Kayne West
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Kayne West Biography
In a short span of time, Kanye West went from hitmaking
producer to just plain hitmaker, as his stellar production work earned
him a solo record deal and soon his beats were accompanied by his own
witty raps on a number of critically and commercially successful
releases. His flamboyant personality also made a mark. West showcased a
dapper fashion sense that set him apart from most of his rap peers, and
his confidence often came across as boastful or even egotistic, albeit
amusingly. This flamboyance, of course, made for good press, something
West enjoyed plenty of during his sudden rise to celebrity status. He
was a media darling, appearing and performing at practically every
major awards show (and winning at them, too), delivering theatrical
videos to MTV that were events in themselves, and mouthing off about
whatever happened to cross his mind. For instance, he once spoke out
against the rampant homophobia evident in much rap music, and he also
posed for the cover of Rolling Stone as Jesus Christ. He seemed to
court controversy. West's steady presence in the celebrity limelight,
on the other hand, could sometimes eclipse his considerable musical
talent. His production ability seemed boundless during his initial
surge of activity, as he not only racked up impressive hits for himself
like Jesus Walks and Gold Digger, but also graced such fellow rap
stars as Jay-Z and Ludacris with smashes. In addition to these many
accomplishments, it's worth noting how West shattered certain
stereotypes about rappers. Whether it was his appearance or his
rhetoric, or even just his music, this young man became a superstar on
his own terms, and his singularity no doubt is part of his appeal to a
great many people, especially those who don't generally consider
themselves rap listeners.
From out of left field (i.e., Chicago, anything but a hip-hop hotbed),
West was an unlikely sensation and more than once defied adversity.
Like so many others who were initially inspired by Run-D.M.C., he began
as just another aspiring rapper with a boundless passion for hip-hop,
albeit a rapper with a Midas touch when it came to beatmaking. And it
was indeed his beatmaking skills that got his foot in the industry
door. Though he did quite a bit of noteworthy production work during
the late '90s, it was his work for Roc-a-Fella at the dawn of the new
millennium that took his career to the next level. Alongside fellow
fresh talent Just Blaze, West became one of The Roc's go-to producers,
consistently delivering hot tracks to album after album. He first
caught everyone's ear in 2001 when he laced Jay-Z's earth-shaking
Blueprint album with Takeover and Izzo (H.O.V.A.). Both songs were
enormous successes, partly so because of West's trademark beatmaking
style, which was largely sample-based -- in these brilliant cases the
former track appropriating snippets of the Doors' Five to One, the
latter the Jackson 5's I Want You Back.
More high-profile productions followed, and before long word spread
that West was going to release an album of his own, on which he'd rap
as well as produce. Unfortunately, that album was a long time coming,
pushed back and then pushed back again. It didn't help, of course, that
West experienced a tragic car accident in October 2002 that almost cost
him his life. He capitalized on the traumatic experience by using it as
the inspiration for Through the Wire (and its corresponding video),
which would later become the lead single for his eventually released
debut album. That debut album, The College Dropout (2004), was
continually delayed while West continued to churn out big hits for the
likes of Talib Kweli ( Get By ), Ludacris ( Stand Up ), Jay-Z ( '03
Bonnie & Clyde ), and Alicia Keys ( You Don't Know My Name ). Then,
just as Through the Wire was breaking big-time at the tail end of
2003, another West song caught fire, a collaboration with Twista and
comedian/actor Jamie Foxx called Slow Jamz that gave the
rapper/producer two simultaneously ubiquitous singles and a
much-anticipated debut album. As with so many of West's songs, these
two were driven by somewhat recognizable sample-based hooks -- Chaka
Khan's Through the Fire in the case of Through the Wire, and Luther
Vandross' A House Is Not a Home in the case of Slow Jamz.
In the wake of his breakout success, West earned a whopping ten
nominations for the 47th annual Grammy Awards, held in early 2005. The
College Dropout won the Best Rap Album award, Jesus Walks won Best
Rap Song, and a songwriting credit on You Don't Know My Name had West
sharing the Best R&B Song award with Alicia Keys and Harold Lilly.
Later in the year, he released his second solo album, Late
Registration, which met with enormous success, hit the top of the
charts, and won the Grammy for Album of the Year in early 2006. That
same year, the live album Late Orchestration: Live at Abbey Road
Studios found West performing his hits with a 17-piece string
orchestra. The album and accompanying DVD were only released in Europe.
~ Jason Birchmeier, All Music Guide
Written by Jason Birchmeier