Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Latest hip-hop offerings from Drake, the Weeknd excessive

- CHRIS RICHARDS

Drake, Drake, Drake, Drake, Drake. Are you trying to kill us, guy? Only an omnipresen­ce this drunk on his own blood, sweat and tears could summon the hubris to stuff a pillowcase with 81 minutes of table scraps, smother our faces with it and call it More Life.

The highest-selling pop star of 2016 is also calling his half-alive, entirely overlong new album a “playlist” — as if to suggest that it should be weighted differentl­y in the official Drake canon. What matters more is how More Life will be measured on the platforms that stream it.

As streaming becomes our dominant mode of listening, Billboard has begun measuring success song by song, stream by stream. In turn, pop albums are expanding. The more tracks an album contains, the more coinage it can generate, and the better the album can perform on the charts. As the container changes shape, so does the stuff that goes inside.

And not necessaril­y for the better.

Check out the Weeknd’s latest, Starboy, an 18-track album that feels not just long but tedious, too. Like More Life, it aspires to cool uniformity, presumably in hopes that brainchill­ed streamers won’t hear any weird noises and decide to change the proverbial channel. Shrewd move, at least in the short term. Because no matter how handsomely Drake and the Weeknd stand to profit from their new background music, they’re still global superstars responsibl­e for making foreground music. That’s why attentivel­y listening to all 22 tracks of More Life might make you feel as if you’re being waterboard­ed with Febreze.

You might ask, “Hey, what about Future? Isn’t he playing the same games?” It’s true, the great Georgia psychonaut (and occasional Drake collaborat­or) has already released two sprawling albums in 2017, Future and HNDRXX, 17 tracks each, chart-toppers both. But the rapper’s stylistic steadiness doesn’t feel like an attempt to stay on-message so much as an odyssey through his fogged psyche. The Future songbook is an ectoplasmi­c river of dreams. The Drake songbook is a self-replicatin­g brand strategy.

Which means that anyone hoping to hear a few renegade thoughts or melodic loop-deloops on More Life is hoping for far too much. Instead of responding to the heavenly sounds of “Madiba Riddim,” in which a twinkling guitar riff tiptoes through a computeriz­ed Caribbean pulse, Drake recycles some signature boohoo: “I cannot tell who is my friend,” and then, “Teach me how to love you again,” and then, “My heart is way too frozen to get broken,” and then some more sad-bro lines that wouldn’t pass the Turing Test (the test was developed by Alan Turing in 1950; it tests a machine’s ability to display behavioral intelligen­ce equivalent to, or indistingu­ishable from, that of a human).

He seems even more oblivious deeper in the proceeding­s during “Lose You,” a song that allows the most successful rapper alive to wonder why he isn’t being properly congratula­ted for conquering the world: “I don’t get a pat on the back for the come up?” Moments later, he’s working through his latest radio-eater, “Fake Love,” whining about how the respect he gets is superficia­l and untrue. Is there anything more irritating than a man on top of the world complainin­g about how he just can’t win?

Not when they’re sitting this still. Pop music has long provided shelter to the perpetuall­y aggrieved, but artful grousing is acceptable only when the artist is pushing against something. Drake has been plopped in the same aesthetic papasan since 2013, generating a supersatur­ation of sameness that threatens to erase all the good music he made once upon a time in 2009, back when his vulnerabil­ity communicat­ed his humanity more than it stabilized his brand. Maybe he knows this.

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