to tweak music over time, after its release, it means that artists will have to spend more time in the recording studio with fewer assurances than ever that they’ll get a return back. It means we’ll hear more home-recorded music. For an indie rock band to release music in this way, they’d almost have to do it live, leading to session-style arrangements similar to what we had in the 1960s with Miles Davis and John Coltrane.

This is a problem, though, because it raises the barrier to entry in music. For all the good technology has done to make it easier for all of us to learn new instruments and record great music, an approach similar to The Life of Pablo risks homogenizing the industry in much the same way that large tech companies risk homogenizing San Francisco. The prevalence of trends that only the rich can afford prevent the poor from entering the business. That’s bad for all of us.

I don’t expect that everybody will start updating their music after it hits iTunes or Spotify, but I do believe that this won’t be the last time an artist makes changes to a record after the fact. In the age of Soundcloud, I’m frankly surprised it’s taken this long to begin with.

It’s every creative person’s dream: a project that never has to end, fuelled by a desire for perfection. While Kanye hasn’t changed the world of hip hop with The Life of Pablo the same way he has with his previous records, he’s changing how we listen to music in profound ways. It’s just a shame they’ll be so unaffordable for many.

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