[Zane Lowe:]
Grab a seat, grab a seat. So, you remember this place? Graduation? (Itās cool, yeah). I was also thinking about some of the other things weāve done as well with the BBC, like Abbey Road sprung to mind with the strings
[Kanye West:]
Oh yeah. That was good. That suit was like, I wouldāve worn something different if I could look back right now. I could still do a suit, I just wouldnāt have done that exact lapel situation
[Zane Lowe:]
But talk about really putting yourself on the line with that. That was so early on for you to be stepping in a room with that many players and that kind of ā to give yourself that objective. What are your thoughts when you think back about Abbey Road, whereā¦itās just nuts
[Kanye West:]
I thought it was good. I thought it was what I was supposed to do at that time. If I see something, if I see an opportunity, Iām gonna go for it. You know what Iām saying ā Weāre all gonna die one day
[Zane Lowe:]
Yeah, thatās true
[Kanye West:]
So live like that. Live like you could die tomorrow. Go for it. Those steps have been the, you know, the platforms that allowed me to make it this far
[Zane Lowe:]
And you have, man, and youāre here. Six original albums of your own, a Throne record, various records with G.O.O.D. Music to talk about, man. But seriously, man, Yeezus. Bravo, dude. I mean, that is one of the most creative records of any genre Iāve heard in a very, very long time, and you know, just in terms of your output, your most exciting-sounding record, I think
[Kanye West:]
Oh, thank you very much. Yeah, I feel I was able to start making exactly what was in my mind again, not having to speak with the textures of the time. Cause, you know, Cruel Summer is definitely Kanye West, and thereās something weird and kind of off about āMercy,ā like when it has the high-pitched, that type of sound. It sounds like art still a little bit, even thought it obviously was a radio smash
But itās still ā when I get into the idea, the trap drums and things like that, certain songs that are blatant radio hits, itās like Iām speaking with todayās textures. And thatās ā if you look at it 200 years from now, itās not going to stand out in the way that 808ās or Yeezus stands out, and can completely push or redefine or make people say, you know: hey, I completely hate that, or I completely love that, but let me just think differently. Because everybody is bound to these ā no pun intended ā theyāre bound to sixteen bars or eight bars, and you know the normal radio ā the radio thing
I was talking to Frank Ocean about this, and said, my mom got arrested for the sit-ins, and now weāre more like the sit-outs. Like, sit off of radio, and say, hey radio, come to us. We need to find something new, because itās being controlled in a way, and manufactured in a way, that really awesome artists can make amazing music and not break as far past as, like, something thatās very formulaic
[Zane Lowe:]
So it almost feels like a duty to you in a weird way? Having the peoplesā ear, having peoplesā attention for great music, to be able to say, well, if Iām not challenging them enough, Iām not challenging myself, not challenging radio, what am I doing?
[Kanye West:]
Yeah. Iām not trying to regurgitate myself. I showed ā showed people that I understand how to make perfect. Dark Fantasy could be considered to be perfect. I know how to make perfect. But thatās not what Iām here to do. Iām here to crack the pavement and make new grounds, you know, sonically and society, culturally
[Zane Lowe:]
Youāve done that with Yeezus. (Yeah) Itās fascinating for us to sit here and talk about this record now, because normally when I talk to artists about records of this nature, itās in the lead-up to something. So weāre all kind of playing a guessing game, you know what I mean? You could tell me what you think of the record, but Iām trying to find my way around it, the audience probably wonāt have heard it. In this case, itās been out for a minute, so we can reflect on it with the benefit of hindsight, too. Youāve seen what everyone else has had to say about this record, both good and bad. But Iām fascinated to know, today, how you would describe Yeezus, as someone who made it. How you would describe that record. You know?
[Kanye West:]
I just think that Iām a production person, Iām a product guy, Iām a producer. So if Iām working on a John Legend album, Iām gonna try to give John Legend the best home for him to stay in. And Iām gonna try to push Pusha T ā no pun intended once again, this keeps happening to me ā to make the thing that represents what I like about his music the most. And then for me as Kanye West, I gotta fuck shit up. (laughs) Ah-ha-ha!
[Zane Lowe:]
And you did, dude, seriously. From the minute it starts. I mean, seriously. (āOn Sightā beginning plays.). Itās disgusting
So youāre up in the loft probably at this point, and youāre kicking around ideas, and youāre putting things together, and this sound comes into your head, and youāre like, this is what Iām looking for?
[Kanye West:]
Nah. This is me going to the studio with Thomas and Guy-Manuel, whoās Daft Punk. They had a synthesizer the size of that wall right there. This is just one session right here. This beat was originally like 14 minutes long, and that part in the beginning was something we completely just distorted, and I ended up making that the intro
[Zane Lowe:]
You know, I got a beef with you over this track. Itās too short! I wanted more out of it. Cause itās one of the best beats on the record for me, and it feels like youāre just getting warmed up. Was that kind of deliberate, you know, to pull back after only a couple of verses and go, you know what, weāre going to get on with the album now?
[Kanye West:]
Nah, itās just what I felt, like it should be
[Zane Lowe:]
[Just a dance thing]
[Kanye West:]
And you know, originally āBlood on the Leavesā was supposed to be first
[Zane Lowe:]
Wow
[Kanye West:]
Which, psychologically, I know would have changed certain Yeezus naysayers about the album. It wasnāt that time for me. I ā I ā I didnāt want to come up there and perform. A lot of times, music can be presented as a service position. But I wanted to take a more aggressive approach with music
You know, people go on a vacation and say, you got the drugs, you got the music, you got the wine? Itās in that territory. But I wanted to speak up and say, okay, so my voice is only compressed to express myself artistically through music. Itās the only place where I actually have a deal, so I can only consistently make things in music. So Iām gonna take music and Iām gonna try to make it three-dimensional, like ā like ā like on Star Wars and the hologramāll pop up out of R2D2. Iām gonna try to make something that jumps up and affects you, in a good or bad way. Whether itās, Iām going into a scream in the middle of the track because thatās just the way I feel. But Iām not here to make easy listening, you know, easy programmable music
[Zane Lowe:]
No. Youāre so off the reservation on this album in the best possible way. Like you talked about, the way you use your voice in different ways, you donāt rely on conventional rhyming flows. Your opening line, āYeezus season approaching,ā you know? āA monsterās awoken.ā Youāre laying it out there, this isnāt My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy Part 2. Iām wilding out on this record, straight away
(Interlude plays from āOn Sightā). And then from nowhere as well, we just get treated to these wonderful moments where, like you say, itās almost like a collage. Like youāre sitting here going, you know, why canāt I go into this? Why not?
