I must admit I’ve been a bit intrigued by the Jay-Z song, “Empire State of Mind” featuring Alicia Keys, which is a perfect example of a crossover hit complete with musical hooks, orchestral pop grandeur, and an anthemic quality that goes beyond mere shout-outs. On my other blog, I have a link to a mashup showing the places the song is referring to. The comparisons to “New York, New York”, which Frank Sinatra made famous, are obvious and Shawn Carter makes it explicit::
“I’m the new Sinatra
and since I made it here
I can make it anywhere
yeah they love me everywhere”
What strikes me about this song is how it embodies an American mythology that’s perfect for the Great Recession and has the potential to transcend place. In contrast to the lyrics of “New York, New York”, “Empire State of Mind” crafts a narrative that contextualizes the American dream with its darker elements. Here’s a link to the lyrics. Granted, it’s just a song and not ethnography, but I think it offers up a revised mythology that’s from a different point of view and one that resonates in these times of uncertainty. The song makes references to being from Bed-Stuy in Brooklyn, but with characteristic bravado showing the upside of success::
“now I live on Billboard
and I brought my boys with me
Say what up to Ta-ta
Still sipping Mai Tais
Sitting courtside
Knicks and Nets give me high-5
Nigga, I be Spiked out
I could trip a referee”
“I made you hot nigga,
Catch me at the X with OG at a Yankee game,
shit I made the Yankee hat
more famous than a Yankee can”
The soaring chorus sung by Alicia Keys reinforces this part of the mythology, which may well be what listeners “hear” the most::
“New York!!!!
Concrete jungle where dreams are made of,
There’s nothing you can’t do,
Now you’re in New York!!!
These streets will make you feel brand new,
the lights will inspire you,
Let’s hear it for New York, New York, New York”
The overt and subtle drug references, e.g., “MDMA” and “If Jeezy’s payin’ LeBron, I’m paying Dwayne Wade” {a reference to Jeezy’s song, “Kobe and Lebron” that uses the players’ numbers as code for cocaine prices per kilo}, and cautionary tales of smashed-up dreams and getting addicted to the limelight, serve to juxtapose possibilities with the darker elements of modern life. A modern life increasingly “hard knock” for many in 2009-10. Falling prey to the limelight may not be a life lived by most, but serves as a metaphor. The public consumes through a thirst for the entertainment spectacle, pointing to our collective culpability with respect to what is valued.
I’m not sure how closely people are paying that attention to the lyrics, but I think it’s the simultaneous depiction of what “can be” and “what is” that resonates with listeners. It captures how many see the mythology of the American dream, in the wake of financial meltdowns, bailouts, and double-digit unemployment, which is now 10.6% in NYC.
Twitterversion:: DDoes Jay-Z’s Empire State of Mind create perfect depiction of the American dream, warts&all? Life in the great recession @Prof_K
Comments 2
mgg — January 25, 2010
I think you have to look at this song in contrast to Nas' classic "NY State of Mind." - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UKjj4hk0pV4
Hov and Nas squashed their beef, but they've always been competitive and there's no doubt that Nas' earlier work informed Empire State of Mind. Empire State may have some references to that tradition of cautionary tales about New York, but it's ultimately a pop hit, too soaring and uplifting to not make you feel good. Jay-Z gives us an anthem that lets us pretend that we're not in a recession and that the America Dream is still accessible, but he's so far away from reality that it rings false.
Kenneth M. Kambara — January 26, 2010
mgg:: I definitely think you're on to something re: NAS & Jay-Z and the crossover pop nature of "Empire" also serves as a metaphor for the state of rap/hip-hop in '10, in stark contrast to the Dinkins/Guiliani-era NYC of 1994. It also contextualizes the narrative structure as an oppositional resistance on several levels. It subverts the hegemonic institutions of late capitalism, including the NYC government, before the genre was subsumed by the very commercial institutions that ignored them for years.
NAS' gritty storyline here isn't a myth for the masses. It's too subversive, but, illuminates a psychology of the margins, i.e., places like LIC, Bed Stuy, & Bushwick, and has a sense of the "real" that "Empire" could never have.
I took the liberty of adding NAS' "N.Y. State of Mind" {'94} & Part 2 {'99} to the player.
Great comment, BTW.