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It is, really and truly, an experience.
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Judging by this surprisingly strong return to form, Jay-Z might want to consider spending less time in the office and more time at the movies.
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Feb 4, 2011It's excellent, to be honest. Jay-Z sounds relaxed and comfortable in his legacy on the mic: he's not feeling as pressed to perform as he did on Kingdom Come, and the MC just lets his talent flow effortlessly.
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This is the best music Jay-Z can make as a human--at least by my (his) definitions of what he (we) can do.
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Musically, American Gangster is lush and spacious.
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There are also sparse, programmed beats from the Neptunes and lesser-knowns like No I.D., with Jay-Z fixing his flow accordingly. What unites the collection more than a specific sound is a narrative arc that loosely parallels Lucas' rise and decline.
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This is a very good Jay-Z album. He is, for the most part, doing what he has done before: what he does best.
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Forget Frank Lucas: The real black superhero here is Jay, and with American Gangster, Gray-Hova is back in black.
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Jay-Z sounds much more engaged on American Gangster, a collection of taut, focused songs heavy on musical references to the '70s
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He's not a real gangster, but he is a real poet. And like the greatest of American poets, he admits that, very well then, he contradicts himself. American Gangster contains multitudes.
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Ya boy is back with another dark soul-saturated album in the vein of "The Blueprint."
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Despite the intro being borrowed from the trailer to American Gangster it essentially reclaims the genre Shawn Carter helped to pioneer from the studio gangstas and plastic pimps that hip-pop is swamped with.
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The more you listen to it, the more powerful it becomes.
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The "Gangster" portion of the record is, as you'd expect, effortlessly strong.
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For all American Gangster's conceptual flair, the purest joy comes from 'Success', a tune which could have slotted into any Jay-Z album.
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Jay-Z has rebounded to make one of the year's most interesting and engaging rap records with a sense of immediacy and wordplay that no Denzel Washington film could match.
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A tight collection of intelligent numbers that, instead of bombarding us with stale rhyming schemes and plastic beats, groove ever so effectively.
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Q MagazineAmerican Gangster sounds less like a last gasp than the possible start to a second act in Jay-Z's career. [Jan 2008, p.103]
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The beat selection, personal insight, wit, and overall coherence surpasses that of "Kingdom Come" and fulfills many of the expectations that the latter album failed to meet.
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UncutWith his delivery having reached comfortable cruising altitude, this is an effective reminder of what success is about--leaving the hustle behind. [Jan 2008, p.91]
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This equivocation--a rapper inspired by a movie about a gangster, trying simultaneously to distance himself from rappers, actors and the gangster in question--sums up the album's greatest strength and greatest weakness. Jay-Z is too discerning to ignore the contradictions in his music, even when he's trying to play the role of a coldblooded killer.
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Hearing him coast is still better than listening to most rappers trying; but the Jay-Z of today sounds like someone for whom making music is an enjoyable hobby, not a burning need.
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Patchy, perhaps, but there's plenty over the course of American Gangster to suggest that, even if sullied by a lack of prolificacy, at least the Brooklyn beatnik is keeping the right company again.
Awards & Rankings
User score distribution:
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Positive: 177 out of 201
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Mixed: 12 out of 201
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Negative: 12 out of 201
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ajaydSep 11, 2009Stop tryin to compare this to lupe...lupe has nothing on Jay. THis album is a hip hop master piece.
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Aug 15, 2019
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Jul 18, 2017