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The Lost Tapes (Nas album)

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The Lost Tapes
File:Nas-the-lost-tapes-lp.jpg
Compilation album by Nas
Released September 23, 2002 (2002-09-23)
Recorded 1998–2001
Genre Hip hop
Length 43:02
Label Ill Will, Columbia
Producer The Alchemist, Deric "D-Dot" Angelettie, Hill, Inc., L.E.S., Nas (exec.), Poke and Tone, Precision, Rockwilder, Al West
Nas chronology
Stillmatic
(2001)Stillmatic2001
The Lost Tapes
(2002)
God's Son
(2002)God's Son2002

The Lost Tapes is a compilation album by American rapper Nas. It was released on September 23, 2002, by Ill Will Records and Columbia Records, who wanted to capitalize on what was seen in hip hop music as Nas' artistic comeback the year before. The album compiles previously unreleased tracks that were discarded from recording sessions for Nas' previous studio albums, I Am... (1999) and Stillmatic (2001). It features production by L.E.S., The Alchemist, Poke and Tone, and Deric "D-Dot" Angelettie, among others. With low-key, sparse sounds and observational lyrics about urban life, the songs are autobiographical and nostalgic, departing from the thug persona of Nas' previous records.

Released with little promotion, The Lost Tapes debuted at number 10 on the Billboard 200, selling over 70,000 copies in its first week. It was met with widespread acclaim from critics, some of whom viewed it as Nas' best record since his 1994 debut album Illmatic. A second volume of previously unreleased songs was planned before Nas had signed with Def Jam Recordings in 2006, but the project was delayed and eventually abandoned because of issues with his record label.

Background

In 2001, Nas made an artistic comeback with his fifth album Stillmatic and his highly publicized feud with rapper Jay-Z.[1] Both revitalized his image in hip hop music at the time, following a string of commercially successful but critically subpar albums.[1] Nas' record label, Columbia Records, capitalized on his comeback with a promotional campaign that included the release of two archival albums, the extended play From Illmatic to Stillmatic: The Remixes and The Lost Tapes, while leading up to the release of his 2002 studio album God's Son.[2]

The Lost Tapes compiles previously unreleased tracks that Nas recorded during 1998 to 2001 in the sessions for both his 1999 album I Am... and Stillmatic.[3][4] Several songs from the sessions for the former album, including "Blaze a 50", "Drunk by Myself", and "Poppa Was a Playa",[5] were bootlegged prior to its release and leaked to the Internet through MP3 technology,[6] which led to their exclusion from I Am....[7] Most of the compiled songs first became available as bootlegs on underground mixtapes before being selected and mastered for The Lost Tapes.[3]

Songs on The Lost Tapes were recorded in several recording studios in New York, including Right Track Studios, The Hit Factory Studios, and Sony Studios in New York City, Lobo Studios in Long Island, and Music Palace in West Hempstead, as well as South Beach Studios in Miami, Florida and Westlake Studios in Santa Monica, California.[8] Production was handled by The Alchemist, L.E.S., Poke and Tone, Precision, Rockwilder, Al West, Deric "D-Dot" Angelettie, and Hill, Inc. The album was packaged with a booklet featuring artwork by Chris "C-Money" Feldman and photography by Kareem Black, along with liner notes displaying the slogan "No cameos. No hype. No bullsh*t".[8]

Music and lyrics

The Lost Tapes features sociological themes, narratives, and commentary on urban life (New York City public housing project pictured).

The Lost Tapes features introspective lyrics and themes of urban life, sociology, and despair.[1][9] Its music is characterized by low-key beats,[10] sparse production, subtle string flourishes,[11] mellow piano work, and subdued soul music loops.[12] Stylus Magazine's Brett Berliner said songs such as "Doo Rags" and "No Idea's Original" incorporate classical melodies, while songs such as "Purple" and "Fetus" feature neo-classical themes.[13] John Bush of AllMusic said the songs "have more in common with his early recordings; there's more of a back-in-the-day, wasn't-it-all-so-simple-then sound to 'Doo Rags' and 'Poppa Was a Playa,' two tracks that definitely wouldn't have fit on the raging Stillmatic."[14] Music writer Craig Seymour observed "spare beats" in the music and few boasts in Nas' rapping,[9] while Chris Conti from the Boston Phoenix said the simple beats "counteract Nas's complex bars of braggadocio and street-life storytelling."[15]

