1. kanye west - yeezus

Over the last twenty days of December (and obviously 2013), I’ll be writing about my favorite twenty albums and songs of the year, one a day.  Not best. Not most influential.  Not most likely to land on a Complex slideshow.  Just my favorite, ranked in order.

1. kanye west – yeezus

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While Pitchfork’s reader-base might not be the most authoritative of sources, it’s telling that Kanye West’s Yeezus was voted “Most Overrated,” “Most Underrated,” and “Best” album of the year.  While Kanye’s musical ability seems to be increasingly up for debate as his career rolls along, his ability to spark discussion certainly isn’t; Kanye’s name hasn’t really left the headlines all year. Whether it’s been his relationship with Kim Kardashian or his explosions at Jimmy Kimmel (#ALLDISRESPECTTOJIMMYKIMMEL) and Shade 45's Sway (“You ain’t got the answers, Sway!”), Kanye certainly hasn’t lost his knack for retaining the spotlight.

And while it’s not that Kanye has ever been a public figure who’s seemed overly concerned with his public image, but Yeezus is divisive even by his standards.  He’s seized the opposite end of the spectrum from the maximalism that ran through the veins of his last few releases, instead employing the legendary bearded presence of Rick Rubin to help strip Yeezus down to its very core.  It’s not the same type of minimalism that Pusha T embraced for My Name is My Name, though; Yeezus demonstrates it through restraint, when it submerges its synths underwater to let Kanye rage, or when it draws back everything but the beat’s spine for the majority of a song. 

It’s almost a guilty pleasure to watch Kanye drop all pretenses of eloquence. It’s not an approach that’s too surprising given that Kanye never was the most talented of lyricists (he’s always relied on memorable rather than articulate lines) – to be honest, it’s the direction Kanye’s been heading in for years; it was only a matter of time before he decided that crude bluntness was a better approach than subtlety.  And while Kanye’s perceived lack of lyricism has been a major gripe surrounding Yeezus (in all fairness, Kanye’s performance as a rapper on this album is amateurish often bordering on pathetic), what Kanye has discarded in his bars he’s more than regained through his emotion and investment.

It’s sharp and primal when it’s there, like when Kanye kicks up into fifth gear in the second half of “New Slaves” or when he breaks out the screams in “I Am a God.”  Kanye built up his career as the open antithesis of hip-hop’s hard street thug image and he’s certainly not forgotten that (“Pink-ass polo with a fucking backpack/Everybody knows I brought real rap back,” “I Am a God”), so the shock isn’t Kanye’s openness.  It’s the extents to which he’s willing to stretch that approach – but then again, Kanye’s not one known for moderation. He’s efficient, for once in his musical career.

And Yeezus is just ten songs long, and the fact that it only clocks in at forty minutes means that it’s more easily consumed as what it is: a flash of intensity  Had Kanye tested the hour-mark as he often does (My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy nudged up against seventy minutes) Yeezus might have appeased more fans, but its battering ram quality would be far less compelling.  Yeezus’ length means that every verse hits harder and every musical move means more.  It’s not just a coincidence buried in an hour of music that Kanye paired up “Strange Fruit” with TNGHT in “Blood on the Leaves,” nor is the unexpected soulfulness of “Bound 2” just a throwaway moment.  The album is best absorbed as a powerful in-and-out blast of music, driven forward less by finesse than by brute force and emotion.  Fantasy relied heavily on our investment in Kanye’s issues to drive the album forward for full effect, but Yeezus makes it brutally clear that, well, Kanye couldn’t give less of a shit whether we relate to his problems.  It’s a musical manifesto, often unclear and misleading but always gripping.

 Kanye exists in a musical vacuum of his own, where his primary comparison will always be his last album and his primary competitor is himself.  The specters hanging over him aren’t that of Drake and Jay-Z (his utter disregard for public opinion seems to indicate as much), but of My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy and The College Dropout.  He’ll always be compared against his other albums, for better or worse – and even if Yeezus might qualitatively be the worst of his solo efforts, it’s an album that’ll be discussed years from now.  Even when the whole point seems to be that Kanye doesn’t care, well, he can’t help but make us care.

1. pusha t - "nosetalgia feat. kendrick lamar (prod. nottz & kanye west)"

Over the last twenty days of December (and obviously 2013), I’ll be writing about my favorite twenty albums and songs of the year, one a day.  Not best. Not most influential.  Not most likely to land on a Complex slideshow.  Just my favorite, ranked in order.

1. pusha t – “nosetalgia feat. kendrick lamar (prod. nottz & kanye west)”

On an album that embraced minimalism as a way of life, “Nosetalgia” stands head and shoulders above the rest as the purest manifestation of the album’s “Rick Rubin on steroids” mantra.  It’s as bare-bones as a hip-hop song gets, relying on about six different drum and sample sounds to lurch it along, and there’s no mistake where the spotlight’s turned: towards the mic.  On a superficial level, it’s excellent simply as a glass display case for two of the best rappers alive; Nottz and Kanye’s stretched-out horns and subdued drums certainly leave enough space between drums and rattles for Pusha T and Kendrick Lamar to flex.  We could leave it there – it’s just two incredibly talented rappers clearing the table off, sitting down, and rhyming.  

