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Cole World: The Sideline Story

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Cole World: The Sideline Story album cover
01
Intro
1:22 $1.29
02
Dollar and a Dream III
4:43 $1.29
03
Can't Get Enough
Artist: J Cole featuring Trey Songz
3:45 $1.29
04
Lights Please
3:28 $1.29
05
Interlude
1:39 $1.29
06
Sideline Story
3:57 $1.29
07
Mr. Nice Watch
Artist: J Cole featuring JAY Z
3:57 $1.29
08
Cole World
3:04 $1.29
09
In The Morning
Artist: J Cole featuring Drake
3:54 $1.29
10
Lost Ones
4:23 $1.29
11
Nobody's Perfect
Artist: J Cole featuring Missy Elliott
3:10 $1.29
12
Never Told
3:31 $1.29
13
Rise and Shine
4:34 $1.29
14
God's Gift
3:32 $1.29
15
Breakdown
4:45 $1.29
16
Work Out
3:54
$1.29
Album Information

Total Tracks: 16   Total Length: 57:38

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eMusic Review 0

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Christina Lee

eMusic Contributor

Christina Lee is a freelance writer based in Atlanta, where she's still trying to find a venue she likes more than D.C.'s 9:30 Club. She once drank Ted Leo's be...more »

09.29.11
He's got this
2011 | Label: Roc Nation/Columbia

One of the most notable samples in J. Cole’s proper debut — Cole World: The Sideline Story — comes from Backstage, Jay-Z’s 1999 Hard Knock Life tour documentary. “In between Apple Jacks he writing some shit and he want my spot,” Hova said of his ideal signee. But as J. Cole reveals, impressing Jay-Z isn’t that easy. “Didn’t want to even take my CD when he see me/ Two years, bitch we made it / on, onto The Blueprint,” he spits over chipmunk-voiced moaning and heavy bass thumping. His voice shakes, though not out of fear. Cole doesn’t just want this — he’s got this.

Respectable producers (Brian Kidd, No I.D.) occasionally surface in Sideline Story. High-profile guests (Missy Elliott, Jay himself) feature, too. But Cole is still in his usual spot: hunched over the piano, drum machine and the mic. He’s largely revisiting the minimalistic production of his mixtapes, though he’s also creating an album, it seems, of songs drawn from Planned Parenthood counseling sessions. “Lost Ones” is a conversation between a couple too young to take care of their forthcoming baby. “Breakdown” is an ode to his father, who abandoned his family and became “a Martin with… read more »

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DOPE DEBUT ALBUM!

EarlG.

Excellent debut album! J. spits heat rocks from beginning to end plus he has some songs with fresh topics and depth. VERY IMPRESSIVE DEBUT! Easily one of, if not, the best album of the year.

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They Say All Music Guide

Anyone who encountered his numerous mixtapes can tell you that before his official debut landed, rapper/producer J. Cole had spent some time bringing the whole Drake, Wale, and Big Sean style to a more street level. It’s worth mentioning because Cole World: The Sideline Story has little of that debut desire to cross over, and while the multi-talented Cole is a skilled, interesting beat-maker in his own right, a superstar production would have certainly made this album more approachable. Instead, No I.D. — the biggest behind-the-boards name here — turns in a sluggy, druggy construction for “Never Told,” Cole’s deep, rich study of father/son confidence. Cole handles most of the rest on his own, turning in B+ stabs at dubstep (“Mr. Nice Watch” with guest and label boss Jay-Z), indie-hop (“Cole World” or “flossin’ with a laptop”), and his own humbler version of the Roc-A-Fella sound (the great single “Lights Please”). Add an “Intro” and then a part III — the first two parts to be found on earlier mixtapes — and you’re practically telling the aboveground crowd they’re stale from the start, but the tradeoff is a talent that has matured in the underground and is free of any forced outside influence. Cole’s fantastic style shoots off bold punch lines one minute (“I blow brains, Cobain-style”) and then goes deep the next, with equal skill and all while stringing together eye-level, real-life stories that have that classic flow. The reservation count is high and the flaw count is zero, and in this case, that’s the proper formula for a rich hip-hop album. Take a couple listens, let it sink in, and then discover that Cole World is one hell of a debut. – David Jeffries

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