Unveiling the Mystery: Discover the Real Identity of “The Old Kanye” from ‘The College Dropout’ to ‘Vultures’
Itâs been 20 years, 12 albums, 24 Grammys, two marriages, and 10 seasons of Yeezy apparel since Kanye West released his debut album, The College Dropout, a very good and very important collection of songs from a rapper who has since released increasingly polarizing music while also provoking some extremely uncomfortable discussions about bipolar disorder and antisemitism. On Friday heâs scheduled to release Vultures, Volume 1, a collaboration album with Ty Dolla $ign and a sign of how distressingly far weâve all come since the glory days of âThrough the Wire.â
Kanye has meant so many different things to so many different people at so many different points. He was a hip-hop hitmaker in the 2000s, an angsty haute pop perfectionist in the 2010s, and now, in the 2020s, heâs a radicalized pariah whose musical direction is more questionable than ever and also, for a vocal portion of his fan base, moot, given his recent history of stanning Donald Trump and rationalizing chattel slavery and ranting in all caps about Jews. Kanye West is by no means the first beloved entertainer to go on some ugly political tangent, but his transformations over the yearsâmusically, politically, spirituallyâhave been so drastic and disorienting, even if they havenât been entirely uncharacteristic of the guy who made The College Dropout. Who was âthe old Kanye,â anyway?
In the earliest phase of his stardom, for sure, Kanye West was a provocateur. âJesus Walks,â the single that won him one of his first Grammys, was all about his penchant for high-minded transgressions: âThey say you can rap about anything except for Jesus / That means guns, sex, lies, videotape / But if I talk about God, my record wonât get played, huh?â He was weirdly verbose and argumentative for a guy whom most people wouldâve primarily recognized as a beatmaker. He was an uncredited producer with the Hitmen at Bad Boy Records and then a notable contributor to Jay-Zâs The Blueprint, as the producer behind âIzzo (H.O.V.A.),â the albumâs ubiquitous lead single. But Kanye wanted to rap. People didnât really get it. Rawkus Records, arguably the most suitable home for his style of swaggy, sample-driven, semi-conscious rap, turned him down. Kanye begged Dame Dash to sign him to Roc-A-Fella Records, as a rapper, and to green-light The College Dropout. Here he was nearly thwarted by a cruel twist of fateâa head-on car crash in Los Angeles in 2002 that shattered his jaw and briefly imperiled his ability to speak, much less rap.
This really couldâve been the end, even assuming his survival; 13 years earlier a similar crash derailed the once-promising solo career of the immensely talented N.W.A ghostwriter the D.O.C., as the accident heavily damaged his vocal cords. But Kanye recovered and, in fact, recorded the original version of his debut single, âThrough the Wire,â just two weeks after the crash, slurring verses through a jaw still wired shutâa testament to his perseverance. This gave Kanye, of all people, an origin story similar to 50 Centâs: a mythical gangster who famously survived nine gunshots, including a bullet to his jaw, a few years before Eminem recruited him to Interscope and he released Get Rich or Die Tryinâ. As survivors, 50 and Kanye both had an air of inevitability about them. 50 Cent marketed himself as an unkillable tyrant; Kanye billed himself as a multifaceted visionary, destined for a level of greatness exceeding even that of his immensely successful mentor Jay-Z. The old Kanye had big plans.
His early success was an unlikely story. The College Dropout, released on February 10, 2004, scored the second-highest first-week sales for a hip-hop album that year, under Eminemâs fifth album, Encore. Suddenly, the second-biggest artist signed to the Roc was the producer rapping about Greek Life over âSpirit in the Darkâ without swears (or else Aretha wouldnât clear the sample). âSchool Spirit,â âAll Falls Down,â âSpaceshipââthese were incredible songs with immaculate beats, charming lyrics, and a peculiar theme: anxiety about the fate of the emerging Black middle class and its first-generation college students in particular. But The College Dropout was also something a bit more universally heroic: an album full of can-do bluster from an otherwise unassuming guy, wearing polos, who wouldnât take no for an answer. And it was full of straight-up hits.
Kanye, 50 Cent, The Game, Ja Rule, Eminem, DMXâall of these guys, in some respects, to some extent, wanted to be 2Pac. Biggie and 2Pac both loom large in hip-hop history, but 2Pac left the bigger hole. Kanye said as much on Late Registration, on âBring Me Down.â (I prefer the live version from Late Orchestration.) 50 and Em used to bust Jaâs balls about what they viewed as his ludicrous mimicry of 2Pac in interviews and in photo shoots and on the harsher moments of Pain Is Love. But Eminem and 50, especially, wanted to be 2Pac themselves. Maybe not the radically political aspects in 50âs case, or the street-preacher aspects in Emâs case, but definitely the larger-than-life aspects. 2Pac wasnât just talented or successful or interesting. 2Pac was meaningful. He talked out of 10 different sides of his mouth yet represented an incredibly distinct and righteous point of view on the Black community, popular culture, and American politics.