But that’s not all.  Kendrick plays the windowpane-peering Nas to Pusha’s Jay-Z stunningly well, each taking up two different roles and lenses to view the cocaine trade through.  While Pusha was “crack in the school zone/two beepers on me, starter jacket that was two-toned,” Kendrick’s “daddy turned a quarter piece to a four and a half/Took a L, started selling soap fiends bubble bath.”  They’re at odds by the very nature of the parts they play, but “Nosetalgia” doesn’t pit the two rappers against each other: the song isn’t accusatory towards any side, and it’s not a platform for either to level shots.  Instead, the aggression and intensity bleeds through the lines and snarls, letting the verses serve as testimonials to be taken and absorbed.

For any other rapper, Kendrick’s turn on “Nosetalgia” would be a career-high.  It’s telling that for him, it’s just another clip in a highlight reel of a year full of song-throttlers: Big Sean’s “Control”, Tech N9ne’s “Fragile”, Fredo Santana’s “Jealous.”  It’s not as in-your-face as the verse that most might name as his biggest contribution this year (here, Kendrick at least refrains from calling out his peers), but it burrows into your brain just as well.  While “Control” saw Kendrick tossing out a flurry of references and threats, he’s paradoxically both more restrained and animated here.  Halfway through his verse, right before he segues into a conversation with his father in which he raps both sides: “And nine times out of ten, niggas don’t pay attention/And when there’s tension in the air, nines come with extensions.” Kendrick’s not as grizzled as Pusha, and maybe he doesn’t have the same type of resume to flaunt, but when it comes to backdoor meaning unveilings and crafting unforgettable images, well, he’s virtually unparalleled.  King Kendrick.

4. earl sweatshirt - doris//kanye west - "new slaves (prod. lots of people)"

Over the last twenty days of December (and obviously 2013), I’ll be writing about my favorite twenty albums and songs of the year, one a day.  Not best. Not most influential.  Not most likely to land on a Complex slideshow.  Just my favorite, ranked in order.

4. earl sweatshirt – doris

There are a lot of problems with Earl Sweatshirt’s return to the music scene: he lets himself get buffeted around by Domo Genesis and Vince Staples, he’s lost the tongue-in-cheek defiance that laced Earl, his voice is locked into a singular monotone pitch.  But even given his unfortunate habit to mutter and drawl the majority of his verses, Doris still provides an incredible snapshot into the life of The Internet’s Prodigal Son.  Earl was brought to fame by the Internet in a way that very few other celebrities have been – and most pointedly, he missed his own rise, having not made his return from Samoa until he’d already become the subject of a massive Internet movement (Free Earl).  Earl’s an immensely talented artist (really, he makes golden children like Joey Bada$$ look comparatively amateurish) that hasn’t really gotten it all together yet, and Doris is a way for us to watch as he puts it all together.  He’ll let Domo walk all over him on “20 Wave Caps” and just sit back as Tyler, The Creator turns his own song (“Sasquatch”) into a Wolf leftover, and then he’ll spring a masterpiece like “Sunday” or “Chum” on us.  Part of the thrill is watching as spectators, knowing that brilliance is within reach, anticipating the next flash of transcendence.  Earl’s an imperfect artist, and Doris is a reflection of that state as much as it’s a reflection of his anger, despair, and rebelliousness. 

4. kanye west – “new slaves (prod. lots of people)”

“New Slaves” might encapsulate Yeezus and its attitude better than anything else on the album or anything Kanye West might say.  It rattles into action with a slow buzzsaw synth quickly drowned out by distorted, unintelligible layered prattling before the first lines even hit acapella.  Kanye and Co. are twisting familiar choir samples into the backing for a soundscape far more aggressive and cutting than anything we’d been used to as a fanbase – and if the cold synths weren’t a good enough indication of Kanye’s newfound anger, well, the second verse probably did the trick.  That is, if you can even call it a verse, as it’s a mash of repeated lines and increasingly accusatory one-liners (like the now iconic “fuck you and your corporations, y’all niggas can’t control me”).  It’s unclear how much of what Kanye is saying is actually factually correct (I’m pretty sure you can read and sign contracts, Kanye), logical (up for debate whether the DEA and the CCA are actually teaming up), or justifiable (there’s a whole ‘nother discussion to be had about the hypocrisy stretched across “New Slaves”).  But forget all of that for a second, and recognize that this might be the bluntest and stripped-down Kanye has ever been, especially as he descends into particular madness towards the end of the second verse.  This is the song from Yeezus that’ll stand the test of time.

And we haven’t even talked about that outro.  That outro.

5. danny brown - old//pusha t - "numbers on the board (prod. don cannon & kanye west)"

Over the last twenty days of December (and obviously 2013), I’ll be writing about my favorite twenty albums and songs of the year, one a day.  Not best. Not most influential.  Not most likely to land on a Complex slideshow.  Just my favorite, ranked in order.

