Meek Mill - Championships
Pitchfork 77
Despite being born of injustice, an air of victory hangs over Meek’s first full-length since he was released from prison. It captures an intensity that the Philadelphia rapper is known for and best at.
Tue Dec 04 06:00:00 GMT 2018The Guardian 60
Atlantic/Maybach Music Group
In recent years, Meek Mill has become better known for his brushes with the law than his music. On continued probation since a 2007 arrest for possession of a firearm, he was last year sentenced to two to four years in prison for violating his parole by performing a dirt-bike wheelie in New York. The apparent incongruity between this act and Mill’s arrest spawned the widespread hashtag campaign #FreeMeekMill, a New York Times op-ed penned by Jay-Z advocating prison reform, and a petition for the rapper’s release that received over 400,000 signatures. Mill was released in April after serving five months.
Where Mill has always made the struggle between the individual and external forces – society, money, race – felt in his pugilistic rap, his fourth album is a maximalist testament to the self-made man, or at least Mill’s version of that all-American narrative. It opens with a sample of Phil Collins’ In the Air Tonight that’s so unexpected as to be shocking, yet Mill somehow makes it work. As it crescendos to Collins’ infamous drum fill, he creates an Eye of the Tiger for the Creed generation.
Continue reading... Fri Dec 07 10:00:13 GMT 2018