Cordae ‘From A Bird’s Eye View’ Reveals The Pitfalls Of Idolizing Rap Purism

    Virginia rapper Cordae returns with his new Hip Hop album From A Bird’s Eye View. HipHopDX breaks down Cordae’s From A Bird’s Eye View

    Cordae has spent the entirety of his four-year career separating himself from his peers. Once a founding member of the YBN crew, the North Carolina rapper was quickly chosen as a prodigal talent, the bard of a new generation of rappers. Through projects such as his debut, The Lost Boy, and now his sophomore, From a Birds Eye View, Cordae stepped away from the sounds of popular trap and into the realm of rap purism.

    But on his latest album, Cordae spends more time explaining what he is not rather than crafting an actual voice of his own. By chasing the sounds that came before him, Cordae has lost sight of not only what his audience wants but also the middle child in a new school rapper’s body appeal which endeared him to listeners young and old in the first place.

    On From a Birds Eye View, Cordae finds himself sonically copying a sound between Nas’s It Was Written and J. Cole’s 4 Your Eyez Only but not possessing the lyrical depth, technical skill or heart that made those albums so revered. Artists such as The Weeknd and PinkPantheress have helped lead the charge in the revivalism of past sounds. And while Cordae takes clear inspiration from the 90s and early 2000s, songs such as “Jean-Michel” and “Momma’s Hood” sound referential and lack the connecting bridge to the present time.

    Cordae’s rapping on the album is technically sound. It’s mixed well and the production from the likes of Kid Culture, Boi-1da and Hit-Boy is polished and pristine. But ultimately, the subject matter is so diluted by clichés and meaningless sentiments that the album comes across exceptionally hollow.

    Consistently throughout the project, Cordae struggles to find what he’s actually trying to say. He attempts to establish himself as different from the rest of the industry, yet creates an album designed for Award Committees rather than barbershops or Discord servers. On “Jean-Michel” Cordae speaks to the destructive qualities of power and greed, rapping: “Your favorite artist first priority is gaining wealth.” It’s a nice sentiment that’s completely undercut by bragging about making seven-million dollars in 2021 and buddying up with former Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey in the opening lines of the following track “Super.” It’s one of many contradictions Cordae makes throughout the album.

    Cordae set himself up for failure with “Champagne Glasses,” a song which features the legendary Stevie Wonder and one of Hip Hop’s best MCs in Freddie Gibbs. Despite being in the presence of greatness, Cordae drops some of his least engaging bars of the album, throwing out fake-deep metaphors such as “Still high up off life” as though they’re revelatory. Eminem somehow gets worse with each passing year, and “Parables (Remix)” isn’t salvaged by Cordae’s awkward flexing.

    The true moments of originality come when Cordae sets his “Rapper Hat” to the side and sings. Unlike his bars, Cordae’s melodies are organic and unpolished, even risky. Though brief, his crooning on tracks such as “Want From Me” and “Chronicles” featuring H.E.R. and Lil Durk are the album’s highest moments, with Cordae breaking from the monotony and delivering the heartfelt feeling that is sorely lacking from this album. And he can still rap, holding his own alongside Lil Wayne on “Sinister.”

    Though Cordae clearly has an old soul, evidenced by his obvious emulation of Nas, Mos Def, Talib Kweli J. Cole and others, part of his initial appeal was his youthful approach to Hip Hop, an element which has been wholly stripped away on From a Birds Eye View. On “Old n-ggas,” Cordae’s 2018 rebuttal to J. Cole’s “1985 – Intro to “the Fall Off,” Cordae sparred with the Dreamville Boss’s categorization of the next generation of rappers. But instead of defending the work of his peers, Cordae attempted to prove that he’s not akin to his generation. The result sounded like a stale contemporary version of “The Kids Are Alright.”

    But even if his defense of young lyrical rappers not being SoundCloud rappers was pompous, at least his passion was undisputed and the song came from a heartfelt place. And that’s one of the biggest problems with A Birds Eye View, it feels like an unearned victory lap, hollow praise, good natured advice that comes off pandering and most of all — soulless Grammy bait.

