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The Trials Of The Hardest-Working Man In Hip-Hop

Lil Wayne

Lil Wayne

Here is an amazing article The New York Times did on Lil Wayne and all of his hard work. It is a long but very good article, so check it out and let us know what you think down in the comments.

For someone who made ubiquity his art form, Lil Wayne has done a stupendous job of disappearing this year. Sure, he was on tour and at the Grammys, but the stream of mixtapes and freestyles on which he built his reputation slowed to a drip. While he was taking a breather, others — in particular, Gucci Mane, and Lil Wayne’s protégé Drake — took his template and ran with it.

On Feb. 9 he will be sentenced in connection with a 2007 arrest for gun possession. He is expected to begin serving his sentence that same day: an enforced absence instead of the voluntary break he has been taking.

But as the days count down, Lil Wayne is re-emerging. On Tuesday his extended crew Young Money released its debut album, “We Are Young Money” (Young Money/Cash Money/Universal Motown). And this month his rock album, “Rebirth” (Cash Money/Universal Motown), leaked to the Internet after Amazon.com accidentally shipped some 500 copies to customers who had preordered it. Just like that, Lil Wayne is omnipresent again.

In a character-softening appearance last week on “The Mo’Nique Show” on BET, Mo’Nique asked him what he looks for in the artists he signs. “First of all, work ethic,” he replied. It was a reminder that behind Lil Wayne’s seeming effortlessness is a huge machine of carefully calibrated moving parts, and that this deluge of new material is no accident.

Lil Wayne has been piecing together Young Money for a couple of years. The crew features Drake, the former child actor from Toronto who stands on his own as a rap star; Nicki Minaj, the most invigorating female rapper currently working; and a host of lesser characters, from thugs (Jae Millz, Gudda Gudda) to semi-hipsters (Tyga) to kids (Lil Chuckee, Lil Twist).

Collecting a competent crew has been all but impossible in hip-hop in recent years; since 50 Cent spawned G-Unit, no one has been famous enough to try. And though “We Are Young Money” is spotty, especially on the part of Lil Wayne, there are strong indications that he’s a keen observer of talent. (And not just of rappers: this album is a showcase for the up-and-coming producers Kane Beatz and Chase N. Cashe.)

So far, “We Are Young Money” has produced two hits: “Every Girl in the World,” which was dominant this summer, and “Bedrock,” a current smash. It’s no coincidence that both feature Drake, as assured as any rapper when it comes to the topic of seduction.

The album’s unexpected star is Nicki Minaj, who raps with a comically nasal chirp that half the time sounds like the accent of a privileged, gum-snapping teenager from Long Island. (She is from Queens, after all.) More than anyone here, even Lil Wayne, she fights against the strictures of the beat, her flow pattern varying from stutter to fusillade, spitting out bizarre, color-theme rhymes (“Roger That,” “Finale”) and oddball metaphors (“About to get a mani-ped/I’m the big bad wolf, and your granny dead”).

On many songs Lil Wayne is present primarily in the form of an Auto-Tuned hook, leaving room for his squad but also implicitly removing himself from direct competition. It’s a benevolent form of arrogance.

Neither the crew album nor the experimental passion project has a proud commercial legacy in hip-hop. But for “Rebirth,” at least, Lil Wayne’s label had sizable expectations. According to Billboard, around one million copies were printed, one-third of which were distributed to retailers. (Lil Wayne’s last album, “Tha Carter III,” has been certified triple platinum, meaning three million copies were shipped.) After months of delays, “Rebirth” had been scheduled for release on Feb. 1, seemingly pegged to Lil Wayne’s impending incarceration.

That release has now been canceled, but what an odd note to depart on it would have been. By Lil Wayne standards, “Rebirth,” clunky and confusing, approaches catastrophe. By the standards of rappers reaching outside their comfort zones, it’s admirable but not effective, lacking the tonal consistency and emotional ambition of its most obvious predecessor, Kanye West’s “808s & Heartbreak.” By the standards of contemporary radio rock, it’s passable, possibly even good.

At minimum, it shows a sense of adventure. Mostly, Lil Wayne hews close to power ballads and classic rock, a predictable entry point for a guy who sent out tie-dye promotional T-shirts for “Tha Carter III.” Those kinds of songs here (“Prom Queen,” “Paradise”) are among the most ponderous. Lil Wayne’s lyrics on “Paradise” — “Sometimes we try to find a road to the riches, need roadside assistance/Blisters on my knees, from begging for forgiveness” — could just as easily come out of the mouth of Chad Kroeger of Nickelback.

