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turboman

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Review of Jay-Z's "The Blueprint 3".

 Jay Z

The past ten years of Jay-Z's career has been hit or miss. We have the best out of Hove with 2007's "American Gangster" and Jay-Z's first retirement album "The Black Album". The latter of the two might as well be more known for the future "Gray Album" by DJ DangerMouse, but that's a different story. We have also seen Jay-Z's worst with "Kingdom Come" and All of the collaboration albums with R Kelly. The Blueprint 3 is Jay-Z's latest attempt and falls somewhere in between his best work and his worst work. It's nothing to pass off, as it defaults to one of the best hip-hop albums of the year, but it's nothing that anyone should get to excited over either.
 
  

  

In the Giant Bomb panel at PAX, Alex argued about how hard it is to write about a mediocre product, and that's just what this is. Jay-Z lead sing, DoA(Death of Autotune) is so brilliant and ferocious at the third track of the album, he never has the true ability to follow it up with anything. Run This Town immediately follows DoA, and while you can definitely enjoy the rest of the album on the first couple of listens throughout the CD, it gets stale really quick, on each listen, you eliminate songs in the rotation each time, untill your down to about three or four songs.
 
  
  

It's not flat out terrible songs, they just don't have anything to new to offer or say. Most of the worse tracks also will tend to feature some unknown rapper(at least to me), and it just seems like filling time up on the CD to make it longer. Young Jeezy is the opposite of what I like in a rap song, so I might be a tad bit biased here, but Young Jeezy can seriously piss off. All of the beats are slightly amusing, but nothing compared to Jay-Z's back catalog. One beat had potential by Swizz Beats on the song "On To The Next One", when I read that it was sampled from Justices "D.A.N.C.E.", I imagined the song to be fun not unlike "It's a Hard Knock Life", but the song ultimately disappoints by being dark and meaningless. Another lowpoint of the CD is "Venus vs. Mars". Try not to feel a little embarrassed that this song was made by Jay-Z. Ludacris will usually stoop this low in sexual song writing, but it's really weird hearing it come out of Jay's mouth, with the chorus being "(Girl) Daddy get it in, (Jay) Baby go hard" over and over. The song is just dirty and filthy, it's really awkward to listen to. 

  
   

There are a few standouts to point out on the Blueprint 3. DoA obviously being the biggest. DoA is just four minutes of Jay-Z trying to save Hip-Hop, while also taking a couple of stabs at Scene rockers in one line. A Star Is Born might be a controversial pick, cause I can see people hating it, but I love that song for some reason. The song is about Jay-Z justifying why he is one of the greatest rappers today by naming rappers of the past, and how they didn't survive, but Jay did. The last of the greats can also be Hate-able(irony), the song is called Hate. While I'm on this subject, the best thing for Jay to remain fresh, and for Kanye to regain some fans back after his shenanigans at the VMA's would be if Jay-Z and Kanye released some kind of collaboration album. Hearing them rap off of each other(with albeit, ridiculously dumb rap patterns) is very fun to listen to.


Overall, Jay-z disappoints with the Blueprint 3. He raps about moving the genre forward, but doesn't back it up with any legitimately game changing songs. Everything seems pretty tacked on, despite the hype of hearing something different(Hey, what happened to that MGMT song, by the way?). A couple of years ago, he made a CD that he said he would retire on. After hearing Blueprint 3, it could be time for Jay-z to hang up his Yankees hat and focus on running his label behind the desk, not in front. 

Recommended Downloads: 
 Death of Autotune 
 Run This Town 
 A Star is Born 
 Hate 
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turboman

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Edited By turboman

 Jay Z

The past ten years of Jay-Z's career has been hit or miss. We have the best out of Hove with 2007's "American Gangster" and Jay-Z's first retirement album "The Black Album". The latter of the two might as well be more known for the future "Gray Album" by DJ DangerMouse, but that's a different story. We have also seen Jay-Z's worst with "Kingdom Come" and All of the collaboration albums with R Kelly. The Blueprint 3 is Jay-Z's latest attempt and falls somewhere in between his best work and his worst work. It's nothing to pass off, as it defaults to one of the best hip-hop albums of the year, but it's nothing that anyone should get to excited over either.
 
