One thing I have stopped doing over the years is looking at hip-hop artists to be a voice for our social conscious. Of course when things in Ferguson, Missouri started getting out of control I had a quick thought: โWhatโs Nelly going to do?โ But I dismissed it as quick as it entered my head. No matter what he would do in his own backyard,it was a foolโs errand to think Nelly had answers. The important things we needed were going to come from people far more important than him. And besides the idea of Nelly doing something like going into a booth and recording a song in honor of Mike Brown and the Ferguson community sounds niceโฆon paper. But on headphones or speakers? A new Nelly song is currently fluctuating between the last and second-to-last thing I want in my life.
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In general, I let go of the idea that rap is, what Chuck D once called, โblack Americaโs CNNโ a long time ago. That isnโt because Iโm cynical. Rather, the opposite is true. As a fan and a critic, I have noticed how over the years, the hip-hop genre has become so robust, it can no longer be easily divided up into neat sub-categories like โconsciousโ and โgangstaโ or โbackpackโ and โstreet.โ These days, a lot of rappers can be woke and ball at the same time, spit bars about selling drugs and break down the systemic problems in America that put them on that path. โKeeping it realโ has become a contrivedย lifestyle phrase to the point where any artist who says thatโs what theyโre doing is perceived by me as doing the opposite. Now when I look at rappers and their music, the only intangible quality Iโm listening for is authenticity.
Authenticity is what I heard this morning when I pressed play and started streaming J. Coleโs new song, โBe Free.โ Again, this was a moment in the Ferguson crisis that I wasnโt holding my breath for, a new song that would encapsulate my anger and frustration. If anything, looking at the artwork that accompanied it, I halfway expected this song to be a throwaway track he unearthed to score some points with fans of his who consider themselves purists and wish Rawkus Records was still around. Thatโs not a dig on J. Cole personally, more so, itโs my familiarity with how art works in times like this.
Yes, these events can inspire us to want to express ourselves using our gifts, but thereโs also something to be said for tact, and speaking too soon. As Drake once said, โwait on it.โ Stay silent and no one can accuse you of grandstanding. Besides, there are enough records out there that were already helping me cope with this, such as Young Jeezyโs The Recession, which is why my expectations that this new J. Cole song was going to be something I wanted to listen to more than once were low.
So far, I have counted myself listening to this song 12 times.
If you listen closely, thereโs a noise in the background of the vamp from the rhodes that sounds like the ruffling of papers. I donโt know if those were from Cole flipping through pages of pre-written lyrics, but Iโd like to think they are, and the words heโs reciting are written in all caps with a red pen. And before he even spits a word, thereโs that deep breath he lets out, then he begins:
AND IโM IN DENIAL, AND IT DONโT TAKE NO X-RAY TO SEE RIGHT THROUGH MY SMILE.
Thatโs written in all caps because โBe Freeโ is more than Cole venting out his emotions, heโs exhuming them. Also of note is Coleโs decision to add excerpts of an interview with Dorian Johnson, the friend who was with Michael Brown when he was killed. In a way, that addition is a timestamp, so that no matter how many years go by, no listener will ever forget what inspired Cole to record this song.
โBe Free,โ will probably never go down as the next โWe Are The World.โ It is messy, like something that came out of a home or tour bus studio. Hell, J. Cole isnโt even rapping, and the song doesnโt even sound mastered. But I canโt stop listening to โBe Freeโ and as long as tragedies like what happened to Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouricontinue to happen, Iโll always be given a reason to listen to it again.
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