But rather than picking one overwrought rock mode and digging in, Lil Wayne hops among a few. He plays guitar and bass at various points on the album. (“I’m a dope boy with a guitar,” he sings on “American Star.”) His clipped vocals on “Get a Life” suggest that maybe he’s been listening to Elvis Costello, or at least the Clash. “Knockout” could be a Fall Out Boy song. “On Fire,” the current single, is a reworking of the dynamic, muscular synth-rock track “She’s on Fire,” by Amy Holland, from the “Scarface” soundtrack.

Sometimes on this album Lil Wayne is rapping, but mostly he’s singing, and poorly at that, his voice buried in a haze of digital effects that only highlight the lack underneath.

Listen to these two albums on their own, and the impression is that Lil Wayne is in a creative rut. But his signature contribution to hip-hop has been to redefine the idea of workflow. For him the commercially released album is effectively meaningless, a concession to the record label and that old albatross, the need for revenue.

Instead these records should take their place as just one of his many creative phases. (Remember his reggae period?) Even if they have the permanence and legitimacy that a bar code affords, they’re not more important than, say, the far superior “No Ceilings,” the mixtape Lil Wayne put out in October, and one of this year’s best rap releases.

For 500 or so fans, the physical CD of the original “Rebirth” is a collectible. At least one hip-hop Web site featured a picture of a couple of young men gleefully holding up their copy of “Rebirth”: inadvertent samizdat. But for the untold thousands who downloaded the album’s songs free, they’re just grist for the mill, placeholders until something else comes along, preferably better.

According to a representative for Universal Motown Records, a new version of “Rebirth” is now slated to be released in the first quarter of 2010, though as the recent plights of T. I. and Gucci Mane have shown, it’s tough to promote yourself, or your album, from behind bars.

Maybe the better option for Lil Wayne would be to release “Rebirth” as is and cut his losses: silence on his own terms, while he still has the choice.

Discussion

29 comments for “The Trials Of The Hardest-Working Man In Hip-Hop”

  1. first cuz thats all u fags care about

    Posted by Weezy F BayBay | December 22, 2009, 10:40 pm
  2. HMM ,,

    Posted by tayy | December 22, 2009, 10:41 pm
  3. 3rd….What he looks for in the artists he signs. “First of all, work ethic,” he replied.

    Posted by Keon | December 22, 2009, 11:01 pm
  4. man lil wayne does not sing poorly hes the best at singing and rapping!!!any disaggrements?

    Posted by micheal watts | December 22, 2009, 11:01 pm
  5. I got we are young money and i think everyone should check it out.

    Posted by Keon | December 22, 2009, 11:03 pm
  6. i like rebirth and i applaud weezy for picking up a guitar. personally, i’ve never heard anything like it, rock riffs, power ballad hooks, and verses spat.
    is it safe to say hova introduced us, or @ least made mainstream, the mashup?
    weezy has the rap game on lock and having understood the vastness that is his frontal cortex…it makes sense to switch it up, see how far you can take it. i’m afraid that when he goes in…the drought officially begins.

    ja

    Posted by j.a. | December 22, 2009, 11:04 pm
  7. uhm no! weezy cant sing! he isnt a singer! he is a rapper! thats wat he does best! he IS the best rapper 2 ever touch the world! he is really good at rockin! but rapping is his thing! he doesnt sing! and when he does the autotune kicks in! but he is the best!!!!!

    Posted by haaaa | December 22, 2009, 11:06 pm
  8. micheal watts, agreedd!! (:
    i hope that’s not sarcasm though?

    Posted by WEEZYSBAE | December 22, 2009, 11:12 pm
  9. WEEZYBAE ha no sarcasm ova here!!! and haaaa u dont know wat the fukk u talkin bout i respet the fact tht u atleast like his rap and his rock but check this out his singin abilities are improvin so atleast give him tht much. also wat other rapper do u knoe would even attempt to sing? NOBODY!!!!

    Posted by micheal watts | December 22, 2009, 11:21 pm
  10. i dont know if there sticking up for him or not.. is rebirth being sold im so confused

    Posted by alana | December 22, 2009, 11:23 pm
  11. Lil Wayne does have a “haze of digital effects” in his music which is what other artists are lacking…and it goes great with his rapping style. I would be doing the same.

