voir dire


2023-10-20

I few years ago I saw a video breaking down some of Earl Sweatshirt's lyrics line-by-line. I wanted to link to it here but sadly it was from a pretty small channel and I can't find it anymore. It introduced me to the concept of devices that are exclusive to music. I feel like I used to listen to music only using the tools we learn about in English class, thinking that was about as far as it goes. It feels dumb in hindsight to not have realized there are things people do with audio that written text can't accomplish, but I'm glad I know it now, and it always makes me happy to listen to an album and notice things I never would've found from reading.

On the new Earl/The Alchemist album Voir Dire I found myself noticing a lot of callbacks to his older material. I'm sure that this exists in literature as well, but I haven't read enough from a single artist to notice it and see value. The casual listening of music and varying points of emphasis make it really easy to remember strong lines from songs you've liked in the past, but I think I'd find it very difficult to recognize a sentence from even some of my favourite books in the context of another one (though this probably has more to do with me than the mediums). I think music, specifically Earl Sweatshirt's, is uniquely well-suited to recalling moments from the past. His releases are infrequent and his songs are short, so there aren't too many lyrics, and since the vocals aren't always clear, the ones that are really stand out. His wide vocabulary and careful writing couple to make it feel like if he's using an unusual word for a second time, it must be for a reason. And his approach to music itself is so personal that it makes sense for each album to be a development from the last, with each one being necessarily linked. Also I must say, I know this is actually quite common in rap but the instances I've noticed previously have been pretty surface level and sometimes just feel like recycling lyrics. Kanye West's "I wasn't supposed to make it past 25" on Saint Pablo is one example I really liked, but the frequency with which it's used on Voir Dire is really cool to me so I wanted to share.

Other moments on the album that might be callbacks but might also be coincidental/not really worth reading into:

There's more I've made note of but they're probably innocuous so that's enough lol. I've once again made a playlist below with Voir Dire in its entirety and all the other songs mentioned here. Also as a reminder, the coloured lyrics above are clickable to hear the line for ease of comparison.