eMusic Review 0
The truth is, Jay-Z didn't have to make this album. Nearly seven years removed from the bloat of Blueprint 2, he returned to the imprimatur of his most lauded release because prestige is at a premium in the world of hip-hop, and few can imply swaggering importance like Jay-Z. But this is no prestige project, like, say, his previous album, 2007's American Gangster. Instead, it's a distillation of 2006's failed Kingdom Come — a mildly cynical modern hits collection packaged under the pretense of midcareer glory. And it worked. The Blueprint 3 became one of Jay's greatest successes, spawning his biggest single ever, the sour-sweet cabaret "Empire State of Mind," another massive hit in the loathsome "Young Forever," and a powerfully disorienting new concert staple, "On to the Next One." Those songs will likely be the album's legacy. But surrounding it are some deeply strange choices.
Notably executive-produced by Kanye West, the album subscribes to the unpredictable mood and rollicking tone of one of his albums — few songs have sonic connections, fewer still have thematic consequences. There's a battle of the sexes song, a haters song, a "keep it real" song — tropes all and none very interesting. At… read more »