Seven years ago this month, we were all giddy with the hype and secrecy behind Kanye Westâs upcoming fifth studio album, My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy. Many consider that album to be Kanyeâs magnum opus (not me ⊠that honor belongs to Graduation) and the last vestige of the âOld Kanyeâ before he completely succumbed to whatever peyote he was smoking to create a clothing line for which he asks hundreds of dollars of people to dress like the nigga I periodically give change to on the off-ramp of Diversey and California avenues.
Kanye gave us what was probably the best promotional lead-up to an album in hip-hop history: the GOOD Fridays series. Almost every Friday from late August until MBDTFâs Nov. 22 release, Yeezy dropped 14 free tracksâeach loaded with a stellar mix of guest artists and producersâon his website. Four of the tracks ended up on the final version of MBDTF in some remixed fashion; the 15th track, âChristmas in Harlem,â came out Dec. 17.
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When taken in concert with MBDTF, Kanyeâs GOOD Fridays output arguably marked the apex of his skills as an artist before his music became more experimental and divisive. It was also, presumably, the last time weâd see him working with artists he looked up to at the dawn of his career (Talib Kweli, Mos Def, Common, etc.).
Even the cover art of each track is dope: gigantic bold red Impact typeface on top of either a blacked-out cover or a filtered photograph. If taken as a full-length album, GOOD Fridays is not quite as good as MBDTF, but itâs definitely stronger than Yeezus or The Life of Pablo (Editorâs note: This is categorically false. Continue, though. âD.Y.) or most hip-hop albums from anyone this decade.
In honor of the seventh anniversary of GOOD Fridays, I rank them all in reverse order (not counting the three tracks he dropped in advance of TLOP in 2016). Yeezy fanatics: Stay out of my direct messages, yes?
This track was so unmemorable that I had to go back and listen to it just to write about it. One of the only GOOD Fridays total misfires, not even Q-Tip on the boards or a Talib Kweli verse can help this abomination.
Despite an always reliable Lupe Fiasco verse, this downtempo song is generally uninteresting. Iâm sure everyone involved in the creation of this track was on Xannies at the time.
Brian Bennettâs âSolsticeâ is an entirely overused sample in hip-hop, which automatically undercuts the impact of this track. Uncle Charlie Wilson is always welcome, but âLord Lord Lordâ wonât go down as a shining moment for Ye, Mos Def or Raekwon.
Nothingâs actually wrong with âLooking for Troubleâ outside of, maybe, the presence of Big Seanâit actually sounds like it came from the cutting room floor of The College Dropout era. But at No. 12, itâs the song that I like least of all the GOOD Fridays songs that I like.
Noteworthy for having what might be the funniest, shit-talkingest Kanye verse ever, which is saying a whole hell of a lot. The beatboxing bass line is also pretty dope. Iâd love to get my hands on a remastered version.
Feel-GOOD hip-hop for your soul. Pusha T bodies Common while Big Sean brings up the rear, as Big Sean is wont to do.
A track that features a Raekwon verse and a pre-voice-break Justin Bieber singing the hook over a sample of âWu-Tang Clan Ainât Nuthing ta Fuck Witâ had no reason to work, then or ever. That it does is all the proof anyone needs of Kanyeâs genius musical ear.
Among the biggest disappointments of early-21st-century hip-hop (Jay Electronica with no goddamn album is the biggest, so weâre clear) is that Child Rebel Soldier only released two official songs: âUs Placersâ and âDonât Stop!â At the beginning of the decade, Kanye, Lupe and Pharrell Williams were all razor-sharp and a perfect fit for a hip-hop supergroup. An album from them couldâve been an easy classic. Alas âŠ
I am so averse to Nicki Minajâs star-making verse on âMonsterâ that I always turn the song off before it comes on. Otherwise, itâs a great songâfrom the beat to the hook to everyone elseâs verse. Virtually no one agrees with me on this, and thatâs quite OK. The line to fight me starts in the back, around the corner. Please donât block sidewalk traffic.
Editorâs note: Youâre right. No one agrees with you here. âD.Y.
Seconded. I almost took out the word âvirtuallyâ for accuracyâs sake. âN.D.
The only GOOD Fridays track to drop after MBDTF, âChristmas in Harlemâ is probably the best Christmas rap record next to Run-DMCâs âChristmas in Hollis.â A reminder of simpler times between Camâron and Jim Jones, this will be on repeat on my iPhone in about a month.
Kanye didnât produce this beautiful-ass beat, which samples Smokey Robinsonâs âWill You Still Love Me Tomorrow,â but it sounds like his handiwork. The MBDTF version with Rozay has essentially rendered the GOOD Fridays version obsolete; I didnât fully appreciate it until years later when I started appreciating Rozay himself, but I always appreciated that added guitar solo.
As far as Iâm concerned, the remix of âPowerâ with Jay-Z and Swizz Beatz is the definitive version, mainly because it improves upon the MBDTF version in some crucial waysânamely an added Jay-Z verse and a beat switch during which Kanye snaps over, well, a sample of Snapâs âI Got the Power.â Seven years later, it still gets me hype in the gym.
I generally have John Legend issues, but even I couldnât stop humming the hook of this joint. I, too, donât know why they keep calling.
Probably my favorite cut on My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy. Everyone brought something to the track, including RZAâs confusing marble-mouthed hook. âSo Appalledâ might be most notable for introducing the world to CyHi the Prynce, whoâs a solid emcee despite having seemingly Saigon levels of drama in getting that debut album released.
One of my top 10 favorite Kanye songs of all time. Pete Rock did what only producers of his caliber can do: take a completely worn-out sample like âThe Makings of Youâ and turn it into some minimalist gold that Kanye and Jay both glide over effortlessly. That this was a bonus track on Watch the Throne made it the best track on that album.
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