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Reasonable Doubt Album Zip

5/7/2019Posted by admin
  1. Reasonable Doubt Zippy
  2. Reasonable Doubt Jay Z Album

Public Group active 2 weeks, 6 days ago. Looking to download Reasonable Doubt album online? Released: Jun 25, 1996, JAY-Z launched Hip-Hop/Rap album Reasonable Doubt. Album has 15 Songs, 59 Minutes available to download or listen.


Jay-Z - Demo Tape
01. Greatest MC (Demo)
02. Whats in a name? feat. Treach
03. Get Off My Dick feat. Sauce Money
04. Understand Me
05. Pass the Roc
06. Broken English & Drug Sellin’ feat. Sauce Money
07. Rippin’ It Up, Right? feat. Sauce Money
08. Nothin’ But Love feat. Sauce Money
09. Under Pressure
10. Behind The Ropes feat. Sauce Money


Jay-Z - Reasonable Doubt (1996)


02. Politics As Usual
04. Dead Presidents II
06. D'Evils
08. Can I Live
10. Friend Or Foe
12. Cashmere Thoughts
14. Regrets
15. Can't Knock The Hustle (Fools Paradise Remix) (feat. Meli'sa Morgan)



01. Intro / A Million and One Questions / Rhyme No More
03. I Know What Girls Like (feat. Puff Daddy & Lil' Kim)
05. Streets Is Watching
07. Lucky Me
09. Who You Wit II
11. Real Niggaz (feat. Too Short)
13. Where I'm From



02. Jay-Z - Love For Free (feat. Rell)
04. Christion - Pimp This Love
05. Murder Inc - Murdagram (feat. DMX and Ja Rule)
07. Usual Suspects - Crazy
09. Christion - Your Love (feat. Jay-Z)
11. M.O.P. - My Nigga Hill Figga
12. Jay-Z - Celebration (feat. Memphis Bleek, Sauce Money & Wais Of The Ranjahz)
Jay-Z - Vol.2..Hard Knock Life (1998)
01. Intro - Hand It Down
03. If I Should Die (feat. Da Ranjahz)
05. Nigga What, Nigga Who (Originator 99) (feat. Amil & Big Jaz)
07. A Week Ago (feat. Too $hort)
08. Coming Of Age (Da Sequel) (feat. Memphis Bleek)
10. Paper Chase (feat. Foxy Brown)
11. Reservoir Dogs (feat. The Lox, Beanie Sigel & Sauce Money)
13. It's Alright (feat. Memphis Bleek)

Jay-Z - Vol.3: The Life And Times Of S. Carter (1999)
01. Hova Song (intro)
03. Do It Again (Put Ya Hands Up)
05. Things That U Do (feat. Mariah Carey)
07. Snoopy Track (feat. Juvenile)
09. Pop 4 Roc (feat. Beanie Sigel, Memphis Bleek and Amil)
11. Big Pimpin' (feat. UGK)
13. Come and Get Me
15. Hova Song (outro)
16. Anything, [Secret Songs_ Jigga My Nigga & Girl's Best Friend]
Jay-Z - The Dynasty Roc La Familia (2000)
01. Intro
02. Change the Game (feat. Beanie Sigel and Memphis Bleek)
04. Streets Is Talking (feat. Beanie Sigel)
05. This Can't Be Life (feat. Scarface and Memphis Bleek)
06. Get Your Mind Right Mami (feat. Snoop Dogg and Memphis Bleek)
07. Stick 2 the Script (feat. Beanie Sigel and DJ Clue)
08. You, Me, Him and Her (feat. Amil, Beanie Sigel and Memphis Bleek)
10. Parking Lot Pimpin' (feat. Beanie Sigel and Memphis Bleek)
12. 1-900-Hustler (feat. Beanie Sigel, Memphis Bleek and Freeway)
13. The R.O.C. (feat. Beanie Sigel and Memphis Bleek)
15. Squeeze 1st



02. Takeover
04. Jigga What, Jigga Who
06. Heart Of The City (Ain't No Love)
08. Hard Knock Life (The Ghetto Anthem)
10. Can't Knock The Hustle (Feat. Mary J. Blige)
12. I Just Wanna Love U (Give It 2 Me) (feat. Pharrell)



