It’s hard to deny that the release of Jay-Z's Magna Carta Holy Grail could have gone a bit smoother. Despite the promise of his technology-based #NewRules promotional campaign with Samsung, the planned July 4th release of the album through the MCHG Android app was almost comically bad. In principle, it was pretty impressive - while releasing lyrics and promo videos leading up to the album’s release, Jay handed over a million copies for Samsung to distribute to its phone users for free a few days early. But instead, Twitter blew up in outrage over the malfunctioning app and angry Jay-Z fans around the nation who had stayed up for the album fumed. But, you’d imagine Jay wasn’t particularly bothered - the man was certified platinum by the RIAA before a single physical copy left stores.
And it’s very easy to jump on the Jay-Z hate train - hip-hop’s next class of stars are firmly entrenched (shout outs to Kendrick Lamar and Drake), and if Brooklyn’s Finest isn’t ready to keep pace, well, we can leave him behind. And Jay-Z’s decline has been a storyline for years now, after the radio-targeted Blueprint III of 2009. Ragging on Magna Carta is the only natural step for an aging superstar losing his feel.
But is that really what Jay-Z is anymore? Have we already shifted from “top of the game” Jay-Z circa 2011's Watch the Throne phase to “he’s washed up” Jay-Z now? Was it really that long ago that we were applauding Jay-Z’s bold decadence alongside Kanye West? Sure, things have changed, but it’s hard to imagine Jay-Z’s regressed that much in the last two years. To be sure, Magna is no Watch the Throne. That was an unprecedented celebration of decadence by two of America’s biggest stars, and that’s a hard thing to live up to.
And there’s a lot of new stuff going on. The 8-bit Super Mario vibe of “Tom Ford,” the beat switch-up in “Picasso Baby” from croaking drums and bass to vintage Vol. 3, or even the threatening synths across the Mike WiLL Made It-produced “Beach is Better.” It’s all some of the most interesting stuff Jay has done in years. Just take a look at the production credits for Magna, which ranges from old friends (Pharrell, Timbaland, Swizz Beatz) to new upshots (Travi$ Scott, Mike WiLL Made It, Hit-Boy). Shuffle in the fact that Jay is sharper on this album that he’s been in years (the first verse of “Heaven” is spiritual Hova at his best - “Food, clothing, shelter, help a nigga find some peace/Happiness for a gangsta, ain’t no love in these streets”), and it’s hard not to be impressed by Jay’s outing.
Does Jay-Z really have to be doing anything groundbreaking when he’s making music this entertaining and clever? He may not be pushing the envelope to the degree that re-appropriator extraordinaire Kanye West, but Jay’s making great music while switching the formula up just enough to be interesting. Jay-Z’s sending jabs at his sport agent rivals on “Crown,” putting together hard-hitting one-minute interludes like “Versus” and “Beach is Better,” and throwing Nas, Justin Timberlake, Pharrell, and Beyonce on the same song with “BBC”. It’s not Watch the Throne, but this is no Kingdom Come, either.