According to Robert Christgau, The Lost Tapes abandons the thug persona of Nas' previous work in favor of more sensitive, nostalgic, and autobiographical lyrics.[16] Slate magazine's David Samuels interpreted "a message that begins with a rejection of the materialism of his ... rival Jay-Z" and "the home truth about how most kids in the projects feel about the real-life gangstas who live in their neighborhoods", citing "No Idea's Original" as an example.[17] New York Daily News writer Jim Farber commented on his lyrical observations, "Nas focuses on linear scenarios and on human motivations ... "unlike many hard rappers, Nas' tales of ghetto horror are not covert boasts but expressions of true fear". Farber took note of "a cinematic tale of self-destruction in 'Drunk by Myself,' and a compelling autobiography narrated from the womb in 'Fetus.' "[18]

The opening track "Doo Rags" contemplates Nas' youth and society's cyclical nature.[19] It features a contemporary piano loop and jazz tones.[4] Richard Hazell from HipHopDX describes the song as "a piano propelled painting of time and space as seen through the third eye of Nas, which can easily be envisioned by any New York City dweller."[20] On "My Way", he meditates over his rise out of poverty to the "life of a rich thug",[20] recalls the death of his childhood friend Ill Will, and concedes that he "still feels broke with millions in the bank."[21] On "U Gotta Love It", Nas makes reference to the "'86 crack blitz" and discusses his own significance: "This thug life you claimed it, I make millions from entertainment / Now back in the hood, certain cats they wanna kill me / They ice-grill me, but on the low, niggas feel me."[22] "Nothing Lasts Forever" advises to appreciate life's small epiphanies and be optimistic about the future.[11] On "No Idea's Original", Nas notes the similarities of people in life and views other rappers as creatively derivative, while distinguishing himself from them:[23] "No idea's original, there's nothin new under the sun / It's never what you do, but how it's done / What you base your happiness around material, women, and large paper / That means you inferior, not major."[5] He references the line "there's nothing new under the sun" from the Book of Ecclesiastes in the song's chorus.[17] "No Idea's Original" samples Barry White's 1973 song "I'm Gonna Love You Just a Little More Baby", a frequently sampled recording in hip hop music.[23]

File:Kanye West 2007.jpg

"Blaze a 50" features a violin-based instrumental and a complex narrative that follows a tale of murder,[24] sex, and betrayal.[21] Nas narrates the tale in conventional fashion until the ending, at which the track rewinds to an earlier point and he revises his original ending.[25] "Everybody's Crazy" features complex rhymes and braggadocio rap by Nas: "Gangsta see, gangsta do / A Langston Hughes predecessor / Gun in my dresser, slang I use."[15] In "Purple"'s narrative, Nas lights up a blunt and expresses his thoughts, including criticism of hoodlums and their effect on their neighborhoods: "The 'hood love you, but behind your back they pray for the day / A bullet hit your heart and ambulance take you away / That ain't love it's hate / Think of all the mothers at wakes / Whose sons you've killed and you ain't got a cut on your face?"[26] "Drunk by Myself" has lyrics concerning alcohol and self-medication.[1]

"Black Zombie" is an impassioned, self-reflective critique of problems afflicting the African-American community, including prejudice ("You believe when they say we ain't shit, we can't grow / All we are is dope dealers and gangstas and hoes"), economic insolvency ("What do we own? The skin on our backs / We rent and we ask for reparations, then they hit us with tax"), and dependency ("I'ma Colombia record slave / So get paid / Control your own destiny, you are a genius / Don't let it happen to you like it did to me, I was a black zombie").[27] Its socially conscious lyrics deride media stereotypes of African Americans, inequality in the educational system, and black-on-black violence.[21] According to writer Dax-Devlon Ross, the song foreshadowed the themes and "world view" of Nas' subsequent albums.[27] "Poppa Was a Playa" features uncredited co-production by Kanye West,[28] and discusses Nas' complicated relationship with his father, jazz musician Olu Dara, addressing his lusty, itinerant lifestyle throughout Nas' youth.[29] Gabriel Alvarez of Complex calls it an "honest dedication to his old man: a jazz player, a rolling stone" and writes of the song, "The love is there despite the man's faults. Nas crafts a full picture of the past, looking at the infidelity and fights from both parents' perspectives."[30]

