Skip to content
  • Nick Cave has been singing about mortality for decades, and...

    Carl Court / Getty-AFP

    Nick Cave has been singing about mortality for decades, and he's really good at it. Whether the narratives are biblical or pulpy, the victims innocents or death row convicts, the circumstances comprehensible or cruelly random, Cave's songs are on intimate terms with the infinite ways a life can be extinguished. And yet, "Skeleton Tree", his latest album with his estimable band, the Bad Seeds, is a relatively concise song cycle shadowed by death that feels different than all the rest. Read the full review.

  • On "22, A Million," Justin Vernon reimagines his music from...

    AP

    On "22, A Million," Justin Vernon reimagines his music from the bottom up by letting technology — synthesizers, treated vocals, electronic sound effects — dictate. The songs retain their melancholy cast, but now must fight for air beneath static and noise. Read the full review.

  • The new album embraces her individuality more explicitly than ever,...

    Jean-Baptiste Lacroix, AFP/Getty Images

    The new album embraces her individuality more explicitly than ever, both more autobiographical and more politically and socially direct than anything she'd recorded previously. It's a rawer, less elaborate work than its predecessors, yet still hugely ambitious. Read the review

  • Kendrick Lamar's "Untitled, Unmastered" is presented as an unfinished work,...

    Matt Sayles/Invision/AP

    Kendrick Lamar's "Untitled, Unmastered" is presented as an unfinished work, though it rarely sounds like one. Read the review.

  • Woody introduces the gang to a homemade spork toy with...

    Pixar / AP

    Woody introduces the gang to a homemade spork toy with self-esteem issues in "Toy Story 4."  Read the review.

  • "Lemonade" is more than just a play for pop supremacy....

    Lawrence K. Ho / Los Angeles Times

    "Lemonade" is more than just a play for pop supremacy. It's the work of an artist who is trying to get to know herself better, for better or worse, and letting the listeners/viewers in on the sometimes brutal self-interrogation. Read the full review.

  • On her seventh studio album, "Golden Hour" (MCA Nashville), the...

    John Konstantaras / Chicago Tribune

    On her seventh studio album, "Golden Hour" (MCA Nashville), the singer-songwriter doesn't get hung up on genre. She's made a style-hopping pop album that infuses her songs with a relaxed spaciousness while muting, but not ignoring, her country roots. Read the review

  • Now "Schmilco" (dBpm Records) arrives, a product of the same...

    Nuccio DiNuzzo/Chicago Tribune

    Now "Schmilco" (dBpm Records) arrives, a product of the same recording sessions that produced "Star Wars" but a much different album. Though it's ostensibly quieter and less jarring than its predecessor, it presents its own radical take on the song-based, folk and country-tinged side of the band. Read the full review.

  • "Blonde" is a critique of materialism with Frank Ocean employing...

    Jordan Strauss / AP

    "Blonde" is a critique of materialism with Frank Ocean employing two distinct voices, like characters in a play, a recurring theme throughout the album and perhaps its finest sonic achievement. A party spirals out of control, the music rich but low key, a melange of organ and hovering synthesizers. Ocean uses distorting devices on his voice to add emotional texture and to enhance and sharpen the characters he briefly embodies. The upshot: They're all little slices of Ocean's personality with a role to play and they each sound distinct. Read the full review.

  • Warpaint's unerring feel for gauzy hooks and slinky arrangements germinated...

    Chris Sweda / Chicago Tribune

    Warpaint's unerring feel for gauzy hooks and slinky arrangements germinated over a decade and flourished on the quartet's excellent 2014 self-titled album. But the band has always nudged its arrangements onto the dance floor — subtly on record, more overtly on stage — and "Heads Up" (Rough Trade) gives the group's inner disco ball a few extra spins. Read the review.

  • A grown-up Christopher Robin returns to the Hundred Acre Wood...

    Laurie Sparham / AP

    A grown-up Christopher Robin returns to the Hundred Acre Wood and his best friend Winnie the Pooh. Read the review.

  • Not many albums could survive Ed Sheeran performing reggae, but...

