Album Review: Kanye West - 808s & Heartbreak

Album Review: Kanye West - <i>808s & Heartbreak</i>

For better or worse, 2008 is going to be remembered as the Year of the Auto-Tune. Whether you like it or not, if you pay attention to hip hop at all, you more than likely have a strong opinion on the matter. If you pride yourself on your advanced intellect and being “true” to “real” hip hop, you probably consider Auto-Tune a joke of a fad fit only for pop radio rap and the kids who will listen to whatever MTV tells them to. If rap is just something you listen to in your car or at the club you probably don’t see what all the fuss is about. 85 percent of the public falls into one of these two categories.

Then there are people like me who have no freaking idea what to make of Auto-Tune. We are the ones who invest far more time and money in rap than sanity would dictate, yet are forward-thinking enough to be continuously irked by whiny old-school hip hop purists (and that may have sounded a bit conceited, but if this review has been up for more than a few hours I’m sure scrolling to the bottom of the review will reveal several comments demonstrating who I’m talking about.) Since we don’t subscribe to either side of the “real hip hop” argument we have to make up our own minds when it comes to trends like Auto-Tune.

So I have decided that Auto-Tune is an interesting trend that is occasionally very enjoyable, though it probably goes without saying that we’ve seen some overkill in 2008. But even as it is overused there is a lot to enjoy about this trend. With all the controversy that surrounds the entire rap scene it is often easy to forget that most rappers are kids. And since rap by its very nature is meant to be funny, the majority of these kids are goofballs. Guys like Lil Wayne gargling their lyrics through Auto-Tune is kind of the equivalent of your kid making Darth Vader voices into a fan; it can get obnoxious, but it’s also endearing to see them playing around and having fun. Plus, they’ll probably forget all about it in a couple months when they discover what helium will do to their voice.

And Kanye West is the poster-child for big goofy kids screwing around with Auto-Tune. A couple months ago West famously labeled Auto-Tune “the funnest thing to use.” And since he is at the point of his career where he can do whatever the hell he damn well wants, 808s and Hearbreak, fifty minutes of Auto-Tune, drum machines, and synthesizers hits shelves today.

But as happy as Auto-Tune makes Kanye West, 808s and Heartbreak is anything but light-hearted. The stress has piled up on West over the past couple years. The loss of his mother and a break-up with his fiancĂ©e were compounded with West’s increasing anxieties over the trappings of fame. This is where the comments about “poor-baby-Kanye-with-all-his-millis” generally appear, but these complaints are almost always bogus because all the money and fame in the world does not make a person less of a human being. And Kanye West wears his humanity on his sleeve on 808s.

While it’s West’s dramatic shift in musical styles that is grabbing the headlines, it is the overwhelmingly emotional nature of the lyrical themes that should be the real story here. Love it or hate it, 808s will not be swept under the rug as a footnote in his discography, if only for the fact that it is almost certainly the most openly personal album ever released by a mainstream rap artist. On “Welcome to Heartbreak” he sings, “My friend showed me pictures of his kids / And all I could show him were pictures of my cribs / Said his daughter got a brand new report card / And all I got was a brand new sports car.” This is a sweeping departure from the typical Patron-soaked / rain-on-a-bitch gibberish that permeates Top-40 hip hop. In a culture that is constantly under fire for degrading women and flaunting wealth, the biggest name in the game is expressing the desire to trade it all in for a wife and some kids.

Kanye sets the stage for his emotional masterpiece with “Say You Will”, an epic 6-minute, synth-heavy intro that acts more like The Cure’s “Plainsong” than any hip hop album intro that comes to mind. The track ends with three minutes of instrumentals, shattering any lingering ideas that Kanye was just going to go into the studio with his Auto-Tune and spit out a glorified T-Pain album. Make no mistake…nobody has made an album quite like this before.

But as groundbreaking as 808s is, it is far from a perfect album. Kanye has always been susceptible to the occasional cringe-worthy lyric. He’s able to get away with it when he is rapping because the music is goofy and light-hearted. On an album as dark and murky as this one, it’s a little more difficult to write bad lyrics off as being all in good fun. But as usual, Kanye’s individual lyrics are not nearly as important as the overall theme of his lyrical content, and as pointed out, 808s breaks new ground in this regard.

It’s hard to tell whether this is a top-heavy album or one that simply gets old after the novelty wears off. I’m going with a little bit of both, though the songs become much less memorable after “RoboCop”, a song that is certain to be written off as a complete joke by just about every critic who isn’t me. But there is such a thing as ridiculous to the point of awesome and I don’t apologize for knowing where that line is.

As promised, 808s is rap free, aside from a quick verse from Young Jeezy on the perky “Amazing”. Lil Wayne shows up on “See You in My Nightmares”, attempting to out Auto-Tune Kanye and lightening the mood with his typical scatological one-liner: “You think your shit don’t stink but you are Mrs. P.U.” Unfortunately, by this time the concept of the concept album is wearing a little thin and the opening of “Coldest Winter”, Kanye’s mommy-tribute (that easily could have been mistaken for another breakup song if he hadn’t specified), is a very welcome sound.