    Posted by EastSide Gangsta | December 22, 2009, 11:26 pm
  12. ok ppl need to give lil wayne a break he is serving his time and no rapper can pull off rockin like he can so shit talkers fuck off!!!

    Posted by samantha graves | December 23, 2009, 12:18 am
  13. dammm, yall need to get off lil waynes dick. u guys like love em ,,, all he needs to is that he is gifted

    Posted by idk | December 23, 2009, 12:52 am
  14. I love rebirth…personally I thought it was amazing an I aint the type who loves all wayne do but rebirth was dope if u wanna hear bad singin by Wayne listen to piano man but rebirth was sick it was way catchy an actually feels like music ya dig?

    Posted by Papi | December 23, 2009, 2:25 am
  15. Damnnn ridin waynne too harddd!….
    Let the mann beeee…
    He’s a good “rapper”….credit him for that

    But let me ask isn’t this the same dude who said he wouldn’t do skinny jeans,and gett any piercings? Hah
    Kinda of scratchin my head on that…

    No disrespect…..
    I am a fan of the rapper
    ….not the singer nor the pop artist…

    Posted by IAmHipHop | December 23, 2009, 2:59 am
  16. “We Are Young Money” & “Rebirth” are my fav0ryte 2 aLBums ryte n0w! kant waiit tiiLL tha actuaL “Rebirth” cd komez 0ut s0 ii kan Buy iit!

    Posted by LilWayneJr1990 | December 23, 2009, 8:32 am
  17. How ar young money sales doing do ne1 no

    Posted by Reel | December 23, 2009, 11:11 am
  18. It dosent sound like he uses too much effects in “the price is wrong.” Which was my favorite on “Rebirth”.. maybe there shoulda been more like that..

    Posted by grown man shyt | December 23, 2009, 11:18 am
  19. That was really your favorite?
    I thought the CD was good but could have done without that and a few other tracks. No hate

    Posted by DeanO | December 23, 2009, 2:15 pm
  20. lil wayne is amazing. thats all i have to say.

    Posted by lilwaynefuturewife | December 23, 2009, 2:47 pm
  21. micheal watts: ya he is amazing at both things! best music person ever..

    Posted by Mazhar | December 23, 2009, 5:47 pm
  22. I THINK WAYNE IZ THE HARDEST WORKIN MAN HE WORKS FROM THE TYME HE WAKES UP UNTIL LIK MID NITE MABY LONGER SO THAT IZ WAT I CALL A HARD WORKIN MAN AND IF YOU DONT THINK SO FUK U YA DIGGZ

    Posted by WAYNE= #1 4 EV YA DIGGZ | December 24, 2009, 11:14 am
  23. Lil wayne…. Lil wayne It’s all bout Lil wayne the fucking Genius. no daught that he is the best rapper alive in this 21 Century. God bless him and his Family till the end …….Amen
    ……Peace To Ya’ll Young Money…..

    Posted by Ironicbein | December 24, 2009, 2:13 pm
  24. @Michael Watts

    “also wat other rapper do u knoe would even attempt to sing? NOBODY!!!!”

    Drake….dumbass. Wayne can’t sing. Which is the fundamental problem of rebirth.

    Posted by Steve | December 24, 2009, 3:20 pm
  25. Steve, nigga plz shut the FUCK UP!!! No shit Drake is also a singing rapper c’mon bitch wats the point of even namin him? i meant rappers such as Plies, Young Jeezy, Jay-Z people like that. So next time you comment try to think next time you fukkin dipshit!!!!!

    Posted by micheal watts | December 24, 2009, 9:48 pm
  26. And wayne probably sings better than yo gay ass

    Posted by micheal watts | December 24, 2009, 9:49 pm
  27. Ym first week projected sales are 100 000 -120 000 IS that good 4 they 1st album

    Posted by Reel | December 25, 2009, 11:29 am
  28. I saw this in my newspaper. sooo cute(:

    Posted by ashleigh | December 28, 2009, 10:33 pm
  29. If your a Wayne fan the rebirth is just unreal paradise and American star and runnin and drop the world are straight up fuckin amazing I heard those and got chills.. He’s no longer just a rapper he’s a musician and is changing music and will go down in the history books he will never be forgotten he’s the greatest rapper alive

    Posted by Marc | December 28, 2009, 10:40 pm

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