    AP

    Not many albums could survive Ed Sheeran performing reggae, but Pharrell Williams always took chances — not all of them successful — in N.E.R.D.Despite the Sheeran gaffe, "No One Ever Really Dies," the band's first album in seven years, is a typically diverse, trippy ride from the group that established Williams' career as a performer in the early 2000s alongside Chad Hugo and Shay Haley. Read the full review.

  • An Atlanta teenager (Amandla Stenberg) deals with the death of...

    Erika Doss / AP

    An Atlanta teenager (Amandla Stenberg) deals with the death of her friend in "The Hate U Give," director George Tillman Jr.'s fine adaptation of the best-selling young adult novel.  Read the review.

  • Risk-prone 13-year-old Stevie (Sunny Suljic, left) shares some of his...

    Tobin Yelland / AP

    Risk-prone 13-year-old Stevie (Sunny Suljic, left) shares some of his angst with one of the local LA skateboarding idols, Ray (Na-Kel Smith), in writer-director Jonah Hill's "Mid90s." Read the review.

  • Reunited for a family wedding, former lovers played by Penelope...

    Teresa Isasi / AP

    Reunited for a family wedding, former lovers played by Penelope Cruz and Javier Bardem find themselves embroiled in a kidnapping in "Everybody Knows," directed by Asghar Farhadi. Read the review.

  • "Black America Again" (ARTium/Def Jam) arrives as a one of...

    Nuccio DiNuzzo / Chicago Tribune

    "Black America Again" (ARTium/Def Jam) arrives as a one of the year's most potent protest albums. The album sags midway through with a handful of lightweight love songs, but finishes with some of its most emotionally resounding tracks: the "Glory"-like plea for redemption "Rain" with Legend, the celebration of family that is "Little Chicago Boy," and the staggering "Letter to the Free." Read the review.

  • "Love & Hate" shows Kiwanuka breaking out of that stylistic...

    AP

    "Love & Hate" shows Kiwanuka breaking out of that stylistic box. His core remains intact: a grainy, world-weary voice contemplating troubled times in intimate musical settings. The album announces its more ambitious intentions from the outset, with the trembling strings, episodic piano chords and wordless vocals of the 10-minute "Cold Little Heart." It's a striking, if atypical, approach to reintroducing himself to his audience — a five-minute preamble before Kiwanuka begins to sing. Read the full review.

  • A tropical island boat captain (Matthew McConaughey) and his much-abused...

    Graham Bartholomew / AP

    A tropical island boat captain (Matthew McConaughey) and his much-abused ex-wife (Anne Hathaway) enter a vortex of rough justice and fancy riddles in "Serenity." Read the review.

  • Penniless, driven, the Dutch painter Vincent van Gogh (Willem Dafoe)...

    CBS Films/Lily Gavin

    Penniless, driven, the Dutch painter Vincent van Gogh (Willem Dafoe) regards his next canvas subject in "At Eternity's Gate," directed by visual artist and filmmaker Julian Schnabel. Read the review.

  • Isabelle Huppert and Chloe Grace Moretz star in the thriller...

    Jonathan Hession / AP

    Isabelle Huppert and Chloe Grace Moretz star in the thriller "Greta." Read the review.

  • Sound often says it all in Drake's world, but "Views"...

    Frank Gunn / The Canadian Press

    Sound often says it all in Drake's world, but "Views" plays in a narrow range. The trademark hovering synths and barely-there percussion edge out most of the hooks, in favor of long fades and enervated tempos that start to drag about halfway through this slow-moving album. Read the review.

  • Elton John (Taron Egerton) lays down a track for his...

    David Appleby / AP

    Elton John (Taron Egerton) lays down a track for his express train to super-stardom in "Rocketman." The musical biopic co-stars Jamie Bell as lyricist Bernie Taupin. Read the review.

  • Childhood friends and uneasy lovers played by Yoo Ah-in (left)...

    WellGo USA

    Childhood friends and uneasy lovers played by Yoo Ah-in (left) and Jeon Jong-seo (center) find their lives disrupted by a mysterious man of means (Steven Yeung, right) in "Burning." Read the review.

  • Vanellope von Schweetz (voiced by Sarah Silverman) and Ralph (John...

    AP

    Vanellope von Schweetz (voiced by Sarah Silverman) and Ralph (John C. Reilly) zip around the web in a mad dash to save Vanellope's arcade game, "Sugar Rush," in this wild sequel to the 2012 "Wreck-It Ralph." Read the review.