5. danny brown – old

While 2011’s XXX was practically built to be a critical darling, Old (by design) is a lot more divisive.  From its pseudo-double-disc structure (Side A sports a more traditional Danny Brown, while Side B is all massive festival material) to his general disregard for the types of songs that made him an indie darling a couple years ago (needless to say, songs like “Smokin’ & Drinkin’” completely lack the heart-baring transparency of songs like “XXX”), this is Danny striking out for a different musical path.  But does that mean he’s put out a worse album? Hardly.  It’s not just that Danny’s making a different kind of music, he’s just flashing a different skill set from the one we’re used to. For one, Danny’s the rare artist that can restrain himself from descending into repetitiveness even when he’s crafting bangers like “Dip”: it’s not all just “girls, molly, girls molly.”  It’s easy to forget amongst the rattling basses and seizing synths that at his core, Danny’s from the gutters of Detroit – that is, until he hits you with a line like “Bankroll in my pocket so everybody know me/Went home and gave my mama three hundred for some groceries” (“Side B (Dope Song)”).  It’s tough to say an artist going through musical changes is ever staying true to his roots, but that’s certainly what Danny’s doing.  Getting better, too.  Who’d have predicted that the man putting out Detroit State of Mind mixtapes a few years ago would be disguising escapism as mosh-pit churners?

5. pusha t – “numbers on the board (prod. don cannon & kanye west)”

“Unorthodox” wouldn’t be a bad way to describe the first single off of Pusha T’s first studio album with G.O.O.D. Music.  The beat is brilliantly executed minimalism, riding off kitchen-pan percussion and a couple buzzing bass notes, a hip-hop instrumental stripped to its very core.  The hook is a quick one-line snarl (“Ballers, I put numbers on the board”) interjected seemingly at random between short verses, and halfway through the song, Jay-Z circa 1997 busts through in the form of a sample for a half-bar.  But at the same time, as unconventional as “Numbers on the Board” might be in relation to the rest of 2013 hip-hop, it’s still the same Pusha.  Same push-ya-top-back chin thrusts (“Your SL’s missing an S, nigga/Your plane’s missing a chef”) and same slick drug rhymes (“I might sell a brick on my birthday/thirty-six years of doing dirt like it’s Earth Day, God”).  And, of course, the same love for stripped-down beats – we can thank Pharrell and Chad Hugo for that affinity.  This one is as raw as the kilos Pusha moved way back when.

9. pusha t - my name is my name//nipsey hussle - "face the world (prod. 9th wonder)"

Over the last twenty days of December (and obviously 2013), I’ll be writing about my favorite twenty albums and songs of the year, one a day.  Not best. Not most influential.  Not most likely to land on a Complex slideshow.  Just my favorite, ranked in order.

9. pusha t – my name is my name

My Name is My Name couldn’t have come at a better time – it’s a reminder that no matter how inconsistent and illogical he’s been with his solo career until now, he’s capable of hunkering down and rapping about cocaine better than virtually anyone alive.  Pusha might be thirty-six, but that doesn’t mean he’s lost any of the slithering menace that he’s sported since his early days with Malice in Clipse.  Of course, he’s doling it out in portions, but the times My Name is My Name really shines are when Pusha throws caution to the wind and snarls out bar after bar.  It’s a short album, but that doesn’t stop it from suffering from filler: we could have done without the (hyper-acccurate) Ma$e impression on “Let Me Love You,” and even if it presents an introspective side of Pusha we rarely see, “40 Acres” doesn’t really belong here.  And Wrath of Caine’s “Revolution” really, really should have been on here somewhere.  But it’s really not a concern when Pusha decides to really rap.  It’s funny, because Pusha’s overbearing persona exemplifies the type of approach most new artists seem to be taking with their career: style first, and Pusha does minimalism better than anyone else, including Kanye“Numbers on the Board” strips down a hip-hop beat right down to its spine, and most of the time, his idea of a hook seems to be a quick afterthought of a bar between verses. And while it can be a bit limiting to cast yourself almost exclusively as a drug-flipping rapper (it ruins the effect when Pusha decides to kick the thugging down a notch), it truly is hard to care once Pusha starts flinging around lines like he used to fling around kilos. 

9. nipsey hussle – “face the world (prod. 9th wonder)”

This is the type of song that defines lost potential. Nipsey’s been making music for years now, and nothing he’s made even remotely touches this masterpiece. Sure, a lot of it stems from the beat, for sure (I shouldn’t even have to explain how good 9th Wonder is, and this is him at his very best): but Nipsey’s the real star here.  It’s not like he’s throwing around lyrical beauties or anything; all about the atmosphere.  Nipsey’s the rare rapper (like Blu) that can be optimistic and offer advice and drop lines like “Yeah, this your life, you can play with it/You make your bed, you gon’ lay in it” without sounding remotely played-out.  Maybe it’s the confidence, maybe it’s the delivery, or maybe it’s the fact that Nipsey pulls off the slightly-harried, determined-with-a-hint-of-desperate tone here better than Game ever will.  But what it means is that this reads less like a Macklemore preaching session and more like a rapper who made it out of Crenshaw laying out his lessons.  I listened to this song again to write this, and I think I got chills about three different times.