JOPLIN, Mo. —
I haven’t listened to too much rap yet in 2012, but with the warm weather settling early, I’m anticipating summer and long days.
Last week was a good one, brining new music from both Kanye West and Nicki Minaj, arguably the reigning king and queen of that sweet domain where rap meets pop -- the commonwealth of commercially viable hip-hop.
I haven’t paid much attention to Nicki Minaj since she showed up on my radar after out-rapping Jay-Z, Rick Ross and Kanye West on West’s 2010 single “Monster.” Her verse was virtuosic and unhinged and, like the first time I heard Eminem in his Slim Shady persona, I realized someone totally unique and weird had arrived on the scene.
But after that, I stopped paying attention to her. Part of the problem is whenever I saw her on television, she seemed self-consciously “weird” in a way that was neither thought-out nor all that interesting. And aside from “Super Bass,” her big single from last year, her debut album “Pink Friday” was boring, mostly unsuccessful pop.
It soon became clear Nicki Minaj wasn’t interested in being a great rapper, but rather a composite: a little bit Lady Gaga, a little bit Lil Kim, a dash of Katy Perry.
The incredibly strong first third of her sophomore album “Pink Friday: Roman Reloaded” however, puts everyone on notice that if she wanted, she could rip your throat out on her ascent to the throne of most interesting, if not greatest, rapper alive.
With a collection of adventurous, sonically stacked beats, Minaj burns through the most exciting 22 minutes of music released in 2012 so far. “Beez in the Trap,” the album’s highlight, is pitch black and mean with Minaj flipping the casual misogyny of rap on what sounds like an IV drip distorted into a percolating, hypnotic drone.
It’s a jarring shift from songs such as “Come on a Cone,” with its swarm of cyborg bees and Minaj’s threats to put her male genitalia in your face, to the warmed-over Eurobeat and generic Top 40 retreads that make up the rest of the album.
Minaj is such a gifted rapper -- nimble, quick, able to make maniacal shifts in tone without losing the song’s thread -- that it’s puzzling why she’d rein in her personality to make the kind of music any halfway decent “American Idol” reject could pull off.
Still, I find it difficult to knock Minaj for not being something I want her to be -- an album-oriented rap star. Sure, another five to seven songs as strong as the first six, and “Roman Reloaded” would be the kind of album rap nerds would talk about for years. But what Minaj released is safer in an age where the album is on its way out; it’s better, at least commercially, to be a little something to everyone.
Which is why I’m thankful for artists like West who, for better or worse, follow their muse and make pop music come to them. West has earned enough clout over the years that he can afford to be the kind of album-oriented rap star who makes no concessions for the market.
And yet last year he and Jay-Z released the hardest of hard rap songs “N***** in Paris” -- whose sonic architect also provided the beat for Minaj’s “Come on a Cone” -- and it still became one of the biggest singles of the year.
Last week West released both a new solo single “Theraflu,” which contained some of his best self-lacerating boasting to date, and a group track, “Mercy,” that’s speculated to be the first song from an upcoming album featuring all the artists from West’s GOOD Music label.
If Minaj enjoys making mediocre Top 40 pop, good for her, but if she’s just doing it to be radio viable she should look to West as a role model--which is perhaps the only instance where anyone should regard West as such--and trust that her talent and indomitable personality will bring her success on her own terms. Because I suspect it would.
Enjoy
Jeremiah Tucker: Minaj gets back to being interesting with new album
- Enjoy
-
-
Raised voices: Trio brings energetic, spiritual show to Branson
From singing in church and at their mother's bedside following her near-fatal accident, Michael, Avery and Nadia Cole, the Voices of Glory, have had an effect on people.
-
Glass instruments featured in special program
Dennis James' obsession started when he was 6 years old. During a visit to the Franklin Museum in 1956, he spotted a glass armonica and was transfixed.
-
Farm Girl Fest to hold spring event at school
A group that re-creates historic farm life at Red Oak II in Carthage will take their event to school this weekend.
-
Historic ghost tour features Victorian-era seance
Now the spring season of the historic ghost tours has a new stop: Caldone's After Dark Speakeasy at 218 S. Main.
-
Rummage sale to benefit foster parents
A rummage sale this weekend will help raise funds for foster parents dealing with cancer.
-
Dave Woods: Exotic animals provide adventure in Branson
I didn’t know what to expect when I walked into Branson’s Wild World. Neither did Denita Brooks.
-
Dave Woods: Hamner-Barber veterans tribute raises bar
Dave Hamner and Jim Barber's variety show is filled with magic, music, ventriloquism and, near the end of the show, a veterans tribute like none I had seen before. It brought me to tears and raised the Branson veterans tribute bar for me.
-
Benji Tunnell: Downey, Black reunite to improve 'Iron Man'
Jon Favreau, director of the first two films, steps aside this time and turns over the reins to co-writer/director Shane Black, allowing a reunion between Black and his "Kiss Kiss Bang Bang" star Robert Downey Jr., reprising his role as Tony Stark.
-
Jeremiah Tucker: Now easier than ever to find new music online
Listening to hours of music every day used to mean turning on the radio and subjecting yourself to programming formats bloated with songs so overplayed that they are the auditory equivalent of putting a wad of pre-chewed gum in your mouth.
-
Joe Hadsall: 'Orphan Black' features great story, performance
The central story arc of one of the most brilliant shows to hit TV was revealed early in its third episode. Jokes about "Clone Club" and "Attack of the Clones" are running rampant in media coverage of the show, so there's no point in holding that tidbit back, or treating this column with a spoiler alert warning.
- More Enjoy Headlines
-