  • In contrast, "Junk" (Mute"), M83's seventh studio album, sounds chintzy...

    Armando L. Sanchez / Chicago Tribune

    In contrast, "Junk" (Mute"), M83's seventh studio album, sounds chintzy — a bubble-gum snyth-pop album that indulges Gonzalez's love of decades-old TV soundtracks, hair-metal guitar solos and kitschy pop songs. Read the full review.

  • Unburdened by Batman and Superman, the DC Comics realm turns...

    Steve Wilkie / AP

    Unburdened by Batman and Superman, the DC Comics realm turns in a not-bad origin story buoyed by Zachary Levi as the superhero version of 15-year-old Billy Batson (Asher Angel). Read the review.

  • Cystic fibrosis patients Stella (Haley Lu Richardson) and Will (Cole...

    Patti Perret/CBS Films

    Cystic fibrosis patients Stella (Haley Lu Richardson) and Will (Cole Sprouse) negotiate a tricky mutual attraction in "Five Feet Apart," directed by Justin Baldoni.  Read the review.

  • Stephan James and KiKi Layne play Fonny and Tish, expectant...

    Tatum Mangus / AP

    Stephan James and KiKi Layne play Fonny and Tish, expectant parents in 1970s Harlem in the new James Baldwin adaptation "If Beale Street Could Talk."  Read the review.

  • This image released by Fox Searchlight Films shows Olivia Colman...

    Atsushi Nishijima / AP

    This image released by Fox Searchlight Films shows Olivia Colman in a scene from the film "The Favourite." (Atsushi Nishijima/Fox Searchlight Films via AP)

  • A late-night TV talk show host (Emma Thompson) faces falling...

    Emily Aragones / AP

    A late-night TV talk show host (Emma Thompson) faces falling ratings, personal crises and a blindingly white-male writers' room in "Late Night," co-starring and written by Mindy Kaling. Read the review.

  • "Everything Now" is a tighter but not better album. The...

    AP

    "Everything Now" is a tighter but not better album. The heavyweight arena anthems of Arcade Fire's 2004 debut, "Funeral," are long gone, replaced by brooding lyrics encased in lighter music. Read the review.

  • "American Dream" is a breakup album of sorts but not...

    Chris Sweda / Chicago Tribune

    "American Dream" is a breakup album of sorts but not in the traditional sense. This is about breakups with youth, the past, and the heroes and villains that populated it. It underlines the notion of breaking up as just a step away from letting go — of friends, family, relevance. Read the review.

  • A high-powered ad agency executive (Tika Sumpter, right) takes in...

    Chip Bergmann / AP

    A high-powered ad agency executive (Tika Sumpter, right) takes in her ex-con sister (Tiffany Haddish, center) in "Nobody's Fool."  Read the review.

  • Washington D.C. power brokers Dick Cheney (Christian Bale) and Lynne...

    Matt Kennedy / AP

    Washington D.C. power brokers Dick Cheney (Christian Bale) and Lynne Cheney have a date with destiny in Adam McKay's "Vice," co-starring Steve Carell as Donald Rumsfeld.  Read the review. Nomainted for: Best Picture, Best Actor for Christian Bale, Best Supporting Actor for Sam Rockwell, Best Supporting Actress for Amy Adams, Best Director for Adam McKay, Best Original Screenplay, Best Film Editing,

  • "Ye" isn't so much a musical statement as a 23-minute,...

    Chris Sweda / Chicago Tribune

    "Ye" isn't so much a musical statement as a 23-minute, seven-track therapy session. Read the review

  • Queen Anne's (Olivia Colman) court wrestles with the question of...

    Atsushi Nishijima / AP

    Queen Anne's (Olivia Colman) court wrestles with the question of how to finance a war with France. Lady Sarah (Rachel Weisz), the Duchess of Marlborough, uses her wits, her body and the queen's bed to coerce Anne into raising taxes on the citizenry in order to keep the off-screen battle going. Then the unexpected arrival of her country cousin, Abigail (Emma Stone), a noblewoman fallen on hard times. A dab hand with medicinal herbs, Abigail quickly rises above servant status to become the queen's new favorite. Game on! Read the review. Nomainted for: Best Picture, Best Actress for Olivia Colman, Best Supporting Actress for Emma Stone and Rachel Weisz, Best Director for Yorgos Lanthimos, Best Original Screenplay, Best Cinematography, Best Film Editing, Best Production Design, Best Costume Design,

  • "Peace Trail" — Neil Young's second album this year and...