An untitled hidden track follows "Poppa Was a Playa" and has Nas rapping from the perspective of his prenatal self.[1] It was originally recorded for I Am... and had planned titles "Fetus" and "Belly Button Window".[7][31] The track opens with solemn guitar chords and the sound of bubbling liquid before being overlaid with a beat and a piano riff.[32] An introductory verse is delivered by Nas in a spoken word tone: "Yeah. I want all my niggas to come journey with me / My name is Nas, and the year is 1973 / The beginning of me / Therefore I can see / Through my belly button window / Who I am."[32] The narrative follows the time before his birth, covering subject matter such as his parents fighting and his expectations for life.[33] In Book of Rhymes: The Poetics of Hip Hop (2009), writer Adam Bradley denotes the track's lyrical narrative of an MC's story of birth as "one of the core narratives in rap", having its roots in a similar autobiographical convention found in African-American slave narratives. Of Nas' narrative, Bradley states, "By endowing the insensible with voice, he aspires to an expressive level that transcends speaking for oneself, or of oneself, to one that self-consciously constructs itself as an artist giving shape to that which lacks coherence."[32]

Release and reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
AllMusic 3.5/5 stars[14]
Boston Phoenix 3/4 stars[15]
Entertainment Weekly A−[7]
HipHopDX 4.5/5[34]
Pitchfork Media 6.9/10[21]
Rolling Stone 4/5 stars[12]
The Source 4.5/5 stars[35]
Spin 8/10[24]
Stylus Magazine B[13]
The Village Voice B+[16]

The Lost Tapes was released by Ill Will Records and Columbia Records,[14] and distributed through Sony Music Entertainment.[36] It was first released on September 23 in the United Kingdom, then September 24 in the United States,[37] October 9 in Japan, where it was issued with three bonus tracks,[38] and January 20, 2003, in Australia.[10] Receiving little promotion from the record labels,[39] The Lost Tapes debuted at number 10 on the Billboard 200 and sold over 70,000 copies in its first week in the United States,[40] ultimately spending eight weeks on the chart.[41] It also charted at number three on the Billboard Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums.[42] By July 2008, the album had sold 340,000 copies in the US, according to Nielsen SoundScan.[41]

The Lost Tapes was met with widespread acclaim from critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream publications, the album received an average score of 81, based on 12 reviews.[43] In Entertainment Weekly, Craig Seymour said Nas' "gritty, yet hopeful, reflections made Lost Tapes a real find."[7] Rolling Stone critic Jon Caramanica hailed it as "the real Stillmatic", writing that it "displayed Nas' gifts for tightly stitched narrative and stunningly precise detail."[12] In The A.V. Club, Nathan Rabin deemed it a masterpiece whose assorted tracks cohered as well as any of Nas' official studio albums while reaffirming his reputation as "rap music's poet laureate of urban despair".[1] Ken Capobianco from The Boston Globe said the leftover songs proved why Nas had so much promise early in his career,[11] while Spin's Chris Ryan viewed the record as a hip hop version of Bob Dylan's much-bootlegged Basement Tapes—"a raw document [that] still proves that Nas had it all along."[24] PopMatters critic Marc L. Hill called it a "masterfully arranged" and "necessary addition to the collection of any hip-hop fan".[37] In The Village Voice, Christgau was particularly impressed by the four autobiographical songs closing the album, preferring them to other songs he felt were nothing more than outtakes.[16] In a less enthusiastic review, Brett Berliner from Stylus Magazine wrote that as good as the songs were, "they don't make a real album ... [more] like a superb mixtape",[13] while Billboard's Rashaun Hall believed the production on some of the songs sounded outdated.[19]

In a retrospective review, AllMusic editor John Bush recommended The Lost Tapes to "hip-hop fans who want to hear some great rhyming with no added features" and commented that tracks such as "Doo Rags", "No Idea's Original", and "Black Zombie" "stand up to anything Nas has recorded since the original Illmatic."[14] Jesal Padania of RapReviews commented that the album "proved remarkably consistent throughout, and was a superb listening experience" and considered it a studio release, stating "this was a short sharp shock of awesome lyricism, and many, unofficially, consider this to be the closest cousin we will ever get to Illmatic II."[44] Pitchfork Media's Ryan Dombal cited the album as one of Nas' "finest moments".[45] About.com's Henry Adaso called it "noteworthy because of its superiority to half the stuff in Nas' catalog."[46] In The Rolling Stone Album Guide (2004), Chris Ryan was less enthusiastic about the album, finding it "somewhat inconsistent, and certainly too scattered to be considered an album per se," even though it features "some classics, such as the nostalgic 'Doo Rags,' that are not to be missed."[47] In its 2007 issue, XXL included The Lost Tapes in its list of "classic" albums to be given the publication's maximum "XXL" rating.[48] In 2012, Complex included The Lost Tapes in their list of "25 Rap Albums From the Past Decade That Deserve Classic Status".[49]