[Kanye West:]
You can
[Zane Lowe:]
And you did
[Kanye West:]
Thatās how life is. Itās like a car crash. You could just be driving, and just out of nowhere it happens
[Zane Lowe:]
At what point did that very deliberate feel to the record, whereby breaks come in and join this really discordant electronic moments and everything seems to exist in this very ā very contradictory but it works kind of way, at what point did that start to take shape? Because it is very omnipresent through the record as a whole, the way it flips between one and the other. Was that in your head early on, or did that come towards the end when you started to reduce the record?
[Kanye West:]
Well, I didnāt reduce it. Rick Rubin reduced it. Heās not a producer, heās a reducer. (Laughs)
[Zane Lowe:]
Nice ā but was it always part of the process for you, to say, why donāt I take elements of this and this and just (claps hands) bolt it together?
[Kanye West:]
Yeah. Itās just the way I was consuming information in my life at the time. Negative information to positive information, from the Internet, just going to the Louvre, going to furniture exhibits and understanding that, trying to open up and do interviews with this, learning more about architecture. Taking one thousand meetings, attempting to get backing to do clothing and different things like that. Like, getting no headway whatsoever. It was just that level of frustration. This is what frustration fucking sounds like
This is what frustration sounds like. Like, for me, as Kanye West, I would not be Kanye West if it wasnāt for Michael Jackson. I was with Quincy Jones a couple days ago at John Legendās wedding. Quincy was telling me, it wasnāt just Mike, but these guys broke down the barriers. Of course you know Michael Jackson, he had to fight to get his video played because he was black. This is Michael Jackson. Michael Jacksonās not even black, heās Michael Jackson ā you know what I mean? Itās like heās ā heās so crazy, how can he even be classified as this black artist?
So for me, in my life and creativity itās been challenging yeah, itās been challenging and everything. But I was able to ascend to massive heights because of the foundation that my mother and my father and my grandfather laid through civil rights, what Michael Jackson did with music videos and the ground he broke. There would be no Kanye West if it wasnāt for Michael Jackson ā that allowed him to be that, right?
[Zane Lowe:]
Ya
[Kanye West:]
Now letās take people who have issues with me as Kanye West. They classify my motivational speeches as rants ā like āWhy is he saying that? Why is he doing that?ā Well Iāve reached a point in my life where my Truman Show boat has hit the painting. And Iāve got to a point that Michael Jackson did not break down. I have reached the glass ceiling ā as a creative person, as a celebrity
When I say that it means I want to do product. I am a product person. Not just clothing but water bottle design, architecture, everything that you could think about. And Iāve been at it for 10 years, and I look around and I say, āHey wait a second ā thereās no one around here in this space that looks like me.ā And if they are, theyāre quiet as fuck!
So that means ā wait a second ā now weāre seriously in a Civil Rights movement. Like people used to joke about ā remember our South Park photo ā
[Zane Lowe:]
Yeah, I do
[Kanye West:]
Remember how funny that was? Do you think there would be a Givenchy in the hood if it wasnāt for that South Park photo. But no one thinks about that ā no one thinks about the names I got called for wearing tight jeans
[Zane Lowe:]
You reference that in the record, you talk about that. āNo oneās liked him since heās been wearing tight jeans.ā Everybody knows you brought back real rap. I mean you reference that in the record
[Kanye West:]
Iām saying yāall had all that, but I brought real rap back. Iām going to do dope things. And I wanna take this opportunity to speak to something, because I go to Hypebeast sometimes to look it up, the new things thatāre coming out. And every time my name goes up, thereās a series of people who write just negative comments ā they wanna joke around and say, āWhy is he still trying? Why is he doing this?ā Why is he ā they like diss me as a person for trying. Now mind you, Iāve brought 10 years of product that has added to humanity
[Zane Lowe:]
Ya
[Kanye West:]
You know, and now, what they donāt realize when I say āHey this is Pusha T, this is what it isā I have to remind Pusha T that heās Pusha T. Because the radio, if theyāre not playing a song of his that has an R&B hook on it or works at a certain level of trap tempo and plays in [club-live], itās like we forget about that Clipse album that meant everything
And the reason why I relate it to design and what we do in design is saying thatās the music that us as creatives that wanted to get into design ā we looked at Clipse as the gods, and this is our soundtrack to creativity. And itās not a trap beat that comes in on that soundtrack to creativity. You know what Iām saying. No knock to trap, cause I did āCanāt Tell Me Nothingā ā I like it. But itās been commercialized to the point where ā and Iām not mentioning no names ā but what ā but people used to use the term āR&B n***aā but then it was ārappers.ā But then rappers didnāt wanna be no R&B n***a. Now the rappers is the new R&B n***as! The rapperās the new radio! Like whereās the culture at? Where is the culture at?
So then I scream ā and Iām sitting in the middle of it ā whether Iām at a dinner with Anna Wintour, or you know, Iām at a listening session with Pusha, or me and Virgil are in Rome giving designs to Fendi over and over and gettinā our designs knocked down. Brought ā brought the leather jogging pants 6 years ago to Fendi, and they said no. How many motherfuckers you done seen with a leather jogging pant? Meaning when I see Hedi Slimane and itās all like, āOK this is my take on the worldā ā yeah he got some nice $5,000 jeans in there, itās some nice ones here and there, some good shit here and there
But we culture. Rap the new rock nā roll! We culture! Rap is the new rock nā roll! We the rock stars!
[Zane Lowe:]
Itās been like that now for a minute
[Kanye West:]
Itās been like that for a minute, Hedi Slimane! Itās been like that for a minute. We the real rock stars, and Iām the biggest of all of āem. Iām the number one rock star on the planet
[Kanye West:]
We are the real rock stars, and Iām the biggest of all of them. Iām the number one rock star on the planet
[Zane Lowe:]
There it is. That record, it says that. Thatās what your album says when you come out, and there were songs on there, you make that very clear
[Kanye West:]
So what I want to explain to everybody out there, itās like, I make music I can do it, but I shouldnāt be limited to only one place of creativity. And itās literally only like one or two or three reasons why I havenāt been able to break that down
[Zane Lowe:]
But why would you feel that you are, because and Iām justā¦
[Kanye West:]
This is the thing you guys donāt understand. You guys donāt understand. You guys donāt understand that I did the Yeezus and they eBay-ed it for $90,000
[Zane Lowe:]
Right
[Kanye West:]
And people wanted them bad as whatever, right? But I didnāt get a call from Nike the next day. You guys donāt understand that Iāve met with companies and they say, āWhat weāre trying to figure out is how we can control you and control thatā. If youāre a architect, if youāre a world builder, if you have all these ideas and youāre Gaudi, and you want to build buildings, if you donāt ever get that out, whatās going to happen?
[Zane Lowe:]
Isnāt that why you do it? Isnāt it the process? Isnāt it the point to do it?
[Kanye West:]
I donāt think youāre really hearing what Iām saying
[Zane Lowe:]
But Iām trying to
[Kanye West:]
As a creativeā¦
[Zane Lowe:]
Yeah
[Kanye West:]
For you to have done something to the level of the Yeezus and not be able to create more and you cannot ā you cannot create that on your own, with no support, with no backing. So when I say āclean water was only served to the fairer skinnedā what Iām saying is weāre making products with chitlins. T-SHIRTS! Thatās the most we can make! T-shirts. We could have our best perspective on t-shirts. But if itās anything else, your Truman Show boat is hitting the wall
And whatās more important to me about this than everything that I can do sonically and everything is, if I go somewhere and someone says, āHey, we donāt like Kanye Westā youāve heard that before, right? What people donāt realize is I want to make uniforms for my high school basketball team through brand Yeezy. I want to make that one step, and then make another step, and then eventually do uniforms for the entire city
Then I want those uniforms to be hot and make money and make ā that I eventually want to be the anchor and the force behind a billion dollar company and after I make that billion dollar step, then I can go in and say, āHey Iāve got an opinion on this and that could be a ten billion dollar step, and I eventually want to be the anchor of the first trillion dollar company
But when you sit and you have a meeting with a company and show them the most innovative take on theatre because you thought of it one night while youāre sitting on top of Watch The Throne set which you designed with Es Devlin, and I designed the set with Es Devlin and I thought of, okay, surround vision, there should be a screen above you, below you, to the left, to the right of you and front of you also. Then I paid my own money that I get paid for doing Gold Digger, which I never really liked that song but I always knew I would get paid for doing Gold Digger
Then I shoot a film in Qatar with three camera crews, with Nate Brown, Virgil, Matt Williams, Nabil, all of these crew ā all of the people that every video that pops up every other day on Hypebeast thatās my crew, right? So, we go out and shoot that, three camera crews over five days, edited over 30 days, show it at amfAR ā no, show it in Cannes, the night before amfAR on the beach, build it in a pyramid with Rem Koolhaasā agency, design the entire thing, put editors in it, blah blah blah, people give a standing ovation, I do an interview in New York Times the next year to say, āHey, I did this and I want to let you know I did itā, right?
[Zane Lowe:]
Yeah
[Kanye West:]
And then, it doesnāt get mentioned in the interview and a week later they do an interview with George Lucas and Steven Spielberg and theyāre talking about what the next frontier of theatre will be and how itāll be higher priced tickets and it will be something thatās surrounding you and blah blah blah, but maybe itās in the goggles, I said, āWait a second, I just only did the interview to tell people that I invented it. I made it.ā
Like I went, I remember when I was, dropping William Morris, right, and then Sarah Newkirk at that time said āBefore you drop them, go meet with Ari Emanuelā and I sat with him and I said, āAri, Iām an inventorā and he goes on to tell me about the way it works and what he said is āYou are a celebrity. So basically whatās going to happen is, thereās product here, and this is where you end up, right here. If you can communicate this product, you can make money off the product, because look at Gaga. Sheās the Creative Director of Polaroid.ā I like some of the Gaga songs. What the fuck does she know about cameras?
So it becomes all of this thing where all of the musicians, the musicians try to get more money by promoting other products, right? So youāll say āHey, you know what? Iāve got this water and weāve got, you know, weāve got this red version. We got a red bottle, and weāve got a David Beckham version here, then we got a blue version.ā So my opinion is no more than the patina on top of it, when I understand the reason from my core of why something should work all the way through
So, I understand we want to make it about music but I wanted to take this step to say, we got this new thing called āClassismā. Itās racismās cousin. This is what we do to hold people back. This is what we do. And we got this other thing thatās also been working for a long time where you donāt have to be racist anymore itās called āSelf-Hateā. It works on itself. Itās like real estate of racism. Where, just like that, when someone comes up and says something like āI am a godā, everybody says āWho does he think he is?ā I just told you who I thought I was, a god! I just told you! Thatās who I think I am! Would have been better if I had a song that said, āI am a n***aā? or if I had song that said āI am a gangstaā? or if I had song that said āI am a pimpā? All those colors and patinas fit better on a person like me, right? But to say you are a god? Especially, when you got shipped over to the country that youāre in, and your last name is a slave ownerās. How could you say that? How could you have that mentality?
[Zane Lowe:]
I mean, I know in the past youāve talked about, like, you know, building hotels, doing things that are beyond peopleās normal frame of reference
[Kanye West:]
Yeah
[Zane Lowe:]
They know you as Kanye West, an artist. They know that youāre moving into fashion, but these things I guess in a way are hard for people to comprehend because they donāt have that level of drive. Do you know what that mean? Has it always been like this for you? Have you always felt like you can set your mind to anything and you will achieve it, ultimately?
[Kanye West:]
I always felt like I could do anything. Thatās the main thing people are controlled by, thoughts, their perception of themselves. Theyāre slowed down by their perception of themselves. If youāre taught you canāt do anything you wonāt do anything. I was taught I could do everything, and Iām Kanye West, aged 36. So just watch the next ten years
[Zane Lowe:]
Yeah, yeah, yeah
[Kanye West:]
One thing I want to express to people also, people think a lot of my motivation is very like megalomaniac, and self-oriented. To the contrary completely I just want to help, from day one, I just wanted to help
Like my father was a black panther, my father was a journalist, a paparazzi, a photo journalist. He was a paparazzi. We had a dark room in our house. Like seven years ago, he lived in a homeless shelter, not because he was homeless because he wanted to help the ex-drug addicts. He wanted to get that close. He started a foundation called Good Water and moved to the Dominican Republic to help right there, to help with the prostitution, to help with the extortion, to help right there, he stays in Dominican Republic right now. My mom was the first black female chair of the English Department. There is no award show, there is no amount of Billboards, there is nothing that ā that can define me or make me pass what my parents made me. And thatās exactly who I am. And I put on that pink polo and say broke, broke and broke through the TV and now you got to interview with me. Because their President who is coming out the gate, he was like it aināt going to work, but me Iām here. You know what I mean by Iām here like meaning like I got no play on Yeezus on a radio. Right, no
[Zane Lowe:]
No, not entirely true by the way
[Kanye West:]
A little bit but no number one records, no Kanye West, blah blah right. So then I was going back at forth, with the company Iām in touring right now. And I said I want to perform in the round and then creatively we just couldnāt find it, so I said put me against the corner like how we did in Watch the Throne, well just do that instead. They said, well you know we just canāt technically do it, because why, technically why. Why canāt you do it? They said, look if you do that you are going to be in breach of contract, right. So basically meaning like if I didnāt sell the tickets, I would go into debt
[Zane Lowe:]
Right
[Kanye West:]
So they pushed me ā my back against the ropes, right and I said Iāll take that chance. Iāll take that chance right. So pre-order 9,000 the first day in Chicago doubling Watch the Throne, four pre-orders in one day. That made the people stood up said, we like what Kanye is saying. We like New Slaves
[Zane Lowe:]
But we do that all the time
[Kanye West:]
Yeah, but not through radio
[Zane Lowe:]
Well, yet but Iām a radio broadcaster and I love your records. I mean for meā¦
[Kanye West:]
No Iām not pin-pointing just you, Iām talking about the overall radio, there is no, āGet Luckyā on the album, and perhaps you know itās just because that just wasnāt the song, and maybe it could be that, but it sounds like thereās hits on that album to me. But it sounds like this hits that is distracted by the statements āfuck you and your corporation, yaāll n***as canāt control meā on the first single
[Zane Lowe:]
Yeah I mean this to me sounds like a radio hit where Iām coming from, but you said yourself back in the start, you made a record that was built out of frustration and then you were trying to create cracks in the pavement. I like that description more than you made an album for the radio hits. As a Kanye West fan, I donāt turn to your ā¦
[Kanye West:]
I never described it as an album for the radio hits
[Zane Lowe:]
No, no, no, what Iām saying like I preferred than you to describe it as cracks in the pavement than to have made a record just full the radio hits. You know what I mean, I want to hear where you are at
[Kanye West:]
Pause that, pause that. That song is a hit song, minus the line, āfuck you and your corporation, yaāll n***as canāt control meā on your first single
[Zane Lowe:]
I think itās a great record
[Kanye West:]
But you aināt hearing what I am saying
[Zane Lowe:]
Go ahead
[Kanye West:]
That song is a hit record minus, āfuck you and your corporation, yaāll n***as canāt control me, said on your first single. Because if you canāt control me then you canāt control him, then you canāt control him, then you canāt control him, and then the information age starts, where it occurs while I was talking about starts where Steve Jobs has left as starts. Steve Jobs made the internet usable. This is the information age, we barely scratched the surface
[Zane Lowe:]
Yeah
[Kanye West:]
There is things that are moving. The entire music industry was hit by a fucking glacier by the internet and Sean Parker, just like that glacier up in there, and Steve was like no, no, wait a second, come on, give him a little time. There wonāt be any music, if you just give it away like that. You know what Iām saying, but shit itās changing. People are going to look at this interview and say, āHey, I understand what heās talking about.ā āPeople are going to look at this interview and say, āI donāt like Kanye. Look, he looks mad. I donāt like his teeth.ā Theyāre going to say, āWhy doesnāt he just focus on music? I liked him as music.ā Theyāre going to say, āHey, I want the old Kanye, blah blah blah.ā But one thing they will do, they will play this interview in five years. They will play this interview in ten years and say, he called that, he called that, he called that, he said that was going to happen, that was going to change
[Zane Lowe:]
Youāre a futurist
[Kanye West:]
Yeah. Iām a postmodernist, as best as a career. Iām a futurist, mentally
[Zane Lowe:]
Talking about the Internet where you feature into that. Obviously, itās just a small part of the future and being a futurist. Itās not only just isnāt aspect of it. Itās changed the way everything moves, but it certainly with regards for music
[Kanye West:]
Itās the biggest part. Itās our earth. Like you remember like, that you see future movies and everything was in the sky, like it moved to the sky
[Zane Lowe:]
Thatās where it is
[Kanye West:]
Thatās the Internet
[Zane Lowe:]
Right
[Kanye West:]
Thatās what it is. Thatās our sky
[Zane Lowe:]
Yeah
[Kanye West:]
Thatās our future sky. We kind of thought we knew it was in its flying cars. We didnāt get flying cars, but we can send movies like in two seconds
[Zane Lowe:]
Yeah, itās a very good point. Itās a very point
[Kanye West:]
Yeah
[Zane Lowe:]
So you talk about it being in its early stages and it being really not even yet at a point where itās developed to its true potential. I mean, what are the key things that youāve learned in your journey. Iām fascinated to go down this road for a minute if you want
[Kanye West:]
Yeah
[Zane Lowe:]
We could talk about this because Iād love to
[Kanye West:]
Yeah
[Zane Lowe:]
But while we hearā¦
[Kanye West:]
This record is just the codes of that. Go listen to all my music. Itās the codes of self esteem. Itās the codes of who you are? If youāre a Kanye West fan, you are not a fan of me. Youāre a fan of yourself. You will believe in yourself. Iām just the expresso. Iām just the shot in the morning to get you going, to make you believe that you could overcome that situation that you are dealing with all the time
[Zane Lowe:]
Can I ask you a question about that?
[Kanye West:]
Yeah, yeah
[Zane Lowe:]
I want to talk to you about that aspect of your personality because you said that youāre not here to be ā talk about you ā youāre here to help, and I believe you, when you say that man. You know, I think, you know, youāve given us great records. Youād like to think about where things are going to appear in the future. You keep your eye on things. You want to make like you said, you want to make basketball tops for you. If youāre in high school, you want to do things right
[Kanye West:]
Yeah, yeah
[Zane Lowe:]
Do you allow yourself the time to be good to yourself? Do you allow yourself anytime for yourself at all? Do you know what I mean, I know youāve got a good self esteem and who you are, but you seem to be doing a lot for the bigger picture, for everything thatās moving around you
[Kanye West:]
Yeah
[Zane Lowe:]
Do you give yourself time?
[Kanye West:]
Yeah, itās like family time. Yeah, itās what Kim gave me
[Zane Lowe:]
Yeah
[Kanye West:]
She gave me everything. She gave me a family. She gave me a support system. She was in a powerful enough situation, where she could love me without asking me for money, which is really hard for me to find
[Zane Lowe:]
Yeah. What are the some other things you know, that youāve learned about yourself since you became a family man?
[Kanye West:]
You know, I canāt pinpoint that I donāt have the answer right on me. I got to think about a little bit and give you a really good answer
[Zane Lowe:]
Okay, cool
[Kanye West:]
Iāve got a lock and loaded amount of information that I like to express on a very wide scale that Iāll give you. But if you ask me a question like that Iāll go back and think of it maybe Iāll have an answer for you in a couple of days
[Zane Lowe:]
Okay. No problem, no problem
[Kanye West:]
Yeah. When you get other outlets, you can relax and give other outlets more breathing room, meaning like, okay. When I did the Coachella performance, I had 30 dancers on stage, modern performance artists and I had this lift, and I had the Roman wall and I had like the Celine shirt and above all this types. So when Jay told me to watch it, I always say I didnāt want to use dancers of course. And I said, thatās fine, because I was doing a fashion show in Paris. So I still had 30 girls on the stage, but you know, I still had these elements of the emotion
[Zane Lowe:]
You must have been recognized that wasnāt to through anything either I mean, that was I mean this only what throwing was about that type of performance necessarily
[Kanye West:]
Um, what Iām saying is itās about what I want to make it about. This is my world
[Zane Lowe:]
But youāre with Jay on this start. It is a collaborative project. Itās not just your vision on throwing
[Kanye West:]
Yeah. So then I would have to separate my world, but still get to my world out to the fact that I had a fashion show. You see Iām saying, so itās like right now, people could say oh, he is frustrated, He is that. He is that. No, all I need is the breakthrough. The joint venture for of my clothing, same as Stella McCartney has, same as ā I can name so many people. They have joint ventures of backing to be able to express themselves that way. Okay, bam!