  

  

In the Giant Bomb panel at PAX, Alex argued about how hard it is to write about a mediocre product, and that's just what this is. Jay-Z lead sing, DoA(Death of Autotune) is so brilliant and ferocious at the third track of the album, he never has the true ability to follow it up with anything. Run This Town immediately follows DoA, and while you can definitely enjoy the rest of the album on the first couple of listens throughout the CD, it gets stale really quick, on each listen, you eliminate songs in the rotation each time, untill your down to about three or four songs.
 
  
  

It's not flat out terrible songs, they just don't have anything to new to offer or say. Most of the worse tracks also will tend to feature some unknown rapper(at least to me), and it just seems like filling time up on the CD to make it longer. Young Jeezy is the opposite of what I like in a rap song, so I might be a tad bit biased here, but Young Jeezy can seriously piss off. All of the beats are slightly amusing, but nothing compared to Jay-Z's back catalog. One beat had potential by Swizz Beats on the song "On To The Next One", when I read that it was sampled from Justices "D.A.N.C.E.", I imagined the song to be fun not unlike "It's a Hard Knock Life", but the song ultimately disappoints by being dark and meaningless. Another lowpoint of the CD is "Venus vs. Mars". Try not to feel a little embarrassed that this song was made by Jay-Z. Ludacris will usually stoop this low in sexual song writing, but it's really weird hearing it come out of Jay's mouth, with the chorus being "(Girl) Daddy get it in, (Jay) Baby go hard" over and over. The song is just dirty and filthy, it's really awkward to listen to. 

  
   

There are a few standouts to point out on the Blueprint 3. DoA obviously being the biggest. DoA is just four minutes of Jay-Z trying to save Hip-Hop, while also taking a couple of stabs at Scene rockers in one line. A Star Is Born might be a controversial pick, cause I can see people hating it, but I love that song for some reason. The song is about Jay-Z justifying why he is one of the greatest rappers today by naming rappers of the past, and how they didn't survive, but Jay did. The last of the greats can also be Hate-able(irony), the song is called Hate. While I'm on this subject, the best thing for Jay to remain fresh, and for Kanye to regain some fans back after his shenanigans at the VMA's would be if Jay-Z and Kanye released some kind of collaboration album. Hearing them rap off of each other(with albeit, ridiculously dumb rap patterns) is very fun to listen to.


Overall, Jay-z disappoints with the Blueprint 3. He raps about moving the genre forward, but doesn't back it up with any legitimately game changing songs. Everything seems pretty tacked on, despite the hype of hearing something different(Hey, what happened to that MGMT song, by the way?). A couple of years ago, he made a CD that he said he would retire on. After hearing Blueprint 3, it could be time for Jay-z to hang up his Yankees hat and focus on running his label behind the desk, not in front. 

Recommended Downloads: 
 Death of Autotune 
 Run This Town 
 A Star is Born 
 Hate 
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Daniel

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Edited By Daniel

Good review. I think I may have just not listened to it enough, or am not well-versed enough in his previous work, to have a solid opinion. I do really enjoy Run This Town, Hate, and Empire State of Mind (minus Alisha Keys). This is all coming from a dude that thinks Jay-Z's best album work was shown on the Grey Album ;)

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TheGodPoet

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Edited By TheGodPoet

Good review. I was thinking of picking up The Blueprint 3 but your review is making me change my mind a bit. Maybe I should just get a few songs. Oh, and I actually like Young Jeezy's music.

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rodrigues

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Edited By rodrigues

How can you enjoy "Hate"? That song is awful. Hate's chorus might be the worst chorus in music history. And what's up with the "background" vocals on Hate? Isn't that Kanye using autotune? Why does he use autotune after hating it so much on D.O.A? I don't get it. 
  