02. Takeover
04. Girls, Girls, Girls
06. U Don`t Know
08. Heart Of The City
10. Song Cry
12. Renagade (Feat. Eminem)



01. Hard Knock Life (The Ghetto Anthem - Radio Edit)
03. Sunshine (Radio Edit) (feat. Foxy Brown & Babyface)
04. The City Is Mine (Album Version) (feat. Blackstreet)
05. Can't Knock The Hustle (Radio Edit) (feat. Mary J. Blige)
06. Ain't No Nigga (Original Radio Edit) (feat. Foxy Brown)
08. Money Ain't A Thang (feat. Jermaine Dupri)
09. Can I Get A.. (feat. Amil of 'Major Coins' & Ja Rule)
11. Money, Cash, Hoes (feat. DMX)
12. I Know What Girls Like ('Fly Girly' Dub) (feat. Puff Daddy & Lil' Kim)
14. Dead Presidents II
15. Wishing On A Star (D Influence Remix) [Bonus Track]
16. Can't Knock The Hustle (Fool's Paradise Remix) (feat. Melissa Morgan) [Bonus Track]
17. Ain't No Nigga (Rae & Christian Mix) (feat. Foxy Brown) [Bonus Track]
R. Kelly & Jay-Z - The Best Of Both Worlds (2002)

02. Take You Home With Me a.k.a. Body
04. It Ain't Personal
06. Green Light (feat. Beanie Sigel)
08. Shake Ya Body (feat. Lil' Kim)
10. Get This Money
12. Honey

Jay-Z - The Blueprint 2: The Gift and The Curse (2002)
The Curse:
01. Diamonds Is Forever
03. U Don't Know (Remix) (feat. M.O.P.)
05. Some How Some Way (feat. Beanie Sigel and Scarface)
07. Blueprint 2
09. 2 Many Hoes
10. As One (feat. Memphis Bleek, Freeway, Young Guns, Peedi Crakk, Sparks and Rell)
12. Show You How (Bonus Track)
14. What They Gonna Do Part II (Bonus Track)
The Gift:
01. A Dream (feat. Faith Evans and Notorious B.I.G.)

Reasonable Doubt Zippy

03. The Watcher 2 (feat. Dr. Dre, Rakim and Truth Hurts)
05. Excuse Me Miss
07. All Around The World (feat. LaToiya Williams)
08. Poppin' Tags (feat. Big Boi, Killer Mike and Twista)
10. The Bounce



01. A Dream (Feat. Faith Evans & Notorious B.I.G.)
03. The Watchers 2 (Feat. Dr. Dre, Rakim & Truth Hurts)
05. Excuse Me Miss
07. Guns & Roses (Feat. Lenny Kravitz)
09. Meet The Parents
10. Some How Some Way (Feat. Beanie Sigel & Scarface)
12. What They Gonna Do Part II
Jay-Z - Bring It On: The Best of Jay-Z (2003)
01. 22 Two's
03. Brooklyns Finest (feat. The Notorious B.I.G.)
05. Coming of Age (feat. Memphis Bleek)
07. Rap Game/Crack Game
09. Hard Knock Life (Ghetto Anthem)
11. Coming of Age (Da Sequel) (feat. Memphis Bleek)
12. Reservoir Dogs (feat. The Lox, Beanie Sigel, & Sauce Money)
14. Paper Chase (feat. Foxy Brown)



02. December 4th
04. Encore
06. Dirt Off Your Shoulder
08. Moment Of Clarity
10. Lucifer Instrumental
12. Justify My Thug
14. Allure

Jay-Z & 9th Wonder - Black is Back.. The 9th Album (2004)
01. Jay-Z Intro
03. What More Can I Say (Remix)
05. Dirt Off Your Shoulder (Remix)
Reasonable Doubt Album Zip
07. Moment of Clarity (Remix)
09. Public Service Announcement (Remix)
11. Lucifer (Remix)
13. My First Song (Remix)



02. Big Pimpin'/Papercut
04. Numb/Encore
06. Points Of Authority / 99 Problems / One Step Closer
Jay-Z - Kno vs. HOV (The White Albulum) (2004)
01. Intro
03. Dirt Off your Shoulder
05. Lucifer
07. 99 Problems
09. Change Clothes
11. My First Song
13. Encore

Jay-Z - The Black Album (DJ Premier Remixed) (2004)

02. December 4th (Same Team No Games)
04. Encore (Take It Personal)
06. Dirt Off Your Shoulder (Above The Clouds)
08. Moment Of Clarity (2nd Childhood)
10. P.S.A. (The Return)
12. Lucifer (Who Got Gunz)
14. My 1st Song (In Memory Of)