    AP

    "Peace Trail" — Neil Young's second album this year and sixth since 2014 — is occasionally fascinating. It's also not very good, a release that surely would've benefited from a bit more time and consideration, which might have given Young's ad hoc band — drummer Jim Keltner and bassist Paul Bushnell — a chance to actually learn the songs. But the four-day recording session sounds like a getting-to-know-you warmup instead of a finished product. Read the full review.

  • Genie (Will Smith, right) explains the three-wishes thing to the...

    Daniel Smith / AP

    Genie (Will Smith, right) explains the three-wishes thing to the title character (Mena Massoud) in Disney's "Aladdin," director Guy Ritchie's live-action remake of the 1992 animated feature. Read the review.

  • On their new album, "Existentialism," the Mekons turn their audience...

    Armando L. Sanchez / Chicago Tribune

    On their new album, "Existentialism," the Mekons turn their audience and the recording space into accomplices for the band's high-wire act. Read the full review.

  • Capping the trilogy started with "Unbreakable" (2000) and the surprise...

    Jessica Kourkounis / AP

    Capping the trilogy started with "Unbreakable" (2000) and the surprise hit "Split (2017), Shymalan's treatise on superhero origin stories brings James McAvoy, Bruce Willis and Samuel L. Jackson together for a plodding psych-hospital escape.  Read the review.

  • The real stars of "Godzilla: King of the Monsters" are...

    AP

    The real stars of "Godzilla: King of the Monsters" are sound designers Erik Aadahl and Ethan Van Der Ryn. Their aural creature designs actually sound like something new — part machine, part prehistoric whatzit.  Read the review.

  • In "First Man," Ryan Gosling reteams with "La La Land"...

    Daniel McFadden / AP

    In "First Man," Ryan Gosling reteams with "La La Land" director Damien Chazelle to relay the story of astronaut Neil Armstrong, the first man on the moon. Read the review.

  • On "Here" (Merge), the band's first album in six years...

    Ross Gilmore / Redferns via Getty Images

    On "Here" (Merge), the band's first album in six years and 10th overall, the front line of Norman Blake, Gerard Love and Raymond McGinley once again trades songs (four each) and lead vocals, over sturdily constructed pop-rock arrangements. But the band has taken some subtle evolutionary turns to where it's now a faint shadow of its "Bandwagonesque" incarnation. Read the review.

  • When Aretha Franklin recorded her bestselling gospel album in early...

    AP

    When Aretha Franklin recorded her bestselling gospel album in early 1972, director Sydney Pollack's camera crew shot many hours of footage, unseen publicly until now. "Amazing Grace" is now in theaters.  Read the review.

  • Kanye West's "The Life of Pablo" (GOOD/Def Jam) sounds like...

    NBC

    Kanye West's "The Life of Pablo" (GOOD/Def Jam) sounds like a work in progress rather than a finished album. It's a mess, more a series of marketing opportunities in which West changed the album title and the track listing multiple times, to the point where the very thing that made West tolerable despite a penchant for tripping over his own ego — the music itself — became anti-climactic. Read the review.

  • Six miles beneath the Pacific Ocean surface, a team of...

    AP

    Six miles beneath the Pacific Ocean surface, a team of oceanographers and experts discover an entire hidden ecosystem laden with species "completely unknown to science." But Meg comes calling, attacking the submersible piloted by the ex-wife (Jessica McNamee) of rescue diver Jonas Taylor (Jason Statham). Read the review.

of

Expand
Author
PUBLISHED: | UPDATED:

Chance the Rapper’s most significant new song doesn’t even appear on his acclaimed new mixtape, “Coloring Book.” On the jazzy, gospel-influenced outtake “Grown A– Kid,” left off the project due to difficulties with sample clearance, the Chicago MC affirms what he’d been hinting at for years: “Everybody can finally say it out loud/ My favorite rapper a Christian rapper.”