2Pac impressed himself upon hip-hop in distinct phases: as a roadie with Digital Underground (âSame Songâ), then as an earnest sort of street polemicist (âDear Mama,â âBrendaâs Got a Babyâ), then as a feisty hitmaker (âCalifornia Loveâ), then as an embattled paranoiac raging against Dr. Dre, Puffy, Nas, Jay-Z, and Mobb Deep on a project released just a couple of months after his death (âBomb First,â âHail Mary,â âAgainst All Oddsâ), and at last, in memoriam, as a sort of saint (âChanges,â âThugz Mansionâ); and thatâs not even getting into his development as an actor (Juice, Poetic Justice, Above the Rim). This was all spanning just about a decade, from Digital Underground in the early â90s through 2002âs Better Dayz, though of course 2Pacâs subsequent posthumous releases and his continuous influence in hip-hop make his career feel as if it mustâve been much longer. Longevity in hip-hop is elusive and sometimes ungratifying even when rappers do achieve it. Jay-Z has been making music for three decades. I donât want to downplay the significance of his longevity; he really was the first rapper to prove his mainstream musical viability into middle age. But at some pointâcertainly by The Blueprint 3, if not earlierâhe became a sort of dilettante who raps only part-time, when the mood strikes, as heâs otherwise busy doing big-money mergers and acquisitions. Eminem, at age 51, is still productive and successful but also rather insular since, well, Encore in 2004, honestly. Itâs hard to age gracefully in what is ultimately youth culture.
Kanye was an oversexed materialist who was trying to get right with God, sure, but also, more immediately, trying to get paid and get laid.
Kanye squarely addressed this sort of disillusionment with âthe new Kanyeâ with an a cappella ditty, âI Love Kanye,â on The Life of Pablo: âI hate the new Kanye / the bad mood Kanye / the always rude Kanye / spaz in the news Kanye / I miss the sweet Kanye / chop up the beats Kanye.â This track has always, to my mind, presented a sort of overly simplistic and tokenizing outlook on âthe old Kanye,â one that I was surprised to see Kanye indulge. I recognize the two competing caricatures in these lyrics, but I also find myself wondering whether âthe old Kanyeâ ever even existed. Kanye was always kind of crude and bitter and bombasticâin fact, thatâs a big part of what I remember enjoying about him as a teen. But I also recognize âthe sweet Kanye,â the humbled young man honoring his then-girlfriendâs late father on âNever Let Me Down,â or the good son performing âHey Mamaâ on The Oprah Winfrey Show, with Mama sitting in the front row. I recognize both âthe sweet Kanyeâ and âthe bad mood Kanyeâ as âthe old Kanye.â
Aziz Ansariâin his stand-up comedy and also in character as the goofy millennial swaglord Tom Haverford on Parks and Recreationâused to make Kanye out to be this sort of misunderstood sweetheart with the best of intentions. Sometimes Iâm convinced that Aziz, more than Kanye himself, over the years authored the âold Kanyeâ caricature of âI Love Kanye.â But increasingly, after Graduation, Kanye resisted this very sort of cutesy trivialization. He scrapped the recurring bear mascot as well as his plans to continue the styling and theming of his earlier albumsâThe College Dropout, Late Registration, Graduationâwith a long-rumored album titled Good Ass Job. Instead, pivotally, Kanye released 808s & Heartbreak, a strange and unexpected album full of bleak and heavily Auto-Tuned singing largely devoid of conventional rapping. With a dreary mechanical wail, Kanye was echoing Lilâ Wayne and T-Pain but to a far more forlorn effect. Kanye released 808s a year after his mother died from heart disease and complications suffered during cosmetic surgery, and the music reflected his grief rather ominously. This wouldâve been the earliest cause for fans to start missing âthe old Kanye,â the one with the drawl, the one who pushed miracle whips. This was also the beginning of a morbid fascination with the rapperâs emotional state, out of genuine concern for a grieving son as much asâif not more soâout of an unseemly interest in the musical implications. Kanye is depressedâheâs about to drop a sadboy classic.