02. December 4th
04. Moment Of Clarity
06. PSA
08. Change Clothes
10. Dirt Off Your Shoulder
12. Encore (Feat. DJ Emmare)
14. My First Song (Outro)
Jay-Z vs Metallica - The Double Black Album (2004)
01. Public Service Announcement
03. Dirt Off Your Shoulder
05. 99 Problems
07. Moment Of Clarity
09. Lucifer
11. December 4th



02. What More Can I Say
04. December 4th
06. Dirt Off Your Shoulder
08. Change Clothes
10. Justify My Thug
12. My First Song
MF DOOM vs Jay-Z - The MF Black Album (2004)
01. Intro
03. What More Can I Say?
05. Change Clothes
07. Threat
09. 99 Problems
11. Justify My Thug
13. Allure



02. Get That Blunt Off Your Shoulder
04. Clear Eyes
06. My First Accordian
08. Justified Caps
10. Hustler Problems
12. Hovagrinder

Reasonable Doubt Jay Z Album



02. Big Chips
04. She's Coming Home With Me
06. Stop (feat. Foxy Brown)
08. Pretty Girls
10. Don't Let Me Die
11. The Return (remix) (feat. Slick Rick & Doug E. Fresh)
Jay-Z - Greatest Hits (2006)
01. Can I Get A...
03. Wishing On A Star (D Influence Remix)
05. Ain't No Nigga (feat. Foxy Brown)
07. Brooklyns Finest (feat. Notoroius B.I.G)
09. Friend Or Foe
11. More Money, More Cash, More Hoes
13. Reservoir Dogs
14. I Know What Girls Like (feat. Puff Daddy & Lil'Kim)
16. Money Ain't A Thang (feat. Jermaine Dupri)
18. Regrets
Jay-Z - Kingdom Come (Limited Edition) (2006)
CD 1:
01. The Prelude
03. Kingdom Come
05. Lost One (feat. Chrisette Michele)
07. 30 Something
09. Anything (feat. Usher & Pharrell)
11. Trouble
13. Minority Report (feat. Ne-Yo)


02. Can't Knock the Hustle



02. Pray
04. Hello Brooklyn 2.0 (feat. Lil Wayne)
06. Roc Boys (And The Winner Is)..
08. I Know (feat. Pharrell)
10. Ignorant Shit (feat Beanie Sigel)
12. Success (feat. Nas)
14. Blue Magic (feat. Pharrell))

Jay-Z vs Elvis Presley - Billboard Gangsters (2007)
01 - Intro (Cookin Soul Remix)
03 - American dreamin (Cookin Soul Remix)
05 - No hook (Cookin Soul Remix)
06 - Roc Boys (And the winner is) (Cookin Soul Remix)
08 - I know (Cookin Soul Remix)
10 - Ignorant shit (Cookin Soul Remix)
12 - Success (Cookin Soul Remix)
14 - Blue magic (Cookin Soul Remix)



02. The greatest to ever do it
04. Dont hate me (feat Nas)
06. June 7th07
08. I will never change (feat Kanye west)
10. Me & my radio



02. 99 Problems/Back in Black
04. Smack My Bitch Up/Rehab
06. Dirt Off Your Shoulder/Lying From You
08. Can I Get a.
10. I Just Wanna Love U (Give It 2 Me)
12. Girls, Girls, Girls
14. Umbrella
16. 'Beautiful Moment' Speech



02. Public Speeding
04. Never Changing
Reasonable Doubt Album Zip
06. Back At My Place
08. Lost Part 1
10. Science Is Ignorant
12. Hola Blanco
14. Lost Part 2
16. What If We Cry?
18. Falling In Shadows
20. X-Y-Z
Jay-Z - A Prelude To Blueprint 3 (2009)
01. Jockin' Jay-Z
02. Swagga Like Us (with T.I., Lil Wayne & Kanye West)
04. My President Is Black (Remix with Young Jeezy)
06. Mr. Carter (with Lil Wayne)
08. Gutted (with Beanie Sigel)
10. Blow The Whistle [freestyle]
12. Ain't I
14. When The Money Goes
16. Put On (Remix with Young Jeezy)
18. Go Hard (Remix with DJ Khaled & Kanye West)
19. You're Welcome (feat Mary J Blige & Swizz Beatz)
Jay-Z - America, Meet Shawn Corey (2009)
01 Shawn Corey
03 Go Hard [Remix] ft kanye west
05 Dat Fly Shit [Produced by Bway] ft Bway
06 BROOKLYN [Come Again] FDB ft BIG, Uncle Murda, Joell Ortiz, Sauce Money, Jay-Z, Fab
08 Street Mob ft Young Jeezy
10 Wishing On A Star [Remix]
12 Jockin Jay-Z (Travis Barker Remix)
14 Ain't I
16 Pass The Roc (Demo)
18 Realest To Run It - BIG ft Jay-Z
Jay-Z - Classic Collabos [Sean Carter Edition] (2009)