It may not have seemed like a big deal but there it was, out in the open, possibly the most overt declaration of Christian faith from a secular rapper since Kanye West’s seismic single “Jesus Walks.” Since that song’s release in 2004, hip-hop and Christianity have been inching their way toward each other, though, until now, progress had been fitful: Christian influences have penetrated the music of secular hip-hop, typically as samples of gospel choirs, but “Coloring Book” celebrates Christianity in both its music and, perhaps more crucially, its message, in a more explicit way than anyone can remember.

Rappers have been publicly flirting with Christianity for years, from national acts like Kendrick Lamar and ASAP Rocky to local artists-turned-major-label signees Sir the Baptist and BJ the Chicago Kid, whose song “Church” (“She say she wanna drink, do drugs, and have sex tonight/ But I’ve got church in the mornin’ “) includes a Chance feature, but “Coloring Book” is the trend’s high water mark. “It’s like there’s no rules anymore,” says BJ the Chicago Kid. “It’s like, if you love the music and it feels right, they don’t care if it says ‘God’ in it.”

MOST READ ENTERTAINMENT NEWS THIS HOUR

Gospel influences have been evident in secular pop and soul music as long as those genres have existed; hip-hop, though partly rooted in black gospel, was in its early days more closely connected to the Nation of Islam. “Jesus Walks,” a hit single from West’s 2004 debut, “The College Dropout,” changed everything. A frank declaration of faith erected around a choir sample, the track “really broke down some walls,” says Chicago-based MC Mick Jenkins, who is featured on “Grown A– Kid.” “You could take it back to Ray Charles, that was really just gospel music, nd he put it right into what he was doing. It can always be taken back to another place.”

Almost single-handedly, “Jesus Walks” made the intermingling of Christian themes and secular hip-hop acceptable. “It’s not corny to be Christian in rap right now, which has not been the case for most of the hip-hop tradition,” says Cray Allred, who writes about hip-hop for the blog Christ and Pop Culture. “Typically, you could keep it at arm’s length. You could mention God, respect the church, or even give Him thanks at an awards show, but actually rapping about the Christian faith was pretty much an anomaly when Kanye first did it with ‘Jesus Walks.’ “

Older generations of rappers had avoided Christianity, for fear of seeming preachy. But to a generation of millennials too young to remember life before “Jesus Walks,” there’s no reason not to combine the two. “Millennials aren’t afraid to talk about these things,” says rapper Bernard “Bun B” Freeman, a former member of the rap duo UGK who now lectures at Rice University (his class, Religion and Hip-Hop Culture, is available online for free). “There’s a lot of great artists that aren’t scared to share all of themselves, and if religion is a part of their life, they’re sharing that as well.”

For millennials raised in the church and weaned on rap, it feels natural to use the language of hip-hop to grapple with thorny personal and spiritual issues. “From personal experience, being a ’90s kid who lived on the South Side of Chicago, whose mom and grandma took him to church a lot, I would think that would come out some way, in what you create,” says Peter CottonTale, a member of the Social Experiment, the artistic collective to which Chance also belongs, and a key figure in the production of “Coloring Book.” “In the story of (Chance’s) career, he’s always rapped about nostalgic things, or things that are currently happening to him, so I would guess his spirituality would come to the surface.”

Churchgoers are just as likely to be hip-hop heads as anybody else, figures BJ the Chicago Kid. “Singers that don’t come from church, they want to be from church, or study church singers,” he says. “And if a preacher takes his wife on a date, he’s not going to be playing choir music, I think he might play Luther Vandross, let’s be honest. It’s not as stunning as people would think.”

Some denominations officially reject all hip-hop as worldly and sinful, while more liberal denominations still chafe at artists like Chance or West, who curse profligately (“You’ve gotta say what a preacher would say when he’s at home,” advises Sir the Baptist, a pastor’s kid), and, at least in Kanye’s case, generally lead lives that can be described as flagrantly secular. “It’s more a case of hip-hop absorbing Christian content than Christianity conquesting the mountain of hip-hop,” observes Allred.