    This album reeks of desperation and a desire for approval from all audiences of Hip Hop, like a kid who wants to sit at the adults’ table so he can gloat to his friends later. It isn’t for the barbershop, basketball court or long drives and it’s certainly not making rounds on the school bus or at frat parties. But worst of all, it doesn’t appeal to oldheads or Gen Z, it sits firmly in the middle: not bad enough to cause outrage, but not good enough to make you care. 

    Cordae seems like a good guy who’s heart is in the right place. His rapping capabilities are clearly present and his newfound singing abilities hints at some more engaging possibilities down the road. But in order to translate those skills to his listeners, he’ll need to stray from the path already traveled, quit trying to prove himself and blaze his own trail rather than trying to please every rapper dead or alive he clearly wants to become.

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    24 thoughts on “Cordae ‘From A Bird’s Eye View’ Reveals The Pitfalls Of Idolizing Rap Purism

    1. WTF!

      The album is dope, not a 5/5, but for sure not his BS review.

      Cordae has a lot of potential and growth to do, but this is a good ass album

    2. I feel like there is too much hate for this album in many reviews. I agree that it is not as good as Lost Boy and not as great as he always teased, plus he also played it kinda too save here. Still, it is a solid piece of music and when I see how a lot of other generic, dumbed down trap shit is rated then yeah, I feel there is too much hate for this album.
      Anyway, Iam not the biggest Cordae fan but he is one of the few younger artists with a more popular sound who at least trys to put a message out. He surly has to gear up a bit for the next project but this one is solid.

      1. I’m with you….this is a young artist and we aren’t giving him any chance. And the sad thing is, he’s trying to bring the original sound and lyrics to it, with upgraded relevance. Then if he goes to trap, we’ll be sitting here saying he’s a sad, dumb kid. smh.

    3. This website be giving a bunch of wack albums 4’s. But want to give this album a 2.9? Y’all buggin over there. And what are you talking about in this review? Doesn’t appeal to old heads or Gen Z? How you going to talk for a whole culture? Just because you found a couple tweets who don’t F with the album. You corny for that. I see a whole bunch of people showing this album love old and young alike.

      1. Why do you care about what sells? Ransoms music don’t sell but he will still murk your favourite rapper. Gtfoh

    4. “Rap purists”? Just say ypu don’t like Hip Hop. Matter of fact take those words out of your shitty website name

    5. That review sounded like the author had an axe to grind. A rap outlet complaining about so called purist rap? I think you guys forgot what genre this is. The swipe at Eminem was stupid as well. Getting worse every year? His last two albums got good reviews. Plus you didn’t even go into what the issue with the feature was. Crap review.

    6. Y’all gave NLE Choppa a higher rating than this? Don’t get me wrong i think both of them are ok but i don’t think that it should be rated this low

    7. as long as the word LYRICIST still exists then i got no problem wth this album.Cordae really put smthin solid out there.Its jus tht people are getting really used to trap that now they dont appreciate rap tht much

    8. So Cordea album has “pitfalls for idolized rap purism” but Nas Hit-boy album was a 4.3. This is exactly why our culture/society continues to damage ourselves within. Stop glorifying mediocrity and start acknowledging talent and individuality.

    9. How can you even give so few stars for this one. I think you have misunderstood this man’s content and the futuristic music sound.

      1. no stoopid. Its called return on investment stoopid. The label put alot of money into this project 20k and #18 on the charts aint gon cut it stoopid.

    10. When you are talking about jean-michel, he meant himself being someone’s favorite artist as well. Like the rap game has changed him, that’s why he said “that’s another story for a different day, he just told me don’t switch your ways”

    11. 2.9? Ya’ll smoking the same sh*t pookie did. This review was prolly written by some 25 year old who thinks future is the G.O.A.T ?

    12. Bru this album is a straight up banger definitely not on the same stage as Eminem Ye Jay Z Nas Etc but its close this album is definitely album of the year material

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