My recommended downloads: 
- Death of Autotune
- Run This Town
- Empire State of Mind
- A Star is Born
- Real as it Gets 
 
Songs that you want to stay clear off: 
- Hate
- Venus vs. Mars
- On to the Next One.
 
 
And I can't understand why people hate Kingdom Come? It has two of the best rap songs of the century:
- Beach Chair 
- Lost Ones

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Bruce

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Edited By Bruce
@rodrigues: 
 
Wow, you liked Kingdom Come?  
 
Lost Ones was only good for the hook; don't play yourself!
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i69edUrGpa

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Edited By i69edUrGpa

I have to say it was the most disappointing album I have heard all year. Maybe my expectations were too high but to me it was all around mediocre. 

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turboman

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Edited By turboman
@rodrigues:  
 
listen to Hate more, I hated it at first, and then I regarded it to a song that doesn't take it that seriously, then I had a lot of fun with it, it's very refreshing to hear the song on when going through the album
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Clean

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Edited By Clean

I'm loving it, I love D.O.A though

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rodrigues

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Edited By rodrigues
@Bruce: Kingdom Come was a mediocre album, imo. It has some really good songs (Lost Ones and Beach Chair <3) and some that really sucks ass (Anything and Kingdom Come). But it isn't as bad as many people say it is.
 
@TurboMan: Yeah, it probably isn't that bad after hearing it a few times, but I really hate autotune. But I guess you're right, it isn't that bad.

@daniel: I loved Alicia Keys in Empire State of Mind.  
 
By the way, if you guys are into hiphop, seek out these songs from Gift of Gab:
- Way of the Light
- Flashback
- All Inn
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turboman

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Edited By turboman
@rodrigues: I think I really like Empire of The State too, but Alicia Keys kinda hurts the song in the end, I know her segment is only probably 20 seconds long, I just can't stand her singing anything besides the Chorus
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jakob187

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Edited By jakob187

So far, I'm really into the whole album.  Very good stuff, but I could do without Rihanna on "Run This Town".  At this point, the only thing you can compare Jay to is Jay...and that's some pretty stiff competition.  lol  Nonetheless, I think The Blueprint 3 shines in a lot of ways.  He uses great, authentic beats that you aren't going to find anywhere else.  He kills it on every rhyme he throws out.  I mean, the beginning of "On To The Next One"...KILLS IT! 
 
"Hov on that new shit niggas like how come, niggas want my old shit...buy my old album." 
 
He also does a great job of keeping it East Coast, especially with "Empire State of Mind", which is probably my favorite track on the album aside from "D.O.A.".  I also like Alicia Keys on that track, so I don't know.
 
I love all his old work, but I'm not going to compare him to his old stuff.  Artists always move in different directions, and I'm happy that he's not Auto-Tuning the hell out of his album.  Despite how much I can hate Rihanna's singing on "Run This Town" and nitpick at tons of shit, I have to judge an album based on the state of the artist at the time of its writing and release...and frankly, Jay-Z is making a MUCH bigger statement with this album than any before it:  cut the bullshit and get back to HIP HOP.

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citizenjp

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Edited By citizenjp

Its a pretty good album, but I think it coulda been better and hopefully the next one will. I still think the best ones are The Black Album, The Blueprint, and Reasonable Doubt. :)

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Daniel

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Edited By Daniel
@rodrigues said: 
@daniel: I loved Alicia Keys in Empire State of Mind.  
I think Jay should have been alone on that song. Kinda disappointed me. Didn't ruin the song, but took away something for me.
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SlantedRoom

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Edited By SlantedRoom

@TurboMan:
dude, overall decent review but you got one thing entirely wrong.  
A Star is Born has nothing to do with him talking about how he is the shit by naming other rappers that didn't survive. It's not a diss track like that, if you listen, it's a about him being a humble dude and giving props to those other rappers for shaping hiphop. Most of the dudes he names are his homies.. I quote, "What Em did was silly, the white boy blossomed after Dre endorsed him, his flow on Renegade, fucking awesome, applaud him" 
 
check yo self befo' u wrek yo self

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turboman

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Edited By turboman
@FUPA11: I don't think I said jay dissed them, and he definantly  doesn't. He mentions rappers and how they got their moment to shine, but when he throws out names like Diddy and Mase, in the back of your mind(or mine at least) it's hard not to think how so many rappers have came and went, and Jay is still one of the biggest rappers after so many years. So if you read it as me thinking Jay's dissing people, sorry for not clearing that up, it's a completely respectful song. 
 