808s ends with “Pinocchio Story”, a fairly unnecessary addendum (apparently Beyonce requested that it be included) from a live recording in Singapore. While I can’t think of many reasons I will ever again leave the album playing past the end of “Coldest Winter”, it’s certainly worth one listen as it accurately sums up many of Kanye’s recent moodier themes as he longs to become a “real boy.”

More than anything, 808s feels like we stumbled across something we weren’t supposed to hear. Kanye is like the guy who complicates things by writing his estranged lover a guilt-inducing letter when he should have just walked away…except that guilt-inducing letter is about to be read to millions of people around the world. 808s has more than its share of awkward moments - both musically and lyrically - but the great artists are the ones who are not afraid of taking chances, and Kanye West is the greatest artist today’s pop scene has.

Rating: ★★★★☆

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18 Responses to “Album Review: Kanye West - 808s & Heartbreak

  1. I just want to say that I really enjoy reading your reviews, because I find them honest and balanced. Keep it up. God bless.

  2. OK Harry…you don’t have to enjoy the album…but you really can’t argue that both musically and lyrically (themes…not individual lyrics) this album covers ground that no mainstream rap artist has ever come CLOSE to before. It will be remembered as such…even though I’m fairly certain when the dust clears I will consider it my least favorite of his albums to date.

  3. This album is nowhere near groundbreaking. Ripping off European electronic music badly and writing lyrics that are laughable enough to make his poor lyrical showing on Graduation look near genius does not equate to a groundbreaking definitive piece. This is a good EP at best. Stretched out to album length it’s barely passable as interesting.

  4. Beyond the fact that Mikes my brother, I feel the same way. This album is no Graduation and has no hook line or sinker… It has hits and misses and I feel as if Kanye could have done a much better job. Kudos nonetheless.

  5. I like “Drunk and Hot Girls” because it is hilarious but it does drag on a little bit. But come on…”Bla Bla Bla Bla Bla that’s how tha fuck you sound!”…what an awesomely funny line.

    But back to the album in question. “Robocop” is laughable but like I said I just think it reaches that point of ridiculous where I have to enjoy it. It’s just an epic trainwreck of awesome. And it’s one of the few lighter moments on the album…and I like when it breaks down and starts to sound like “Don’t Stop Belivin’.”

    Zatz…glad you like my reviews. You should check out BPM if you haven’t been already. When I said that rap by its nature is meant to be funny I was referring to the fact that old school (and I mean REALLY old school…not Native Tongues old school)rap was pretty much just meant to be party music…the show was about the DJ and the rappers just came along to get the party started and make people laugh. Pre-”Message” rap is pretty much all light-hearted. Of course the genre has evolved (as it should) so your point is well taken…but I think humor is still at the center of the genre and there are a LOT of instances where rappers are just trying to make a joke and they end up getting torn up by a public who nowadays thinks rap is supposed to be serious…or just doesn’t get the humor.

    There’s an Ice-T quote that I can’t find at the moment but it’s something like, “Rap is funny. But if you don’t know it’s funny it’ll scare the shit out of you.” I think this is a great summary of mainstream culture’s feelings.

  6. I actually find RoboCop to be one of the album’s weakest moments, along with Amazing. The former was laughable almost and Amazing was repetitive, and I don’t like it for the same reasons I didn’t like “Drunk & Hot Girls” off of Graduation (the only lackluster track in what is otherwise a diamond album).

  7. For all the shit Kayne West gets he sure makes great fuckin music.

  8. I know I have Kanye blinders, but this album just gets better and better every time I listen. RoboCop = Pure genius.

  9. Afrika Bambaataa used a vocoder* and he is beyond old school legit.

    *see Planet Rock

  10. It’s a decent album, but certainly feels rushed.

  11. Good job on this. I am consistently impressed with your reviews and this one is probably the best review I’ve read on this album. Minor bitchcraft, “rap by its very nature is meant to be funny” just does not sit right with me, even though I know what you mean.

  12. This album is gonna stir up so much controversy about Kanye, but I think this review is top notch in putting everybody in check. The production is flawless, you get used to the auto-tune, and it turns out to be a satisfying listen from one of the only good modern pop stars.

  13. [...] course, all this proves to be somewhat ironic, considering producer Kanye West’s last undertaking made almost exclusive use of the auto-tune trend. Though Kanye does seem to be making an artistic [...]

  14. [...] Rihanna’s last names for all of you not in the know, to appear in his new music video for 808s & Heartbreak’s “Paranoid”. After a leak provided a tease last week, today, a higher quality [...]

  15. [...] the Grammy Appearance with Daft Punk, the Bonnaroo episode, the arrest(s), and 808s & Heartbreaks, the man better known as Kanye West made quite a stir in 2008. In fact, so much so, that we [...]

  16. [...] rapper turned auto tune freak, and considering the results of his most recent effort, 808s & Heartbreak, I’m not sure anyone really wants that. Again, as for the SNL thing, well, let’s just [...]

  17. [...] went bonkers over Kanye’s 808s & Heartbreak, while Mike dissected the disaster that is The Killer’s Day & [...]

  18. [...] know that a few artists might be missing from the shelves. Now wait, don’t get me wrong. Kanye will still be there, as will The Killers, and not everyone has bought up all those Chinese [...]

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