His melancholia is that of the overly sated: much is being made of Take Care's album cover photograph, in which Drake sits like a lonely Corleone in a gilded corner-table cage. This biracial upper middle-class kid speaks from a position of privilege that few rappers would occupy, even if it were their birthright. The Record Follow The Sample: Drake's 'Take Care' Comes From The BluesÄrake makes even his advocates sometimes cringe, I think, for the same reason I find his music so fascinating. "Jealousy is just love and hate at the same time," I advised my daughter when she reported a conflict in her grade school lunchroom, stealing the line from this album's opening track. I've even taking to invoking his callow wisdom in family situations.
Or maybe it's just that Drake is so endlessly quotable. Maybe it's his stated theme, being lost in love, central to many of my own most beloved listens, from Richard and Linda Thompson's I Want To See the Bright Lights Tonight to the Afghan Whigs' Gentlemen. Maybe it's the memory-foam blend of '90s-nodding R&B and downtempo electronica cultivated by the Canadian rapper's mostly homegrown production team. Drove to Atlanta this past weekend, a three-and-a-half-hour trip from my house, and Take Care was my soundtrack the whole way. I'm pretty much obsessed with this new Drake album.
#TRACKLIST FOR DRAKE TAKE CARE ALBUM FREE#
You can listen on Spotify, or sign up for the free service. The Record 's critic, Ann Powers, and editor Frannie Kelley listened and came back with very different opinions.
Toronto's Aubrey Drake Graham released his second major label album Tuesday.