I need that ā that outlet, and then, youāll get things closer to watch the throne. You get things closer to bound because obviously people ā more people are adept to like āBlood on the Leavesā and āBoundā and āWatch The Throneā, itās just more of an overall like happier vibe, right. But Jay is more realized than me meaning more of his dreams and hopes and aspirations from above has come true and hopefully, God willing, by the time Iām his age, that thing will happen for me also, and Iāll be in that place of a more zenned-out place
Even itās like I couldnāt have done this album without Rick Rubin. I had to have a Zen master come in and say, okay. This is just what weāre going to do. You donāt realize I am so frustrated, like I am so frustrated. Like I am so ā Iāve got so much, I want to give. Iāve got ideas on color palettes. Iāve got ideas on silhouettes and Iāve got a million people telling me, why I canāt do it, you know that Iām not a real designer. Iām not this. Iām not a real rapper either. Iām not a real musician either, like I donāt know how to play the piano. Like Iām a artist, I went to Art College. I went to Art College and was looked down like Iām soft because I like wore like Italian clothes
You know Iām saying, when Iām rapping in front of camera and my pant is tight, trying to spit a verse for [cam]. You know, thatās the same when Iām sitting there, you know, like sitting there at a fashion show. Like Iām there, because I appreciate Phoebe Philo; I appreciate Raf Simons. I appreciate Riccardo Tisci, and I look at them as my peers, as creative people who dedicate their entire life to making something better for the world
Let me explain what anybody that knows a artist and you know someone thatās giving that. If you know artist, there is only one thing you can say, give or ask them when you see them. There are two words āthank youā. There is no, why didnāt you do this? Yo, I want that, whatās up ā that. No. We dedicate our entire life to making our current time in civilization better to adding something to the culture, and there is only two words that you can say, āthank youā
[Zane Lowe:]
Give us an insight to the fashion world though, what youāve been going through there with that whole experience. The biggest challenge youāve had clearly to get your vision across?
[Kanye West:]
Yeah
[Zane Lowe:]
Yeah
[Kanye West:]
Well, be helping me
[Zane Lowe:]
Is that partly and please donāt take this the wrong way I just mean this in for the process of conversation. Is that partly do you think because some of the people who are making fashion look at you and they go well, you say it yourself they dedicate their whole lives to one thing, you are exceptionally successful and gifted in this area. To move into the area, itās understandable, there is a human aspect of suspicion involved there because they are like āwell, hang on a minute, this is our lifeā. So what is it you are trying to achieve there? Do you think it plays a part of that whatās going on do you think?
[Kanye West:]
Iāve dedicated the past 10 years of my life to this. I spent 80% of my time working on this, and 20% of my time working on music. Why do you think this song N***as In Paris is called N***as In Paris, because N***as was in Paris, because I had a office and a small courtyard across the street from Colette, where I couldnāt even find a good pattern cutter. Thatās why we were in Paris
I put in the 10,000 hours. Iāve got a very particular, specific take on menās footwear. No one can say I cannot design or understand how to design, a guyās sneaker. When I was in fourth grade, I was drawing Jordans, when my mama couldnāt afford them. I was drawing those Jordans, getting kicked out of class for drawing them
And when I get that opportunity to work with Nike, I went to that emotional space and place of my life and said, what was it about that? What were the queues that I can add when I make the Yeezyās. You know, I donāt have to do interviews. And I wasnāt the one rapper that had the opportunity to do a shoe at Nike for no reason
It means, it has to be another step. It means, it has to keep going. People didnāt love the Yeezyās the way they did for no reason. Picture this, for me to do the Yeezyās and not have a joint venture backing deal with Nike, the next day would have been like if I made āJesus Walksā, I was never allowed to make a album. If Drake made his first mix tape and was never allowed to be signed, if 2 Chainz only have 1:16 and then, people say, why you mad? Do you know how many 60s 2 Chainz had in them? He did 100 features in one year, 100
[Zane Lowe:]
Yeah
[Kanye West:]
100ā¦
[Zane Lowe:]
Okay, so letās ā¦
[Kanye West:]
ā¦features
[Zane Lowe:]
Letās get to the solution Kanye, letās work out. How are you going to kick that door in as well? How are you going to get in to that world in youāre way, in your terms?
[Kanye West:]
Iām not trying to get into that world. Iām trying to make a higher level of product for the real world because people say life is unfair and unless youāre Kanye West, you know, this pretty girl that dates this soccer player, or your parents had money, you donāt get to wear Versace all the time. And you hear it, we love Versace, Versace, Versace, Versace, Versace, Versace. We love Versace. Versace is the greatest designer of all time. We love Versace. But unless you set a point or you rap so good, and knock down so many doors to produce so much shit, that you was able to actually get Dame Dash to give you a record deal because he was a producer, not because he liked your raps because he was a producer
This because Dame knew it was up and he was downtown with the models and the artist and all that say yo, look at you, this kid got some talent. You are not affording Versace. The creators they want to connect with people. These artists, the clothing is on as they want to connect with people the same way that music gets to connect with people. But the fab, the cost of silk is too expensive and they wonāt lower their quality level. So I can spend 2 million on a record and give it out at a democratic ā in a democratic way. They could spend all their time making the greatest dress in the world, and itās just impossible to hand-make that many
Let me explain to you what a fashion office is like, right. Sometimes if you are working on a album once it gets down to the last moment, there is two or three people in the studio, a engineer, a manager, the artist, a label guy; saying the masters to do tomorrow. Okay, they do a day after tomorrow but letās get them in. It narrows down to that
At a fashion office, youāve had people who have dedicated their entire life to this that are working 12 people 15, 20 people interns coming in, working till 4 a.m. that night slaving to be able to put that thing on the run way pending things right before they go out, all 20 collections everyday for fashion month. That is the level of dedication heart and soul that goes into that. But what happens is for real people, the democratic public ā the people who have a normal amount of money that work everyday, that like nice things, weāll just make these same cuts well by and provide this at a democratic cost. The only thing about it thatās different than Nike and Apple is there is never a time when someone can walk in with some non-Nikes and you feel less in yourself
[Zane Lowe:]
Right
[Kanye West:]
You still feel like the greatest version of youā¦
[Zane Lowe:]
Right
[Kanye West:]
ā¦when you have those Nikes on, right? But you can have on a ZARA pant, right?