01 Brooklyns Finest Ft Biggy
02 Guess Whos Back Ft Scarface & Beanie Sigel
03 A Week Ago Ft Too Short
04 Go Crazy Rmx Ft Young Jeezy
05 Ha Rmx Ft Juvenille
06 Drop It Like Its Hot Rmx Ft Snoop Dogg & Pharrell
07 Blackout Ft Dmx & Lox
08 Black Republican Ft Nas
09 I Do It For Hip Hop Ft Ludacris & Nas
10 Maybach Music Ft Rick Ross
11 Get By Rmx Ft Talib Kweli,mos Def,kanye West & Busta Ryhmes
12 Never Let Me Down Ft Kanye West
13 Renegade Ft Eminem
14 La Familia Ft Amil & Beanie Sigel
15 Big Pimping Ft Ugk
16 I Love The Dough Ft Biggy
17 Is That Yo Bitch Ft Twista & Missy Elliot
18 You Dont Know Rmx Ft M
19 Resevoir Dogs Ft Lox,beanie Sigel & Sauce Money
20 Mr Carter Ft Lil Wayne
21 No Love Lost Ft Nas & Lord Tarik
22 Freestyle Ft Big L (Internet Bonus Track)
23 Foundation Ft Big Jaz & Sauce Money (Internet Bonus Track)
Jay-Z & Nujabes - Japanese Gangster (2009)
01. Pray (Nujabes Imaginary Folklore)
03. Hello Brooklyn (Nujabes Final View)
05. Roc Boys (Nujabes Reflection Eternal)
07. I Know (Nujabes After Hanabi)
09. Ignorant Sh*t (Nujabes Luv Sic Pt. 2)
11. Success (Nujabes Flowes)
13. Blue Magic (Sea Of Clouds)




02. 99 Anthems
04. Lucifer's Jigsaw
06. Dirt Off Your Android
08. Change Order
10. Ignorant Swan
Jay-Z - The Blueprint 3 (2009)
01. What We Talkin' About (Feat. Luke Steele)
03. D.O.A (Death Of Auto-Tune)
05. Empire State Of Mind (Feat. Alicia Keys)
07. On To The Next One (Feat. Swizz Beatz)
09. A Stare Is Born (Feat. J. Cole)
11. Already Home (Feat. Kid Cudi)
13. Reminder
15. Young Forever (Feat. Mr. Hudson)
Disc 2:
01. Ghetto Techno
03. Ain't I (feat. Timbaland)
05. History
07. Brooklyn (Go Hard) (feat. Santogold)
09. My President Is Black [Remix]
10. Death Of Autotune [Remix] (feat. Bone Thugs-N-Harmony)
11. Run This Town [Green Lantern Mix] (feat. (feat. Rihanna & Lil' Wayne)
12. D.O.A. (Death Of Autotune) [Chase & Status Remix]
Jay-Z - The Hits Collection, Vol. 1 [Deluxe Edition] (2010)
CD 1:
01. Public Service Announcement (Interlude)
03. 03' Bonnie & Clyde (feat. Beyonce)
05. I Just Wanna Love U (Give It 2 Me) (feat. Pharrell)
07. D.O.A. (Death Of Auto-Tune)
09. Empire State Of Mind (feat. Alicia Keys)
11. Hard Knock Life (Ghetto Anthem)
13. Roc Boys (And The Winner Is)..


02. Pump It Up (Freestyle)
04. Go Hard (Remix) (feat. Kanye West & T-Pain)


The Throne - Watch the Throne [Deluxe Version] (2011)
01. No Church in the Wild (Feat. Frank Ocean)
03. Niggas in Paris
05. Gotta Have It
07. That's My Bitch
09. Who Gon Stop Me
11. Made in America (Feat. Frank Ocean)
13. Illest Motherfucker Alive
15. Primetime


01. Holy Grail (feat. Justin Timberlake)
03. Tom Ford
05. Oceans (feat. Frank Ocean)
07. Somewhere in America
09. Heaven
11. Part II (On the Run) (feat. Beyonce)
13. BBC
15. La Familia




01. Kill Jay Z
02. The Story of O.J.
03. Smile (feat. Gloria Carter)
04. Caught Their Eyes (feat. Frank Ocean)
05. 4:44
06. Family Feud
07. Bam (feat. Damian Marley)
08. Moonlight
09. Marcy Me
10. Legacy

Autodesk fusion 360 wikipedia. There is nothing like the debut of Jay Z, a stroke of genius chronicling the life of a 26-year-old drug kingpin from the Marcy Houses with a love for craft unrivaled elsewhere in his work.

