Very few albums in hip-hop were as highly anticipated as the debut album from Elpadaro F. Electronica Allah, aka Jay Eletronica. Ever since he came into the public consciousness in the late aughts with Act I: Eternal Sunshine (The Pledge) and further dropped classic songs with Just Blaze, popped up on features with everybody else and signed with Jay-Zโs Roc Nation, the anticipation for a proper studio debut from Jay Electronica, at one point, reached fever pitch levels. And then came the โhurry up and waitโ convos about his career before the hip-hop community moved on. Anyway, after what seemed forever, we got word that an album was coming. On Friday, March 13, the world finally received Jay Electronicaโs debut โsoloโ album, A Written Testimony. I have listened. I have some thoughts. Allow me to share.
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1. I was never the biggest Jay Electronica (Elect) fan. I didnโt dislike him; I recognize that heโs a great lyricist and I really enjoyed the Eternal Sunshine joint and โExhibit A (Transformations)โ and โExhibit C.โ At the same time, I absolutely did not hear what others heard. He was never some second coming of rap Jesus to me. Dope music is dope music, and my man has that in fits and starts. Iโm sharing this largely for context: Iโm not a person who was waiting around for however long hip-hop was waiting for this album before we got over waiting and put it on the shelf with Dr. Dreโs mythical Detox.
2. With that being said, I love A Written Testimony. Maybe โreally like itโ is more accurate. I first listened to it at 5:15 a.m. Friday morningโthe day of its release on streaming servicesโas I drove from Washington, D.C., to Atlanta. At 5:15 a.m., I was hype as fuck over this album. Hereโs a little more context: Dillaโs Donuts is one of my favorite hip-hop albums, as is Madvillainy, the joint Madlib and MF Doom (as Madvillain) project. Both would be in my top 10 hip-hop albums. I mention this because unconventional beat choices never turn me off; in fact, that tends to elevate the project to me. In more fact, when Madvillainy was released in 2004, I remember saying to myself (and on the heels of Jay-Zโs The Black Album, purportedly his retirement album) that I wish Jay-Z would come back and drop a project like Madvillainy; straight hip-hop, entirely eschewing mainstream shit and just going for it over pure underground shit.
Just to round this out since any hip-hop convo that includes favorites, my top five albums (today) would be A Tribe Called Questโs Midnight Marauders, De La Soulโs De La Soul is Dead, Jay-Zโs Reasonable Doubt, Dr. Dreโs The Chronic and Outkastโs ATLiens.
3. Part of what I love about this album is the fact that Iโve been waiting for Jay (Hov) to rap over some production like this and he MURDERS this album. I heard and read many opinions that say that Hov ruined the album and that makes zero sense to me. This is the most inspired Iโve heard Jay in a long time. And hearing that over some more artsy, hip-hop records is that Madvillainy feel Iโve been waiting for. Similarly, you can tell that Hov respects the shit out of Jay Electronica (Elect), because lawdhafmercy did Hov show up.
4. Those first three bullets allowed me to enjoy this album as just another album, in a vacuum. I had no expectations. I havenโt been waiting for this mythical album. In fact, had I not been making a road trip (courtesy of the coronavirus, which caused me to cancel my flight and drive) Iโm not sure Iโd have even listened to this album by now. I definitely wouldnโt have made it a priority. To that end, itโs just a good album to me with some dope records with two top-shelf spitters top shelf spittinโ. Jay-Z put it over the top for me.
5. Letโs get out of the vacuum since I am somebody who is familiar with Elect. The absence of Just Blaze is very noticeable. I think the album is good; I enjoy it. It is not a classic album or an album that I expect to make a ripple in the culture. But it could have. Even with Hov and Elect as a duo. Can you imagine a whole project produced by Just Blaze??? I donโt think itโs a stretch to say that Electโs most impressive songs are the Just Blaze ones. Now considering he finished this album in 40 days (and 40 nights) maybe Just Blaze wasnโt free. Hell, one of the songs, โShiny Suit Theoryโ was released like 10 years ago, and the final song, โA.P.D.I.T.A.โ is literally Hov and Elect rapping over Khruangbinโs โA Hymn.โ Point is, this album wasnโt entiiiiirely cooking for a long time. Which is why some folks are disappointed. Elect was anointed some rap God a decade ago and his โdebutโ album is cool, but if youโve been waiting this probably wasnโt it.
6. Itโs been a while since weโve had such a religion-heavy secular rap album. Hell, the album opens up with the Honorable Louis Farrakhan talking. Elect lays out a lot of his Nation of Islam teachings throughout the album; he even has Hov talking about Allah. Bismillah.
7. The album opens up great with โThe Ghost of Soulja Slim.โ If youโre a fan of Elect at all then you remember the P. Diddy-assisted โThe Ghost of Christopher Wallace.โ โThe Blindingโ to me is the albumโs standout record. And thatโs the thing about this album; even the standout record isnโt a banger so to speak. And thatโs OK, except Elect has hip-hop bangers and I think I thought Iโd hear one or two of those. It doesnโt make it a bad album, it just changes the impact of the album. It takes it from being an album that should have cultural impact to one that exists and that Elect fans will probably largely enjoy by themselves. It also makes it noticeable how much Jay stands out on the record.
8. If I may be one of those people for a moment: I kind of wonder why Elect released this album. Or ever released an album for that matter. He clearly isnโt hurting for money. He canโt possibly be concerned with his legacy in hip-hop; if he was, heโd have dropped an album years ago, no matter what he says in his verses about the difficulty in creating at times. He had to know that dropping an album with Hov would cause convos about Hov more so than him, even if he realized that getting Jay on his album isnโt even fair as he says on โEzekielโs Wheel.โ He had to know that this particular album wouldnโt necessarily live up to the hype. Maybe he didnโt care. Hell, maybe he just felt like releasing an album. Iโm always here for new dope music. I love The Game and he has released the same album with different dope production like 10 times at this point. But I do wonder what his goals were with this album, if they even really exist outside of โIโm a rapper with seemingly infinite access and resources and rappers with seemingly infinite access and resources all eventually release albums.โ
9. Ultimately, we got two spitters over artistic production on an album that we never expected to get during a global pandemic that is making us all stay home and learn about our partners. That canโt truly be a bad thing even if itโs not the great thing we would have expected five to seven years ago. Itโs a solid album. Some will love it, others wonโt. Basically itโs an actual hip-hop album in 2020.
Um, look out for Detox?
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