[Zane Lowe:]
Right
[Kanye West:]
And a girl walks in with the Celine version, and you feel like shit. That is the problem. That is the problem
[Zane Lowe:]
I mean, obviously not my problem because I live like aā¦
[Kanye West:]
Yeah
[Zane Lowe:]
I mean, I dress the same way I do it all the 12ā¦
[Kanye West:]
But Iām talking about, Iām talkinā about us, the new slaves, the people who love fashion. Iām talking about us, you know? Because Iām a slave to it. I love it
[Zane Lowe:]
Oh, dude, I can tell likeā¦
[Kanye West:]
I love it!
[Zane Lowe:]
Yeah
[Kanye West:]
I love it since age five, when my mama brought me to a discount fur spot. And she asked me what I like? Everything I liked was too expensive for us. Thatās five years old. I went to my grandfatherās funeral like three weeks back, and my cousin that works with me, stood up and he told the story about you know, how his mother was a tailor, so he won best dress. I worn best dress in the high school too. A bunch of people in the lineage and my family worn best dress. But his mother was a tailor right? His mother was a tailor, a black, an African-American tailor
My grandfather was a hustler. He used to take old vintage furniture and reupholster it. Then he had a store and he sold all of these different items that he thought would be good for people. Do you know how many times I sat with people and said, āHey, I wanna make a store!ā And he said, āHow could you make a store? Blah, blah, blah⦠Itās in my code. Itās in my code! Have you all ever seen Wreck-It Ralph?ā
[Zane Lowe:]
Yeah
[Kanye West:]
Remember, remember how that girl in there, the people that was raising here wereā¦
[Zane Lowe:]
Glitch
[Kanye West:]
Yeah, she was the glitch
[Zane Lowe:]
Yeah
[Kanye West:]
You telling me they donāt look at me like Iām the motherfucking glitch? You telling me people donāt look at Kanye West like the Glitch? Right now. And she was on the side of the video game, the whole time! Itās in my code. Itās in my code
[Zane Lowe:]
I mean, I watch what happens when you get on the mic or you get on stage, and you say what you want to say, and I donāt want to refer this back to you comment about the glitch, right. And I watch people, you know, I see what some people say in comments and whatever after these things get posted, and I go, all right, those are the people that think youāre the glitch
[Kanye West:]
Yeah, they broke Vanellopeās car!
[Zane Lowe:]
But, but, butā¦
[Kanye West:]
Vanellope Von Schweetz, they broke her car!
[Zane Lowe:]
Yeah
[Kanye West:]
Like
[Zane Lowe:]
But there is also a lot of people in the audience that love what you have to say, love hearing what you have to say. You knowā¦
[Kanye West:]
Yeah
[Zane Lowe:]
ā¦appreciate what you have to say
[Kanye West:]
Yeah
[Zane Lowe:]
Do you focus on them as well?
[Kanye West:]
Yeah, 100%. But Iām doing it for everyone. Iām doing it for the people who donāt appreciate it because theyāll appreciate it later, and of course, Iām doing it for the people who appreciate it. If no one appreciate it, I know, there is couple of people up there to appreciate it
[Zane Lowe:]
For sure. I appreciate it
[Kanye West:]
So and thank you very much. And then people will say your voice was so strong, why are you so focused on just clothing or why would you focus on just that award show or why will you focus on that? The same reason why I sat there and focused on that Otis beat
You know people didnāt like HAM. And Miami Heat was losing and Iām in the Mercer and I literally write on the screen who is watching the Thrones, and show a picture of the brownie stuff. And Iād say I got to watch up Thrones and make Odes, right and say this I know āN***as in Parisā doesnāt work without Odes. You have to bring the flowers to the door first and we delivered Odes and then we did this
So wait a second. Thatās just a step towards this, because people could say, what do you mean, you want to help the world and you are so concerned about fashion. Itās illegal to be naked. Itās not illegal to not listen to music. That is a very high opinion to have. That is something that is extremely important. Shoes. You put on shoes everyday. You walking down the street with no shoes, somebody might think thereās something wrong with you
[Zane Lowe:]
Sure
[Kanye West:]
Youāre walking down the street without a headphones, itās like, āOh whatās up? How you are doing today? No headphones today? Cool! No music todayā. What you did, you know. No shoes? āLook, man. Whatās going on?
[Zane Lowe:]
Yeah
[Kanye West:]
Youāre having problems with the family?ā
[Zane Lowe:]
Is he okay?
[Kanye West:]
Wear your socks, at least
[Zane Lowe:]
Yeah. Sandals
[Kanye West:]
Sandals. Yeah
[Zane Lowe:]
Flip-flops, very rarely
[Kanye West:]
Flip-flops
[Zane Lowe:]
Very rarely
[Kanye West:]
Sandals with socks. Keep it gangster
[Zane Lowe:]
I mean. Iām from New Zealand flip-flops are far more standing
[Kanye West:]
Yeah, exactly. But not for black dudes, though. No flip-flops for black dudes. I donāt care where you at. I donāt care where you at. No flip-flop for black dudes. Wear some hot-ass Jordans on a beach
[Zane Lowe:]
Dude! Weāve covered some stuff
[Kanye West:]
What about you?
[Zane Lowe:]
Now can you do me a favor, like my brain is just like. I walked into his house, two more of the guys there sipping in, man I hope Iāll learn some stuff today, my god I have no idea, but would you indulge in me for five or 10 minutes and would you let me just geek out on a music label, because you know me
[Kanye West:]
Yeah
[Zane Lowe:]
I love hearing what you have to say, some of it I love, some of it upsets me, because as a fan I think you are too out on yourself but thatās you, thatās who you are, thatās not for me to say
[Kanye West:]
Yeah
[Zane Lowe:]
Butā¦
[Kanye West:]
What points do you think Iām hard on myself?
[Zane Lowe:]
Well I think you expect a huge amount of yourself on every level, as well you should and I think that you expect a huge amount of everybody else to understand your motives at all times
[Kanye West:]
Oh no, I donāt expect to be understood at all
[Zane Lowe:]
Okay, but
[Kanye West:]
Like I donāt expect to be ā I think that thereās people who are wired by their parents to understand what Iām saying
[Zane Lowe:]
Sure
[Kanye West:]
And thereās people who are wired by their parents to reject what Iām saying, but that doesnāt mean that after I make what Iām saying, that they wonāt use it, because they will
And Iām just saying āI want to make things, I want to be able to make things and Iām not going to be able to make things that I can call Kanye West, just by making T-Shirts, at a certain point it has to connect; āI would not be here if it was not for a Roc a Fella chain
If it wasnāt for Jay Zās blessing and his co-sign and his protection when I was in New York City, dolo I would not be here in the way that I am. Through the category of the drug dealer filled rap game, me as Kanye West, a young revolutionary coming out of Chicago, would have not made it as far without Jay Z being my big brother and watching my back at all times
And this new place that Iām going to and what I want to do it has to be someone that says because Iām ā the thing is Iām speaking to everybody, but Iām also speaking and sending queues to the right people to say, ācome and help me, help everybody else, you will win with meā you will win
[Zane Lowe:]
Lets talk about the production side of things, because youāve opened the door to collaboration in a big way on this record and even though you produced every song on this record youāve been very, very open to the idea of working with all sorts of very talented individuals
[Kanye West:]
Yeah
[Zane Lowe:]
Have you enjoyed that aspect of it, I mean in the past you know it hasnāt necessarily been that much of a group mentality in making records
[Kanye West:]
Itās the only way I can do it at this point. I canāt do it by myself, I canāt, like I wonāt, it is ā I have no interest in sitting down in the studio by myself and making a track. When I made āOvernight Celebrity,ā which is great, like; I sat down there by myself and made it. And thereās people like, āYeah, thatās the answer, make the music by yourself again āYe, we want the old āYe.ā But ā No, I donāt feel like doing that
[Zane Lowe:]
Yeah
[Kanye West:]
I want to utilize the best resources that we have and have a conversation, as you see I would rather have a conversation
[Zane Lowe:]
Was āThroneā a turning point for that, because I felt I would āThroneā, there was a freedom there that didnāt necessarily feel like you were carrying the whole thing on your own, and also you are free to be an MC, to be upfront and be a part of that process with Jay and it wasnāt like oh Kanye the producer rapper or the whole encompassing thing. Did that began around that time?
