Kanye West - Yeezus -2013- -
They cut New Slaves from the memory of every department store that had ever followed him. He remembered being 18, standing in a Chicago Gap, watching a white manager eye his mother’s credit card. He turned that memory into a rant about the prison-industrial complex, the luxury ceiling, and the Roman numerals on a watch face. Then, at the end—a Frank Ocean outro, soft as a prayer after a fistfight. The skyscraper had a crack in it. Light got in.
He screamed about a Black Skinhead . Punk rock for a post-racial lie. Drums like a fascist rally, lyrics like a Molotov cocktail. He was too famous to be angry, they said. He was too rich to feel pain. So he got angrier.
It didn’t fit. That was the point, too. Kanye West - Yeezus -2013-
The night it leaked, he was on a rooftop in SoHo. He listened on cheap earbuds. Bound 2 , the final track, played—a warped soul sample, a piano that sounded like it was drowning, a hook about being one good girl away from a real life. He laughed. He had spent the whole album destroying himself, and in the last three minutes, he tried to put the pieces back together with a chorus that belonged on a 1970s jukebox.
He named the album Yeezus because it was the only name left that could still offend. He took the cover—a clear CD case with a single piece of red tape. No art. No credits. No humanity. Just the object. The music itself. When the label panicked, Kanye said, “Good. That’s the point.” They cut New Slaves from the memory of
Kanye recorded the next take kneeling on the concrete floor. He wasn’t singing. He was confessing. “I am a God / Hurry up with my damn massage.” The line was absurd. It was also true. In his world, the only sin was humility.
In the studio, Rubin walked in one day. Kanye had sixteen layers of synth on I Am a God . Rubin listened. He said nothing. He just started pulling faders down. One by one. Until only a single, distorted 808 and Kanye’s raw, untreated voice remained. Then, at the end—a Frank Ocean outro, soft
They worked like looters in a cathedral. They took a sample of a Chicago house track, “I Need to Know,” sped it up until it sounded like a panic attack, and called it On Sight . The first words you hear: “Yeezy season approachin’…” —not a boast, a warning. Then the drop: a bass so brutal it felt like a car crash in slow motion.