He was only going to make one album. So goes the story of Reasonable Doubt, anyway, a tale Jay Z has regaled us with at every opportunity since its release on a new and unproven independent label called Roc-A-Fella Records. It was the album he made before the world was listening, with only a close crew of friends and associates at the late age of 26. Every contributor was paid in bags of cash, piles so mountainous nobody involved could be mistaken how they were acquired. It was the valedictory statement of a drug kingpin and the commencement of a brand, a lifetime’s worth of private thoughts discharged before the true business of empire-building could begin. Grand opening; grand closing.

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Shawn Carter has always been fiercely protective of his first full-length, to the degree that it sometimes feels like it belongs more to him than to us. He keeps yanking it from streaming services, as if the album is a troubled prep-school kid. He’s thrown it a series of lavish birthday parties, celebrating its 10th anniversary with a full-concert performance in 2006 and commissioning a documentary to air only on his TIDAL streaming service for its 20th. He has curated its legacy so assiduously that Reasonable Doubt seems like the one part of his story about which he remains insecure, the piece of his legacy that might blink out if he didn’t take care of it.

Perhaps he’s never forgotten its relatively inauspicious release. “Ain’t No Nigga” was a hit, for sure, and the album was certified Gold on its release; solid, but hardly world-conquering in the dynastic era CD sales. Critics were impressed, but not overly so: Mainstream and non-hip-hop publications noted it was clever at times but mostly a rehash of Scarface and gangster-movie tropes. The Source gave it 4 out of 5 mics—approving, not rapturous. The smaller but more influential world of hardcore rap intelligentsia paid attention to him, but in the shadow of Biggie and Pac, Jay felt like a lesser myth. He announced the album with a statement that he was retiring and henceforth “would only be about the business.” In some alternate universe, that might’ve been it.

In Jay’s mind at least, the album certainly marked the end of an era. At this point, by his own cold-eyed accounting on the song “Politics As Usual,” he had been selling drugs for “10 years.” Along a parallel track, he had been flirting furtively with being a rapper. He linked up with Big Jaz (later Jaz-O), doing a stint as the older man's baby-faced sidekick and kicking the triplet-time “figgity-figgity”-style flows that were sweeping New York at the time. He toured, briefly, with Big Daddy Kane, and spit some freestyles for New York hip-hop radio. He was an impressive local kid, but no one’s idea of a worldwide star.

In that murky time between his puppyish Jaz-O beginnings and his sober and assured reappearance on Reasonable Doubt, he figured some things out. First, nobody wanted to hear Jay Z excited. Composed, assured, jaded, deeply unimpressed—these were emotions he could radiate without even trying, and they were truer to his nature. Gone were the endearing attempts at dancing alongside Jaz, looking like a kid at his own bar mitzvah being coaxed onto the floor. His years selling drugs had presumably hardened him, and by the time he opened his mouth on Reasonable Doubt’s opening track, “Can’t Knock the Hustle,” he had mastered an unshakable godfather pose. It is hard to convincingly telegraph “above it all” from the bottom of the food chain, but Shawn Carter had a natural haughtiness that couldn’t be faked. Emedia guitar lessons. “You ain’t havin’ it? Good, me either/Let’s get together and make this whole world believe us,” he barked.

He also figured out how to best wield his clear, surprisingly boyish voice. The syllable chopping disappeared and his words became musical and mellifluous. Even though his voice never rose above a conversational monotone, his words sailed high and glittering over the music, which sampled butter-soft soul from previous decades, blurred memories of more innocent times. These were the lyrics he’s been painstakingly stacking together in his head for years (the “no pen, no pad” detail is another famous and well-rehearsed bit of Jay mythos), and he rolled them out, one pearly string of words after another, like he was exhaling a breath he’d been holding forever.