[Kanye West:]
Yeah around it ā but Dark Fantasy though. When we sowed that fabric so tight you know like for eight, nine months Pete Rock, and No I.D., and Q-tip everyone coming down to Hawaii, Nicki Minaj, Rick Ross, we like textured ā and Jeff Bhasker we created those textures collectively, you know like I would be eating breakfast with Ross in the morning, and just come up with a line and stuff and we all go play ball and Naz would come out there and play ball with me and Common and stuff, come up with another line, then go there and then Virgil will have a idea we say that and [Darcie] has a idea and like these are really great people that came together to make that and where I ā and I learned that process a bit from working on [close], because its that communal process a lot of times
[Zane Lowe:]
You canāt do it all on your own
[Kanye West:]
Yeah
[Zane Lowe:]
You canāt handle everything on your own
[Kanye West:]
Hey how about us as a people, we canāt do it on our own
[Zane Lowe:]
Thatās true
[Kanye West:]
We have to understand that weāre not each otherās enemy. We have to stop discriminating against each other due to class and due to race and due to location or financial position. We have to say āwow that is the best version, lets use it, lets bring it, lets bring it to light, lets move forward, lets push forward as a civilizationā because we are so jacked up on our own egos and so misguided by mainstream marketing, we donāt know what the fuck is real, we would be out again to a fight, this quick for the dumbest reason, definitely something thatās like racially, there is a gender set, you know its like, you know which is like we are pitted against each other, we are mentally not in a place to be accepting, to not be jealous and that ā part of that jealousy and that frustration that goes across an entire globe is due to some of these other high corporation level limitations, everybody is being served a nasty lunch food. Like you know you heard the word minimalism a lot on this project
[Zane Lowe:]
Yes of course
[Kanye West:]
Even this is like, [Kanye sings:] you gave us what you need, may not be what you want, give us what we need to proceed
[Zane Lowe:]
Not what we necessarily want, because we canāt be trusted to a certain extent, you know
[Kanye West:]
Yeah, because we donāt have the education
[Zane Lowe:]
Yeah
[Kanye West:]
To know what to want
[Zane Lowe:]
Yeah, yeah
[Kanye West:]
We donāt know what to want, this is what I was telling that writer in NW [ph] Iām learning what I want, this is the reason why Iām working at five architects in a time, but that time that Iām spending in a bad apartment, I canāt get that back, and that education that I could get from working on it is priceless, and there is very few people that are in the position to educate themselves as much as I can educate myself. For me its constant information intake, I hang around architects mostly
[Zane Lowe:]
Yeah I want to talk about that side of things, because I know that thatās how you know that was ā thatās been talked about in relation to this record as well and that blows my mind, I mean for me I try and connect the dots to my favorite records as much as I can
[Kanye West:]
Yeah
[Zane Lowe:]
But I need you to help me connect the dots and how architecture and how certain type of design that you surrounded yourself with Walston Paris has somehow manifested itself into this and how ā they are not separate things
[Kanye West:]
Yeah, it all parallels, its like you know synesthesia seeing sounds, it all parallels. People will tell you this business inst like this business, itās the same people every where you go, the same type of guy you might meet in Hollywood, you might meet that same type of character in fashion, you might meet that same type of character in music
You got some straight up people to do it for the love and they want to promote it, its all about that, you got some people thatās trying to like make their way, its like ā lets just say its 5%, 10%, or 85%ers,and its like thereās the 10%ers, the media. For the most part, the 85%ers donāt really know what it is. And the 5%ers that know what it is canāt get it past the 10%ers
So this alone would be a beak, this is a jump past, this going to get taken off the internet quick. [*sounds*] Send the paparazzi at him, send the paparazzi at him lets do that get him locked up blah, blah, blah. Thatās whatās going to happen. And paparazzi is going to come by me, Iām just standing like, I know what you are trying to do right now sir, I know exactly what you are trying to do, somebody sent you at me, somebody is trying to set me up. Somebody is trying to shut me up
[Zane Lowe:]
You know people will look at what is being going on with you and the cameras, thatās been going on with other people for a long time as well and I need you to help people who donāt live your life and look at those magazines and there is millions and millions of people that do ā and look at those pictures who donāt understand what it is that you go through in that situation, what is it from your perspective, you have got this platform, you have used this to talk about a bunch of things, so use it now to explain to them why is it ā what is it, what is it like to go through that?
[Kanye West:]
Okay, for me first of all Dopeness is what I like the most, Dopeness ā People who want to make things as dope as possible and by default make money from it
The thing I like the least are people who only want to make money from things whether theyāre dope or not and especially making money at making things as least dope as possible
Photography used to be a sexy profession, It was like being a ball player, like a rapper or like a venture capitalist or something like that, right it was they used to get all the girls and everything, like a photographer ā you go for a photographer studio like that, they completely changed what photography is supposed to mean, same is how there is like plenty of musicians that have sold the fuck out and change like the art and music where people donāt hold that to the highest level of genius anymore, meaning like, if thereās a high level artist like visual artist or a high level clothing artist, theyāll be held at a higher level of genius points than a musician, because the things in music that are selling the most are the least inspired for the most part and the least genius. So, it confuses things. So I take that to paparazzi it confuses it, Paparazzi is necessary, not even a necessary evil, It just needs to be legalized. Meaning at a certain point, thereās cutoff switches, you know what time it is, you know what is that. Like Paparazzi currently like isā¦
[Zane Lowe:]
Understand, give it rules, give it boundaries
[Kanye West:]
Yeah and obviously like publishing, like because publishing, like because theyāre selling our image. And theyāre selling it in a bad way, and if ā
[Zane Lowe:]
But let me get this straight, what is offending you more, the fact they are selling your image or the fact they are selling your image in a bad way, in a bad way?
