The Commercial Rise and Artistic Fall of Dwayne Carter
It’s been two weeks since the official release of Lil Wayne’s official studio album Tha Carter III, and I’ve spent the last fortnight listening to the record, re-listening to the previous installments in Tha Carter series and wealth of Weezy mixtapes, and asking myself why Wayne is no longer the best rapper alive. I was a believer after listening to Tha Carter II—a devotee even. At that point (the album was released in 2005, but I never even heard it until the beginning of 2007) Wayne had yet to achieve the obscene level of stardom that he currently holds. In fact, I considered him extremely underrated. When I traced my steps backward and picked up the original Tha Carter, I was baffled as to how more people could not be talking about this kid from New Orleans. His dexterous yet playful verses left my mouth agape and my head shaking in a way that one generally only expects from rap saints like Pac and Biggie and living deities like Jay-Z.
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And the official Carter III was pushed back. Christmas 2007, initially, then January 2008. February, March, April, May followed with more rumors of release, but still nothing. In the meantime, Wayne used the extra time to further catapult his stardom by lending guest appearances to almost any artist in any genre you can think of.
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A friend of mine thought that Wayne had become too obsessed with his own celebrity and it was effecting what he rapped about, which I suppose is the case for almost every musical artist—the best work comes when they’re still poor unknowns. Once you are a celebrity, what else do you have to rap/sing about but your own celebrity? In fact, Wayne seemed bent on crafting himself as something above homo sapiens, something he strove for through increased use of Auto-Tune (the vocal modulation device that T-Pain has built a career out of). Wayne’s voice already being one of the most unique in rap, he seemed to transcend the inherent cheesiness of the robotic vocals and became something positively ethereal. Listen to him croon painfully (in a good way) on the track “Rider” for proof of this. Still, his increased love for his new voice made me worried as he became more of a singer and less of a rapper. This is clearly evinced in the number one song in the country right now—“Lollipop”—a song so lyrically brain-dead that it’s almost painful, yet also strangely addictive. I’ve yet to switch the station when it comes on the radio, despite how amazingly overplayed it and its remix are.
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In the same vein as Wayne’s apparent fatigue, he sounds out of breath on many of his verses, as if his rapping behind the beat isn’t just for effect, but that he’s actually having trouble keeping up. As opening tracks go, “3 Peat” seems tragically weak compared to what has come before—the epic “Tha Mobb” on Tha Carter II (Wayne’s best song, in my opinion) and the adroit “Walk In” from Tha Carter. The word lazy continues to be the most apt descriptor for this new style of rapping from Wayne. “A Milli” is fine, in my opinion. The trance beat grows on you, and the minimalist snares, bass and handclaps are perfect for freestyling. The only problem is that Wayne doesn’t really make a whole lot of sense on the track, which I am actually more forgiving of than many critics because I think it demonstrates Wayne’s love for individual words and being playful with language. There is no excuse, however, for “Got Money” with T-Pain. Wayne should be above such fluff.
The aforementioned “Comfortable” with Babyface is a standout, as is the other Kanye West produced track “Let The Beat Build.” West’s production seems to fit Wayne’s flow quite well, though the latter track shows the same signs of mental stumbling by Wayne that are apparent throughout Tha Carter III. Production is actually a major sticking point for me with Tha Carter III. Now, I don’t have a huge problem with Mannie Fresh, but he’s far from my favourite producer, and too much of his stuff sounds identical. So when Wayne broke from him for Tha Carter II, I think it might have been one of his best career moves. For that album he culled a wide variety of beats from a handful of mostly unknown southern producers. The end result was a fantastic sonic landscape for the rapper to navigate. Naturally, with Wayne’s increased fame, Tha Carter III would feature appropriately famous producers. The end result this time, however, is a mish-mash of cookie-cutter and just plain bad. “Dr. Carter” and “Phone Home”—two of the weakest tracks on the album—suffer from production missteps by Swizz Beatz and Cool and Dre. The former isn’t outwardly grating, but simply has no life to it, while the latter contains a hook so obnoxious that one has to wonder what Dre was hearing through those headphones. Similarly, “La La,” produced by the ever-insane David Banner, only leaves one wishing that the original “La La La” had made the album.