Sequel

A follow-up compilation, The Lost Tapes 2, was originally intended to be released on December 16, 2003, and include unreleased recordings, remixes, and freestyle tracks.[50] However, its release was delayed,[51] and in 2006, Nas signed to Def Jam Recordings.[52] In a June 2010 interview for Hot 97.5 KVEG, he said of following-up The Lost Tapes, "I do got a lot of songs that really didn't make no album, that's just sittin' around [or] got lost. So I've got enough actually, for a Lost Tapes 2 and 3 by now. So I've just got to set it up, put them together – 12 songs for one album, 12 songs for another album, and figure it out. That's all it takes."[53] In September, he announced plans to release The Lost Tapes 2 on December 14.[45] However, its release was further delayed by Def Jam, whom Nas accused of mishandling the project and its budget in a personal e-mail sent to label executives.[54] Reports of the project's delay incited fans to create an online petition in December asking for Def Jam to release the album.[55] After losing time to the project's delay, Nas began recording for a new studio album and put plans for The Lost Tapes 2 on hold.[56][57] In a May 2011 interview for MTV News, he explained why the sequel was abandoned:

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When I released Lost Tapes, it was on Sony. Being at Sony for so long, I was used to things going easy. Kinda easy. At Def Jam, I just got there, I'm still in my ways at Sony. I'm like, 'yeah, this record'll come out this time, a few months later I'ma drop this.' But we just started working together, so they're like, 'We can do this, but wait, maybe we should do it like this,' and I wasn't used to that. And then there was no communication at all, and I wasn't used to that. With Sony, I wasn't used to a lot of communication, it was just, we understood what we were doing. [...] Def Jam, it was more, 'Let's sit down, let's have tea and talk this over.' I wasn't so used to that, and I saw kinda things falling behind. It kinda messed up my flow, I thought. The timing for that is gone. Now, it's all about the new record.[58]

Track listing

No. Title Writer(s) Producer(s) Length
1. "Doo Rags"   Nasir Jones, Larry Gates, Michelle Lynn Bell Precision 4:03
2. "My Way"   Jones, Alan Maman The Alchemist 3:55
3. "U Gotta Love It"   Jones, Leshan Lewis, Carlos Wilson, Louis Wilson, Ricardo Wilson L.E.S. 3:18
4. "Nothing Lasts Forever"   Jones, Lewis L.E.S. 3:52
5. "No Idea's Original"   Jones, Maman, Barry White The Alchemist 3:04
6. "Blaze a 50"   Jones, L.E.S., Jean-Claude Olivier, Samuel Barnes L.E.S., Poke and Tone 2:49
7. "Everybody's Crazy"   Jones, Dana Stinson Rockwilder 3:35
8. "Purple"   Jones, Tommie Spearman Hill, Inc. 3:39
9. "Drunk by Myself"   Jones, Al West, Barnes, Oliver Al West, Poke and Tone 4:03
10. "Black Zombie"   Jones, Spearman Hill, Inc. 3:35
11. "Poppa Was a Playa"   Jones, Deric Angelettie, Allan Wayne Felder, Norman Ray Harris Deric "D-Dot" Angelettie, Kanye West (co.)[28] 7:09
Notes[8]
  • "U Gotta Love It" contains excerpts from the composition "Love Song" performed by Mandrill, written by Carlos Wilson, Louis Wilson, and Ricardo Wilson.
  • "No Idea's Original" contains excerpts from "I'm Gonna Love You Just a Little More Baby" written and performed by Barry White.
  • "Poppa Was a Playa" contains excerpts from the composition "The Newness Is Gone" written by Allan Wayne Felder and Norman Ray Harris, performed by Eddie Kendricks.
  • A hidden track begins at 3:49 of track 11.

Personnel

Credits are adapted from the album's liner notes.[8]

Charts

Chart (2002) Peak
position
American Albums Chart[59] 10
American R&B/Hip-Hop Albums Chart[59] 3
French Albums Chart[60] 104
Swiss Albums Charts[61] 50

See also

References

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  25. Bradley (2009), p. 173.
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  27. 27.0 27.1 Ross (2008), p. 325.
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  29. Lazerine (2008), p. 121.
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  32. 32.0 32.1 32.2 Bradley (2009), p. 171.
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  47. Ryan (2004), p. 569.
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Bibliography

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External links