[Kanye West:]
In a bad way, a bad way and Iām not getting paid for it
[Zane Lowe:] Right, there you go
[Kanye West:]
So itās like the dopeness which makes the money, I want the dopeness and the money
[Zane Lowe:]
Yeah
[Kanye West:]
Iām changing things for my daughter. Iām going to tell my daughter, by the time she understands what it was, Man, me and your mother were in a completely different situation than youāre in. At that time, Paparazzi wasnāt legal, people could take pictures, people could climb over your fence, people could do that you wouldnāt even get paid for it. You see all these checks that youāre getting at age six, because people taking your picture? You donāt have to worry about thing, a thing ever again just because people want to take your picture, like and I made that happen, Lowe. Thatās what Iām going to tell her
[Zane Lowe:]
So [touring] to be done, oh I want to talk to you about control, I want talk to you about the verse and control. About Kendrick verse and āControlā. Because obviously he credited you, he put you at the table where he rightfully should be with the M&Ms and the Jay Zās, he put you on that side of the equation and then and then raddled off the list and I thought okay its great you deserved to be at the table, but 10 years ago if you hadnāt been at the table and you had been on his list, how do you think you would have reacted, would you have been appreciative of his message or would you have come out swinging do you think and written a response?
[Kanye West:]
Yeah I donāt diss records
[Zane Lowe:]
Yeah, yeah. You are looking forward to two with him; I mean thatās an incredible double bill
[Kanye West:]
Yeah its 100%, its 100%. Iām just looking forward to the opportunity to speak to this brother as much as possible. That ā those conversations is going to be more than everything I even say it right here. Because that he is one of our future messengers and Iām going to give him them jewels
[Zane Lowe:]
Letās talk about this track here, which was the first track that we were given off this album to play on the radio which we did. He said no singles, but we ran with this one early and we proven to be right. So just talk about this track here and who you worked with, you worked with Daft Punk on this in part, and how the song came together?
[Kanye West:]
Daft had the drums, and I then just took the reck and I just started, both this song, āI Am a Godā and this song were made after Hedi Slimane didnāt let me into his first Saint Laurent show, but it wasnāt that ā he wanted me to go, but he just told me I couldnāt go to any other shows other than that
[Zane Lowe:]
Right, right, right, right
[Kanye West:]
And I was like, wait a second. I canāt go? Youāre not telling no editor they canāt go to any of these shows. Iām not your boy you can control me in some way. So I made ā off of that, I went into the studio with the producers that made the music for his show and made āI Am a Godā and āBlack Skinhead.ā
[Zane Lowe:]
That was your reaction to that situation again
[Kanye West:]
That was my reaction
[Zane Lowe:]
That was the aspect of frustration you talked about thatās important to this record
[Kanye West:]
Yes
[Zane Lowe:]
Yeah right on. I mean just talking about another track on here as well. New Slaves which is one of my favorite songs on the record and you know its just as far as beats go its just remarkable, before you even get stuck into the subject matter which is a whole other level. I mean you know you are talking about the materialism, about communist, about corporations and everything else, but at the same time you know there is a blurred line between whether or not you are part of it, whether you are objecting to it or where it stands. I mean just give us some insight into what this song is
[Kanye West:]
Iām 100% a part of it, Iām 100% in it, and 100% I want to over come it, sometimes Iām the communicator of it, some times Iām the maker of it, some times Iām the consumer of it, Iām in it, Iām in the game. But for me ā yeah I say I am a New Slave, you could be a slave to a lot of things
At this point obviously Iām a slave to my passion; Iām a slave to my mission. Itās funny; you drive in a Maybach past a homeless person and you ask Whoās more free? You could be trapped to your possessions. You got to do this next deal because you got to do this with your house and you got to get this car and you got to keep up, everybody stay next to you last name is Jones, and you trying to keep up with all of them. And thatās what itās like to be a celebrity a lot times
Especially every rap is about how much money you make how many spends you get, how many cars you got, what house you get, you know what house A Rock got. We like you know Rappers and musicians trying to compete with ball players with way bigger contracts. Meanwhile, the music is the Titanic thatās going down like this and everybody from the execs to the musicians are running around trying to see how they could still keep that certain house level, that certain car level that certain thing ā up
And of course for me Iām blessed and Iām blessed and Iām privileged because I made such a powerful impact that I can make a certain amount on tour. But also Iām blessed and cursed by my level of education, you know to be a visionary, all you have to do is make decisions based off of your eyes instead of your ears and your memory. I mean so at the moment of the MTV awards, I made that decision based off of my eyes: I was like, thatās not correct, that is invalid, completely invalid. And everybody else donāt move, thatās off they ears. Oh, he going to get in trouble. Thatās off they memory. They donāt move. Theyāre slaved, theyāre slave to what could possibly happen, we are constantly slaved, there is glass ceilings, there is glass fences, there is invisible walls, donāt think I have not been many aā times singing like five heart beats in Paris, I have been up there singing, you want to diss one of my outfits, donāt want to say that, donāt want to like try to diss one of my girlfriends outfits blah, blah
We are just singing, yāall sing aintcha? we can come out of that totally Yea we sing aintcha? Sing something here. And what do we sing? We sing Pyrex, we sing Beentrill, we sing Snapbacks, we sing Yeezus but we want to sing that Nike, we want that clean water, I tasted and I see what it is like, we want to sing Louis Vuitton, we want to sing on a Gucci level, we want to sing as high as we could when we have Pyramids, we donāt want to just have a little print on the back of our jacket that costs $2000, making us feel like a king again for a day
We donāt want to just have jewelry thatās just trying to make us feel good, we want to be good. Thatās creation, thatās that thing that people slave over. Thatās that thing that people are slaves to. Thatās that thing that Iām a slave to. Thatās passion, Thatās that thing where you can hold it. Thatās that dreaming of a new pair of Jordans. Thatās the process of opening up a Nike box. That thing that Steve gave us when you open up your new iPhone and you got the iPhone5 whether you stood in line for it or whatever it is you did or stuff, but you open it up, and you got this new product
Thatās that Transformers in a box that you open up for Christmas or that new TurboGrafx16 or Sega Genesis or Amiga computer or a 3DO or a Nintendo or itās like when you just open that packaging. The process of the packaging, thatās that porno mag that drug addict bought for you when you was 14 that was in that package and you figured out how to pay that drug dealer before there was internet to buy you ā and you open up that and you know you are going to make 5 of those your girlfriend all weekend. Thatās why Iām on that runway, until Iām at the end of it
[Zane Lowe:]
[ ] Good luck
[Kanye West:]
Thanks
[Zane Lowe:]
All right, thank you crew
[Kanye West:]
Thank you
[Zane Lowe:]
Oh my god, that was the most intense fucking interview in my life
[Kanye West:]
Not since Pac right?