The rest of the album is made up of a handful of tracks that are merely good, falling short of great, and not even approaching epic. The message of “Tie My Hands” shows social maturation on the part of Wayne, but Robin Thicke is ultimately an R&B producer and his beats are almost always too laid back for a Hip-Hop album (though the jazzed-up “Shooter” from Tha Carter II came closer than most to a successful crossover). “Shoot Me Down” is positively chilling and largely a success. “Playing With Fire” isn’t quite as good, but Wayne’s comparison of himself to MLK is frighteningly passionate, and his third verse is a rerecording of one from The Drought Is Over 2 song “World Of Fantasy.” (It’s hard to blame him for this transfer of old material; it’s probably one of his best verses and it works really well with this beat.) Wayne is easily outshone on “You Ain’t Got Nuthin,” which demonstrates that his good friend Juelz Santana is perhaps the next to watch for the title of Best Rapper Alive, and the closing track “Don’t Get It” is a moderately entertaining high, rambling rant, though it’s somewhat misplaced here (one wishes he had just stuck to rapping on the track; it’s a nice beat). And then the album ends, and I think to myself, “That’s it? That’s what everyone waited years for? What happened?”
This is the realest review I’ve found yet of Tha Carter III (http://www.tinymixtapes.com/Lil-Wayne), and it purports that Wayne traded in his title of “Best Rapper Alive” for the moniker of “Biggest Rapper Alive.” That’s hard to argue with. At the very least, he had a change of heart since he recorded “Tha Mobb,” in which he rapped: “Crossover? Whatever. Mainstream? No!” Tracks like “Got Money” and “Lollipop” are about as mainstream as they come. Of course, now Wayne is richer than ever before, and it’s hard to criticize him for following the paper. Furthermore, compared to some of the stuff that’s put out these days, Tha Carter III is not actually a bad album. It’s just a disappointment compared to what has come before in Lil Wayne’s career. Now, I’m not going to say that Wayne can never regain his former greatness; stale artists find ways to reinvent themselves all the time. Personally, I would like to see him take some time off and step away from the mic for a little bit. As it is, he’s stretched himself too thin and diluted his material by oversaturating the market. Maybe he can spend some more time in his hometown of New Orleans, which he moved away from for a long time after Katrina destroyed his home. I think he still has more to say, but needs to take a rest for a little while. There have been rumours and indications from the man himself that he wants to become an R&B singer. If that’s the case, then I wish him all the best. Maybe he can breathe new life into that game, as well. Of course, on one of his own remixes to “A Millie” (pretty much every rapper in existence has one now—a testament to how nice the beat is) he says that he’s celebrating Tha Carter III’s impressive sales by starting work on Tha Carter 4. Whatever. I’m not going to protest that, either. In fact, no matter what he decides to do, I’ll probably follow Wayne’s career through its entirety. He’s certainly made things interesting thus far.
1 comment:
Yooooo, I wish I read this when you wrote it, man, it's gr8! I mean, I more or less disagree, but good to see an intelligent, looong post on Weezy.
I think, though, that the "the best work comes when they’re still poor unknowns" thing is an absolutely absurd generalization, and furthermore could scarcely be applied to Wayne, who was never really an unknown rapper. Let us remember allll the way back to 1999 when his debut album went double platinum. Certainly Wayne has never been quite as famous as he is now, but he has been a pretty big rapper for a really long time now, y'kno, so whether or not you like C3 (which I really do, despite it not being as good as C2, but few things are), I'm not sure the "fame makes rappers shittier" thesis is the way to go.
xoxo,
Maciej
(btw, new digs at yesmoredrama.blogspot.com)
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