@jakob187: And I agree, but he doesn't in particularly move on in an interesting way. Most of the songs are just run-of-the-mill songs... of course, we both have opinions, but not much really stands out as "new" on this CD.
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jakob187

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Edited By jakob187
@TurboMan said:
"@jakob187: And I agree, but he doesn't in particularly move on in an interesting way. Most of the songs are just run-of-the-mill songs... of course, we both have opinions, but not much really stands out as "new" on this CD. "
But does it NEED to be "new"?  Jay-Z lays it down better than anyone in the business right now.  He CONTINUES to be an important piece of the hip hop community.  Seriously, when has he dropped an album and it wasn't a major deal?  Exactly.  No matter what this guys does, it turns out to be at LEAST better than everything else that's coming out.  While The Blueprint 3 may not hold up to some of his previous work, it doesn't mean that it isn't a great album.  Like I said, when it comes to Uncle Jay, you can only compare him against himself.  It's the truth.  The man has proven time and time again that he's a master in this field, and no one can hold up against him.  Maybe Nas.  MAYBE. 
 
What I like about the album is that you've got a dood that is showing respect to the old days of hip hop.  Back when LL Cool J and Slick Rick and such were first coming out, they weren't rapping about bitches and hoes and having shitloads of money and this and that.  They were telling the other MCs and rappers out there stuff like "hey, I'm better than you, and here's why".  Jay-Z does that on EVERY SINGLE SONG on this album with flows and rhymes that no one can refute as being downright fucking genius! 
 
So yeah, it's not the album of Jay-Z's career, but it's better than anything else I've heard for the last few years coming from the hip hop and rap scene.
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RetroIce4

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Edited By RetroIce4
@rodrigues said:
" How can you enjoy "Hate"? That song is awful. Hate's chorus might be the worst chorus in music history. And what's up with the "background" vocals on Hate? Isn't that Kanye using autotune? Why does he use autotune after hating it so much on D.O.A? I don't get it. 
  
My recommended downloads:  - Death of Autotune - Run This Town - Empire State of Mind - A Star is Born - Real as it Gets   Songs that you want to stay clear off:  - Hate - Venus vs. Mars - On to the Next One.   And I can't understand why people hate Kingdom Come? It has two of the best rap songs of the century: - Beach Chair  - Lost Ones "
Yo Dawg. Im gonna let you finish and all, but 808's and heartbrake is one of the best albums of all time... I  "hated" that song, "Hate" You are correct. How are you gonna diss Kanye for using auto-tune and use it for 1 word, period?! You even made a song about it Jay.  D.O.A... I thought there were some good songs off Kingdom Come but I liked the Gray Album more. When I got the Blueprint 3 I was, Ecstatic... then I listened to it and didn't really like it.  They should have hyped Mos Def's , "The Ecstatic" Now that was a good album that had no publicity. After listening to the Blueprint 3 I was,  "On To The Next One..."
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Illmatic

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Edited By Illmatic

In all, it is a decent album but I was expecting to like it alot more than I actually did. I can't really point to any songs I outright hated other than Reminder (which was Jay-Z at one of his all time worsts I personally believe), but there are few songs I can see myself listening to months from now. At the same time, it is still lightyears ahead of what we've gotten so far this year. The Ecstatic was a solid release but really lacked the punch I was looking for from Mos Def and we have yet to see what Wale and Lupe Fiasco will give us this year.  However, I was not expecting a newbie like KiD CuDi to release an album I ended up liking more than a Jay-Z album.

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turboman

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Edited By turboman
@Illmatic: is Lupe Fiasco's CD coming out next year?