Lines like “By the ounce, dough accumulate like snow” were their own kind of song, and he treated each syllable with a reverent love undetectable elsewhere in his work. On “Can I Live,” he matches the “Fs” and “Ls” in the phrase “illin’ for revenues, Rayful Edmond-like” to create an irregular little mountain-peak rhythm that echoes the stuttering “expectation for dips, we stack chips” line from earlier in the same verse. He was thinking on several levels at once—how phonetics color meaning, how multiple meanings can suggest all the stories that aren’t being told. He wanted us to feel the discomfited hum of his unquiet mind, even if we couldn’t immediately follow every stray thread. What Biggie and Pac did for self-mythologizing and hip-hop, Jay undoubtedly did for the art of close reading.

The narrative that emerges from a close reading of Reasonable Doubt remains startlingly grim; seen up close, it is a masterpiece of dissociation, a graveyard of dead emotions. From the outset, Jay Z projected surface glamor: He was the first rapper to book a flight out to St. Thomas and hop on a yacht just to film a video. He was the guy who made the “Big Pimpin’” video, putting up a million dollars for the budget. But the message behind all of this flash was always clear: It was all too late for him, and the money was just cold comfort.

This is never clearer than on “D’Evils,” maybe the bleakest, saddest song ever written about the well-worn theme of the psychic toll of drug dealing. “Shit is wicked on these mean streets” could be a boast, the prelude to some exuberant Eazy-E-style tall tales, but the next line echoes in pure psychological space: “None of my friends speak, we all trying to win.” The song’s most lurid moment of violence, and maybe the most brutal scene in all the Jay discography, occurs off-camera, so to speak, only by implication: To locate a rival, Jay kidnaps the mother of his child and stuffs bills into her mouth, force-feeding her crumpled, filthy money while she weeps as he demands information. It is a gruesome scene, but Jay the writer is uninterested in the visual; he’s drawn to the contusion it leaves on her psyche and his: “Don’t cry, it is to be/In time, I take away your miseries and make it mine,” he tells her flatly. It is a chilling promise to both end her life and carry the act with him until the end of his own.

Much later in his career, further removed from the shock of his time dealing drugs, Jay would root around in the messier, more visceral stuff of his early traumas. On “This Can’t Be Life,” he opened his heart to a former girlfriend who miscarried. On “Still Got Love For You,” from Beanie Sigel’s 2001 album The Reason, he raged at his absent father, even allowing his imperial voice to crack slightly: “I’m a mess, Dad/Still I love you no less, Dad/Hope you didn’t think success would make me less mad.” But at age 26, too old to be a burgeoning rap star and far too young to be as tired as he often appeared onstage, he was still in the blast radius of his former life, and all the wounds it left on him were still open. The wide-brimmed hat concealing his eyes, the white suit and fancy cigar of the album’s cover—they were expensive gauze pads, covering a ravaged body. On “Politics As Usual,” perhaps the silkiest track on the record, he is “Cursing the very god that brought this grief to be.”

This album’s legacy is both magnificent and lonely, an immaculate crystal chandelier gathering dust in an abandoned mansion. Every line gleams, begging you to memorize it but forbidding you from loving it. Its impact was subterranean, subliminal—Kendrick Lamar picked up on the notion of “D’evils of Lucy” as recently as 2015, with To Pimp a Butterfly. Other rappers picked up on his chilly, bored pose, but his rapping was really too byzantine to convincingly imitate. It wasn’t until he slowed down his flow, breaking off glittering bits of mind that people could hold onto, that his influence penetrated and spread. Decades later, everyone flows like Jay Z, but not the Jay Z of Reasonable Doubt. That guy is still alone with his thoughts, learning to live with regrets.

Maybe this is why Shawn Carter the man seems to have such a wistful fondness for the album and the time it represented. It feels doomed in its melancholy that it will be misunderstood. “I hope you fools choose to listen, I drop jewels, bust it,” he rhymed on “Feelin’ It,” and then sneered, “Y’all don’t feel me,” a moment later. It’s a self-fulfilling prophecy in rhyme, the sound of a guy baring his heart and freezing it in carbonite in the same breath. “Sometimes I hear myself moaning,” he adds later, after he’s let his guard down slightly to take a small hit of weed. It’s a startling moment of depersonalization, the sound of pain whistling like wind through the cracks in a fractured psyche.

One of the only other times Jay admits to smoking weed on record came years later, on The Black Album, a lifetime’s worth of accomplishments later. “I try to smoke weed to give me the fix I need/For what the game did to my pulse with no results,” he rapped ruefully on “Allure.” The Black Album ended his most coherent, compelling, and memorable era; the hustler makes it all the way to the beloved corporate American icon and bows out on top. He had sold out Madison Square Garden, and the entire music industry knelt at his feet. Everyone felt him. But the only place he’s ever truly wanted to get back to was here.

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