I Died and Went to Yeat’s “AftërLyfe”
Photo: Matt Ty
Though blessed and favored, mankindâs greatest downfall is the knowledge that one day it all must come to an end. We go to great lengths to prevent deathâs arrival, and though we surrender ourselves to trends and lifestyle changes to delay the date of our demise, we still lie awake anxious of what our final moments might be. Who will hold me as I float into oblivion? Who will keep my spirit company as deathâs dynamic shroud is pulled over my eyes? Today, I type this article knowing that I alone know what my last moments will beâor rather, I know what they were.
On 12:01 Friday, February 24, I ascended into the AftërLyfe, a 22-track sonic odyssey composed by modern hip-hopâs most respected iconoclast: Yeat. Joined by longtime collaborator BNYX and a host of AAA features (Kranky Kranky, LUH GEEKY, YoungBoy NBA), Yeatâs newest project doesnât just cement him as a prominent figure in modern hip-hopâs cultural canon, it dismantles the canon entirely, leaving only Yeat in its wake. Despite the sheer magnitude of Yeatâs cultural presence, AftërLyfe is an album that refuses to be preceded by its reputation. On a rainy Los Angeles evening, I left my friends and family behind... all to be annihilated in the austere glory of AftërLyfe
Whether lost in the hazy ambiance of âNo morë talkâ or possessed by the pounding bass signals of âNun id change,â the grasp that Yeat has on my soul is just as unyielding as it is deserved. Most of my experience listening to this record was spent levitating four feet off the ground, and when Yeat said âIâm sipping on lean, lean, Iâm green, Iâm high as a bird bitchâ on âType Monëy,â a beam of light shot out of my body. Every aural element on AftërLyfe is polished, pristine, and a powerful step forward from both of Yeatâs 2022 projects. If there is only one album that appears on your radar in 2023, let it be AftërLyfe.
Listen to AftërLyfe below: