Showing posts with label original rap. Show all posts
Showing posts with label original rap. Show all posts

Monday, September 30, 2024

The FORCE by LL Cool J is: The Best Rap Album of September 2024

 


There are albums that, like fine pieces of literary work, transcend time and linger in the soul long after the last note fades away.  LL Cool J’s latest opus, “The Force,” produced by the ever-masterful Q-Tip, is such an album—a work of such artistic precision and authenticity that it glimmers in the often brash and fleeting world of contemporary hip-hop. It is, without question, the finest boom bap album of September 2024, but to merely state this would be to overlook the intricate craftsmanship, the deep emotional resonance, and the quiet confidence that permeates its tracks.

 When we speak of LL Cool J, we are not simply discussing a rapper; we are acknowledging an architect of an era, a man whose voice shaped the contours of what we now recognize as hip-hop. His entrance onto the scene decades ago was akin to the arrival of a charismatic character in a novel—bold, unrelenting, and instantly memorable. Now, in 2024, LL has returned with “The Force,” a title that suggests power, certainly, but also a sense of inevitability, as if this project were destined to appear at this precise moment in time.

 Q-Tip, enigmatic and cerebral, lends his production talents to the album with the deft touch of a painter who understands the subtleties of his medium. His beats are not mere backdrops but rather fully realized environments, immersive soundscapes that transport the listener into the heart of New York City’s streets, into the psyche of LL Cool J, and into the very essence of boom bap. The production here is reminiscent of Rothko’s color fields, broad strokes that evoke emotion without overt formality, yet within them, you find clarity.  Q-Tip, as always, is a master of mood, creating an atmosphere that is at once timeless and deeply relevant to the modern hip-hop landscape.

 But why is “The Force” the best boom bap album of September 2024? To begin with, LL’s lyricism here is refined, elegant even, in its simplicity. Each word, each bar, is deliberate, chosen with the precision of a short story writer who knows how to make every syllable count. In tracks such as “The FORCE” and “Saturday Night Special,” LL narrates his own journey with a confidence that comes not from arrogance but from experience, from having lived and thrived through multiple eras of rap’s evolution. There is something almost Gatsby-esque about his demeanor—wealthy in knowledge, in self-assurance, in the kind of artistic grace that one earns through a lifetime of creation.

 There is also a certain tension that runs through the album, a palpable sense that both LL and Q-Tip are aware of the precariousness of the art form they are upholding.  Boom Bap, after all, is not merely a style of hip-hop but an ethos, a philosophy that values authenticity over artifice, substance over style. In an age where music is often commodified, where artists chase viral moments and fleeting fame, “The Force” stands defiantly as a reminder of what hip-hop *can* be when crafted by those who understand its roots.

 Take, for instance, the track “Runnit Back” —here, LL delivers not just bars, but a manifesto. He speaks not just for himself, but for a generation of emcees who built the genre from the ground up, brick by lyrical brick. There is a weight to his words, a gravitas that suggests a man who knows his place in history but is not content to rest on past laurels. And then there is Q-Tip’s production, understated but potent, a symphony of minimalist drum patterns and jazz-inflected loops that hark back to A Tribe Called Quest’s heyday while still feeling remarkably fresh.

 Perhaps what is most remarkable about “The Force” is its ability to be both reflective and forward-looking. There is nostalgia, yes—an almost wistful longing for the days when hip-hop was raw, when beats cracked like vinyl under a DJ’s needle. But there is also an undeniable energy, a sense that LL and Q-Tip are not just paying homage to a bygone era but actively pushing the sound forward. This is not a museum piece; it is a living, breathing work of art that demands to be heard in the present tense.

 Ultimately, “The Force” is not just the best boom bap album of September 2024; it is an album that stands as a testament to the enduring power of hip-hop as an art form. In the hands of LL Cool J and Q-Tip, it is rendered with the care and respect it deserves, yet with a boldness and creativity that ensures its place in the modern canon. It is a reminder that great art—whether in literature or music—does not age. It simply finds new ways to resonate.