Lupe Fiasco: The 'Cake' music video reminds you the Chicago rap heavyweight still has it
Not saying you doubted the greatness of rap heavyweight Lupe Fiasco but seeing him in 2024 putting out both visuals and anthems like the new ‘Cake’ presentation? Holy smokes.
Not saying you doubted the greatness of rap heavyweight Lupe Fiasco but seeing him in 2024 putting out both visuals and anthems like the new ‘Cake’ presentation? Holy smokes.
It’s all types of signature Fiasco and the Chicago rap heavyweight delivers. Embrace the visual flex.
Lupe Fiasco goes the Internet route for his 'PRECIOUS THINGS'
Grammy-winning rapper Lupe Fiasco isn’t focused on putting himself on full display with his new ‘PRECIOUS THINGS’ music video. Instead, he’s showcasing his Internet searching skills and goes all out.
Grammy-winning rapper Lupe Fiasco isn’t focused on putting himself on full display with his new ‘PRECIOUS THINGS’ music video. Instead, he’s showcasing his Internet searching skills and goes all out.
The new visual is thought-provoking and shows all types of messaging from how people view Fiasco to some deep-rooted mythology. Peep the details and keep scrolling to see the visual journey.
Lupe Fiasco weaves his lyrics into dense webs of double-meaning, encouraging his listeners to put together the puzzle pieces he teases out with his allusive wordplay. Taking his mythology into his own hands, Lupe shares the video for "PRECIOUS THINGS," his latest music video. A Soundtrakk-produced highlight from his acclaimed LP DRILL MUSIC IN ZION, blessed with a hook from Nayirah, "PRECIOUS THINGS" finds Lupe speaking on the evolutionary miracle that is the human hand, exploring the ways we use our hands to fight, feel, and communicate: "I asked for 'Okays,' I got, 'Up yours' and 'Go aways'/Shoo gestures and throat slicers, the motion's made/Give me a sign when we can talk through a plan/But my hands was like 'Fam, you can talk to the hand,' damn," spits Lupe.
Produced by Alberto Angelini, the video for "PRECIOUS THINGS" tells a story through screen-recorded desktop applications, with an unseen user delving deep into an internet rabbit hole inspired by Lupe's lyrics. Guided by fan communities, comment sections, and old-fashioned articles, the explorer researches the origins of Lupe's hand signals, his linguistic gymnastics, and his esoteric worldview. The user gathers data on academic search engines, looks for clues in articles from websites like HotNewHipHop, scours Google Earth, and even resorts to posting questions on Quora, but the answer to the mystery remains elusive. The video takes full advantage of YouTube's new "pinch-and-zoom" feature, allowing viewers to zoom in on all the screenshots that make up the video and investigate the mystery with their own hands.
Released on June 24th, 2022, DRILL MUSIC IN ZION earned critical acclaim from NPR, Complex, The FADER, and many others, including Vinyl Me Please, who wrote "At their best, Lupe’s bars are as visually and phonetically pleasing as popped bubble wrap." The product of a burst of thoughtful spontaneity, Lupe created DRILL MUSIC IN ZION over a short period, diving into a folder of beats sent by Soundtrakk and emerging with a fully-realized album in just three days (“Sometimes deadlines are lifelines,” says Lupe). The album is home to highlights like "NAOMI," in which Lupe fuses playful political analysis with poignant emotional resonance, and "MS. MURAL," which continues a series of songs that started on 2014's Tetsuo & Youth ("Mural") and continued with his last album DROGAS WAVE ("Mural Jr."), and the jazz-inflected title track, which slyly comments on how art created amidst strife becomes commodified entertainment for the masses. DRILL MUSIC IN ZION earned "Best Of 2022" honors from the likes of Complex, Okayplayer, RIFF Magazine, and The Needle Drop.