The era of sadboy classicsâthatâs obviously âthe new Kanye.â 808s, Yeezus, and The Life of Pablo were each controversial and off-putting to some subset of fans, but awesome and invigorating to a much larger subset. My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy in 2010 is his last work of universal acclaim, an album that earned him a decadeâs worth of goodwill to later squander. Kanye didnât start to run aground until nearly 15 years into his run, with the chaotic back-to-back release of Ye and Kids See Ghosts. These were both uncharacteristically slight albums, about the length of a traditional EP, both diminished, if not lost, in the shuffle of releases from Nas, Pusha T, and Teyana Taylor during the hectic GOOD Music summer recording spree in Jackson Hole, Wyoming. Kanyeâs 2019 album, Jesus Is King, is a novelty as a full-on gospel project from a rapper previously heard rapping about bleached assholes, sure, but mostly Kanye just seemed to be trying to rekindle the old hype for âUltralight Beam.â
On Friday, Kanye and Ty Dolla $ign are slated to release Vultures, Volume 1, an album that strikes me as yet another nth wave rehash of The Life of Pablo. Iâve never loved Pablo and canât say Iâm thrilled to hear Kanye once again playing the art heaux trap messiah, though I will say that some of what Iâve heard sounds promising. (âEverybody,â in particular, is great; if that flip gets the same rude reception as Drakeâs âWay 2 Sexy,â Iâm going to lose my mind.) If Vultures does, against all odds, prove that Kanye is as musically vital as ever regardless of what you or I make of his politics, then Iâll be happier than I am writing about the guy as if he more or less died in 2021. The newer Kanye isnât all bad. Donda grew on me. âI Love Itâ is fun. Jesus Is King has its fans. But I donât knowâmaybe heâs washed at age 46 and Iâm washed at age 36 and weâre both belaboring something and it is what it is.
I have compassion for Kanye, I really doâheâs obviously unwellâbut you canât really blame me or anyone else for disengaging a bit, if not entirely, at his booking an interview with Alex Jones to declare, âI like Hitler.â Now heâs rockingâsorry, reappropriatingâKlan apparel. Now heâs repping Burzum. I reminisce about a time when Kanyeâs knack for grabbing attention didnât feel so much like a weapon. Everyone remembers the September 2007 cover of Rolling Stone, hyping the release date battle of hip-hop blockbusters, Graduation vs. Curtis, Kanye West vs. 50 Cent. Kanyeâs victory in that sales battle is often framed as a sign of some big generational shift away from street rap, but this isnât quite right; that cover dropped a couple of years deep into the rise of the first trap starsâT.I., Jeezy, Gucci Maneâout of Atlanta. What that Rolling Stone cover really effectively representedâapart from the decline of 50 Cent and G-Unit and, more broadly, New York City in the hip-hop mainstreamâwas Kanyeâs knack for making something as crude as marketing feel like the creation myth. He beat his chest and talked his shit like he was Muhammad Ali. Like his jaw was made of adamantium.
These days itâs hard to want to root for Kanye or think too hard about him or hear him beat his chest and talk his shit, as he insists on turning each album release cycle into a culture-war skirmish and also a child-custody hearing. I barely wanted to revisit The College Dropout, as much as it might represent, for many fans, a simpler time and a brighter outlook and a nicer guy. There was a stretch of several years when Rap Twitter couldnât go two weeks without compulsively ranking his albums and tediously rehashing the merits of each. These werenât conversations so much as a secular rite: Kanye West is the most important artist of his generation, and we were for whatever reason obliged to reaffirm his greatness whenever, wherever, however we could. Iâm more critic than fan of, well, everything; Iâve always had frustrations and complaints about Kanye West, as far back as The College Dropout. And yet, for most of his career, I genuinely couldnât imagine Kanye ever, even once, as a fluke, releasing projects as inessential as Donda 2. I donât miss the old Kanye so much as I miss believing in the streak, believing in immortality.
But fans are always saying shit like this, right? Jay-Z once rapped about this sort of entitlement, this sort of back seat driving of a megastarâs life and career: âHov on that new shit, niggas like âHow come?â / Niggas want my old shit, buy my old album.â Thatâs âI Love Kanye,â seven years earlier. Kanye is always echoing Jay, even after all these years of Jay keeping him at armâs length, if not further, certainly since Watch the Throne, perhaps seeing in him the same penchant for hotheaded self-sabotage that Jay identified in his estranged business partner Dame Dash. (Said Kanye on âGet Em Highâ: âWhy you think me and Dame cool? / We assholes!â) The recklessness, the heterodoxy, the spite, the sanctimony, the hedonism but also the distant twinkling promise of humility, redemption, transcendence ⊠somedayâitâs all there, in the old Kanye, in The College Dropout: âIt seems weâre