2B - Thursday, January 17, 2008 REDUCTIVE REASONING Picking one and one apart. The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 0 Wine and cigars: real street living.v U JAY-Z:'VOL. 2 ... HARD KNOCK LIFE' (1998) The lost'Volume' By ANDREW KAHN Daily Arts Writer Ask a rap music fan to name Jay-Z's best album and most of the time you'll hear Reasonable Doubt. It makes sense - after all, it's a great album and, more importantly, it's Jigga's first. Others will point to The Blueprint, undoubt- edly a classic that features some of Jay's most memo- rable songs. Still others will tell you it's The Black Album, Jay's supposed final album. Rare- ly will you come across an indi- vidual who selects Hov's third album, Vol. 2 ... Hard Knock Life, as the rapper's greatest accom- plishment. And there's no rea- sonable explanation for this. Vol. 2 came a year after In My Lifetime, Vol. 1 and two years after Reasonable Doubt. While his first two albums boast well- known tracks like "Can't Knock the Hustle" and "(Always Be My) Sunshine," it wasn't until Vol. 2 that Jay scored his first huge hit, "Hard Knock Life (Ghetto Anthem)." Aided by a sample from the musical "Annie," the song reached no. 15 on the U.S. Billboard singles charts and no.1 in the U.K., the highest-charting single of his career at the time. It's a brilliant contrast to hear the high-pitched orphans sing, " 'Steada kisses, we get kicked / It's a hard knock life," while Hov spits lines like, "From stand- ing on the corners boppin' / To drivin' some of the hottest cars New York has ever seen / For droppin' some of the hottest verses rap has ever heard / From the dope spot, with the smoke glock, fleein' the murder scene." Listening to Jay-Z flow is like watching Larry Bird rain threes or Jack Nicklaus sink putts, and on "Hard Knock Life," Jigga rides the simple piano tinkle to perfection, effortlessly deliver- ing lines like, "I put my money on the long shots / All my ballers that born to clock / Now I'ma be on top whether I perform or not / I went from lukewarm to hot." On Vol. 2, for the first time in Jay-Z's career, he found the perfect balance between street and mainstream. It's a lesson he never forgot and one that helped him dominate the charts for years to come. He also assembled a stellar supporting cast on this album. There are guest spots from the likes of Beanie Sigel, The LOX, Too Short and Ja Rule - and they all deliver. Hov put some thought into the selection of his produc- ers as well, calling on hitmakers like Timbaland, Jermaine Dupri, DJ Premier and Swizz Beatz to create the album's varied yet cohesive sound. The breathy percussion and pitch-shifting synths on "Ride or Die" make it a standout track, but, even there, Jay steals the show. "Niggas don't want it with Jig cause somethin' got to give/I got homes where you hide, I hus- It's a hard knock life. Ain't no joke. tle where youlive." Other rappers could say it, but you wouldn't necessarily believe them. You believe Jay-Z. So maybe it's the album cover that turned off some listeners and caused Vol. 2 to get lost in the shuffle of Jay-Z's classics. The top hat and cigar on the ReasonableDoubt cover display a "gangsta" image, while perhaps the plain, white t-shirt and black leather jacket on Vol. 1 displays more of an "everyman" persona. Maybe Jay-ZleaningonaBentley in a fancy suit presents an auraof wealth and prestige that strayed too far from the street image that launched Hov's career. Or perhaps it was the mainstream success of Vol. 2 - it sold over five million copies in the U.S. and over eight million worldwide - that prevents fans from identify- ing it as his best work when, after careful analysis, Vol. 2 is clearly just that. The Daily Arts guide to the best upcoming events Today 1.17.08 Zell Visiting Writers Series: Jaswinder Bolina and Margaret Lazarus Dean 5 p.m. At the Rackham Assembly Hall Free Distinguished Visitor Series: Chaz Maviyane- Davies 5p.m. At the Michigan Theater Free Tomorrow 1.18.08 The Neutral Zone 7th Annual Poetry Night 7 p.m. At the Lydia Mendelssohn Theater $12/$7 with student ID 6th Annual Michigan Tango Festival 9 p.m. At the Michigan League Ballroom $15/$10 with student ID The Macpodz with Papadosio 9:30 p.m. At the Blind Pig $7/Under 21, $10/18+ Saturday 1.19.08 Collage Concert 8 p.m. At Hill Auditorium $10-25 Bill Bynum & Co. 8 p.m. At The Ark $13.50 Sunday 1.20.08 "The Sounds of Music" presented by the Ann Arbor Concert Band 2 p.m. At the Michigan Theater $10 Yuja Wang on piano 4 p.m. At Hill Auditorium $10-50 DANCE2XS Hip-Hop Class 4:30 p.m. At 2275 CCRB $10 perclass Comedian Suzanne Westenhoefer 7:30 p.m. At The Ark $26 Please send all press releases and event information to artspage@michigandaily.com 6 0 t. ydvrtising tatgoal! for a career n ad a step towards tha *job at parties? 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