Putting socio-economical urges and indomitable vox populi to the side, the world needs JID‘s new album. Kind of… now. Regardless of how one might interpret the artist born Destin Choice Route’s multi-year teasing of a next project—be that the highly-anticipated final album trilogy installment Forever & A Day, or his joint Metro Boomin exploit—the truth of the matter is that the necessity exists. The fact that around three weeks from now a whole entire US Presidential election is on the line, is only partly coincidental. America is hurting. The world of hip-hop is in its most frail, fragmented, and existential juncture in decades. And in spite of what certain sheepish media gatekeepers will have you believe, we aren’t necessarily better off than our parents. What’s certain, is that there seem to be so many externalities that precede our reputations, walking down the street of one’s neighborhood. Affluence, status, class, ethnicity, creed, attire—that’s neither how we build a never nor a forever story.
At this point, we all know JID is the type of rapper who takes his time to perfect his craft and packaging. Not for nothing his discography only sports three full length studio albums in the span of a near fifteen-year career as a recording artist. Yet, it’s been feeling like the 33-year-old Atlanta wordsmith has had material in spades couched in his holster for a while; which in a way makes the wait hurt even more. Amidst the slew of IG Live bombshells and scattered loosies dropped over the past couple years—with the brilliant “31 (Freestyle)” as just the most recent case in point—the hip-hop community from sea to shining sea has been salivating for more pretty much since the day his pièce de résistance The Forever Story came out in 2022. And honestly, JID, we can only take so many palate cleansers. If we add on the string of both high and low-brow features the Dreamville act has been rocking with during the same timespan, that’s adding insult to injury…
Textual, cinematic, integrated—ever since his stunning and revelatory 2017 debut LP The Never Story, JID has always required the main player joystick on the full creative canvass in order to deliver his most accomplished and consequential work. Look at his stupendous DiCaprio 2 (2018) as canonical living proof. Yes sure, his Dreamville and Spillage Village mixtapes peppered throughout the years are all fine and dandy. Good filler content for all intents and purposes, but they’re no solo JID project. That type of work reaches higher powers, and it’s three for three from downtown so far. That’s a 100% 3-point field goal percentage. Don’t get us wrong, we’ll also take all the contractually fulfilling one-offs and check-ins in the form of featured guest slots (or even that rumored collab album with Denzel Curry), but if one thing’s for sure is that JID needs his own inherent and native wireframe from within which to upcycle his art.
As a viable map for the lost to navigate the prism of the former American Football prodigy’s next big thing, one could unpack the aforementioned Hollywood Cole-produced “31 (Freestyle)” throwaway released earlier this month. “Gun in hand, I ain’t threatin’ it, ’cause it’s a promise / Gonna plan, you ain’t takin’ nothin’ I’ve accomplished / Come in, step outside, it’s all violence / I should resurrect Abe and get slavery abolished“: is this not a statement of masterful intent? Is this not a complete embrace of the industry hype and critical acclaim surrounding the Georgian artist? JID knows all too well that hip-hop is the most necessarily competitive industry of all music genres and styles. While one might maintain that this is no different than any dime-a-dozen album roll out anticipation; there’s something to be said about the stakes being higher if your name is JID.
On the same cut, the Atlanta native reveals how “[…] I don’t politic with the policies of the parliament / Pardon JID, part of my ni**as comin’ from all sides / Place your top five in the archive / Besides all of the rap guys findin’ another rapper dick to ride / Bunch of sperm bank workers and y’all been drinkin’ on the job / Oh God, try offer him tides for a peace of mind“. Now, to regroup both mentally and spiritually ahead of an allegedly huge album drop with not-so-veiled allusions to both rap battles to crown the best in the game (“Place your top five in the archive“), as well as ambulance chasing trend-followers (“[…] all of the rap guys findin’ another rapper dick to ride“), is a sight to behold. It’s relevant stuff. Again, everyone can and will trash talk during the game, yet the only tapes we play back for posterity are Jordan’s and Bryant’s. It’s different when the kid does it.
Because everything Destin dishes out is so minutely thought through, layered, and intentional, there is more to dissect from this freebie number. There’s a sense that the MC is speaking to us in tongues and subliminals, fanning the hungry flame for new material through a strategic deployment of auditory samples. The opening recording on “31 (Freestyle)”, lifted from a song by the 1960s Harlem poetry collective The Last Poets, recites “Ni**as and negros, y’all and all better get right / At this time, while the time is good / ‘Cause it might not be no next time“. That lends itself as another a groovy tautological aid to our pledge here. Through it, JID lets us know that he feels the urgency, the poignancy, too. Peeling back the source sample even further in its original recording, “Time”, one can’t but notice additional second-degree references to the climate the American rapper, singer, and songwriter finds himself within.
Stop us if you feel like we’re edging off the deep end here, but in it we find allusions to his own government name (“Time, time is a ship on a merciless sea / Drifting toward an abyss of nothingness / Until it can be recharted for its own destin[y]“), forlorn descriptions of our dystopian technocratic times (“Time is being caught up in a web of fetal self / Until you become inhuman, something to be controlled“) as well as flat out nihilist incursions into the abhorrently vapid entertainment industry complex: “Like Hollywood ni**as who ain’t got nothing better to do with their time than keep their heads glued between the thighs of some Hollowwood bitch who has gonorrhea of the mouth and syphilis dripping from their mind“. This is JID for you, in a nutshell—just by placing the right seconds-long sample in a free giveaway track to pass the time, he invites you to trojan-horse yourself into a multi-leveled solar system of lyrical puncturing. This is why, to this day, there is still no shortage of perspectives and vantage points being shared and deliberated online about his nine-year-old debut album.
Whether JID’s next project comes in the form of Forever & A Day, or a joint record with Metro—just go listen to “Danger” off their Across the Spider-Verse (Soundtrack from and Inspired by the Motion Picture) collab right now—or even that Denzel Curry mash up, one need not really have to worry. We should just worry about getting that a lot sooner rather than later. Rumor has it JID could’ve made a career in American football. Lots of rap pundits say JID could have been much bigger than he already is. That he should have been much bigger than he is. God willing, JID could’ve been President. Yet, where he’s from, JID could have also been so much worse. Life’s tragicomic inertia is balanced on a fine lever, but it tends to bend toward justice. On his next project, we just ask him to be himself—the rest will fall into place.
We’d like to thank you sincerely for taking the time to read this and we hope to feel your interest again next time.
AV


A.A.L. (AGAINST ALL LOGIC) – 2012-2017 (OTHER PEOPLE)
AUGUST GREENE – AUGUST GREENE (AUGUST GREENE LLC)
THE FEVER 333 – MADE AN AMERICA (ROADRUNNER RECORDS)
PUSHA T – DAYTONA (G.O.O.D. MUSIC)
KIDS SEE GHOSTS – KIDS SEE GHOSTS (G.O.O.D. MUSIC)
DENZEL CURRY – TA13OO (LOMA VISTA)
PAUL MCCARTNEY – EGYPT STATION (CAPITOL RECORDS)
BROCKHAMPTON – IRIDESCENCE (RCA RECORDS)
JID – DI CAPRIO 2 (DREAMVILLE RECORDS)