Not all hip-hop artists absorb Christian content in the same way. West’s recent album “The Life of Pablo” was described by the rapper as “a gospel album with a whole lot of cursing on it.” But “adding a choir to a song doesn’t necessarily make it a religious song,” points out Freeman, and “TLOP” can occasionally seem superficial, especially in comparison to the spiritual deep dive of “Coloring Book.” (In a fortuitous bit of product placement, Chance appeared on its splashy opening track, “Ultralight Beam,” alongside gospel stars Kirk Franklin and Kelly Price.)

Released a few months after “Pablo,” “Coloring Book” is a secular album full of religious songs, or vice versa. A joyous, gospel-choir-heavy throwback to a time that never actually was, it’s a prime example of what BJ the Chicago Kid calls “putting the cross on the street pole.”

Even after “Jesus Walks,” a lot of stars had to come into perfect alignment for it to exist: Chance spent years building a reputation for sterling, increasingly-more-devotional mixtapes. Drake, who prizes genteel introspection over songs about popping bottles, and Kendrick Lamar, who approaches theological issues with great seriousness, became famous. In Chicago, particularly fertile ground for rappers experimenting with Christian music and themes, the abidingly dark drill movement came and went, leaving an appetite for music with more uplift.

Saba, a Chicago rapper who appears on the “Coloring Book” track “Angels,” also credits “post-mainstream” artists, who value soul searching over commercial posturing, for the project’s success. “Coloring Book,” which debuted in Billboard’s Top 10, is a streaming-only release that at press time was still unavailable for purchase. “When you’re not focusing on trying to make a hit record, you’re a lot more subject to being vulnerable, and bring real life aspects into your music,” says Saba. “I think that’s what a lot of people like Chance and Kendrick Lamar do for music.”

According to CottonTale, no one seemed nervous that the mixtape’s undisguised religious messages would turn off mainstream audiences. “I don’t think there was a sense of fear,” he says. “I always thought, like, my grandma would love it.”

Despite the key phrase in “Grown A– Kid,” many involved stress the difference between being a Christian who raps and a “Christian rapper.” The implication: No one wants to be a Christian rapper. In the hip-hop hierarchy, to be a Christian rapper is to be consigned to perpetual uncoolness, to otherness. “That’s the feeling you get, like it’s high school,” says Lecrae, one of the most popular Christian hip-hop artists of all time. “The fans see genres as passe. There’s still boxes, (created) by the gatekeepers, and they need to figure out what category you belong in.”

But fans can be gatekeepers, too, and while Chance can refer to Jesus as much as he likes, Lecrae, although he doesn’t say as much, is more hemmed in. He must refer to Jesus enough to satisfy his Christian listeners, but not so much that he alienates secular audiences. His newest mixtape, “Church Clothes 3,” which contains love songs and songs about social issues, is one of his more secular-minded. Newcomers “downloaded it and they loved it,” says Lecrae. “They said, ‘I think this guy’s a Christian, but it’s all good.’ “

Artists in a post-“Coloring Book” world might never again have to worry about such a divide. “Making a statement and affirming it like Chance has done absolutely opens the door for even myself, and the people who come after,” says Jenkins, a Seventh-Day Adventist who plans to drop a religiously-inspired mixtape, “The Healing Component,” this summer. Sir the Baptist, who recently signed to Atlantic Records, is also working on new material. BJ the Chicago Kid dropped his second studio album, the religion-minded “In My Mind,” earlier this year. “I’ll never hide the church element in my music,” he says. “Hiding that is hiding half of me.”

Allison Stewart is a freelancer.

atc-arts@tribpub.com

Twitter @chitribent

RELATED STORIES:

Chance the Rapper’s ‘Magnificent Coloring World’ happened — what was it?

Joey Purp is a man of many musical neighborhoods

Chance the Rapper makes freedom sing on ‘Coloring Book’

Chance the Rapper’s grand plan to unite ‘young creatives’

.galleries:after {
content: ”;
display: block;
background-color: #144A7C;
margin: 16px auto 0;
height: 5px;
width: 100px;

}
.galleries:before {
content: “Entertainment Photos and Video”;
display: block;
font: 700 20px Georgia,serif;
text-align: center;
color: #1e1e1e;

var playlist = ‘chi_ent_movie_trailers’,
layout = ‘autoblurb’,
iu = ‘%2F4011%2Ftrb.chicagotribune%2Fent’;

Watch the latest movie trailers.