このアルバムを通して聴いた時、恐らく誰しもが自伝的であると感じると思う。
妻ビヨンセの「Lemonade」で語られた裏切りへのアンサーアルバム、そして懺悔のアルバムであるとも言える。
黒人が、「黒人である」というカルチャーから抜け出せずに、虐げられ先入観で語られている問題、またはそれへの打開の提言。ある種狂ってしまったカニエとの確執。妻ビヨンセ、義妹ソランジュとの問題。夫として、子を持つ親として何をすべきで何をしてしまったか。
このアルバムはJAY-Z自身の奥底にある罪、思考、人間性、愛、家族、黒人であること。それらを全て詰め込んだ一貫性のある快作である。
カニエの師匠であるNO I・Dのビートサンプリングと、赤裸々かつ芯のあるJAY-Zのリリックが40分の間にしっかりと詰め込まれ、中だるみすることもない。
2017年、ケンドリックのDAMNと並ぶ傑作である。
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4:44
26パーセントの割引で¥2,040 -26% ¥2,040 税込
参考価格: ¥2,750 参考価格: ¥2,750¥2,750
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詳細はこちら
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| 仕様 | 価格 | 新品 | 中古品 |
|
CD, CD, インポート, 2017/7/31
"もう一度試してください。" | CD, インポート | ¥759 | ¥542 |
|
CD, リミックス含む, インポート, 2017/7/7
"もう一度試してください。" | インポート, リミックス含む | ¥1,937 | ¥209 |
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曲目リスト
| 1 | キル・ジェイ・Z |
| 2 | ザ・ストーリー・オブ・O.J. |
| 3 | スマイル feat.グロリア・カーター |
| 4 | コート・ゼア・アイズ feat.フランク・オーシャン |
| 5 | 4:44 |
| 6 | ファミリー・フュード feat.ビヨンセ |
| 7 | バム feat.ダミアン・マーリー |
| 8 | ムーンライト |
| 9 | マーシー・ミー |
| 10 | レガシー |
| 11 | アドニス (ボーナス・トラック) |
| 12 | ブルーズ・フリースタイル/ウィ・ファミリー (ボーナス・トラック) |
| 13 | メニーフェイスドゴッド feat.ジェイムス・ブレイク (ボーナス・トラック) |
商品の説明
メディア掲載レビューほか
グラミー賞、通算21冠!唯一ヒップ・ホップ・アーティストとして、ソングライターの殿堂入りを果たすヒップ・ホップ界のドン=ジェイ・Z、4年ぶりとなるスタジオ・アルバム! (C)RS
登録情報
- 製品サイズ : 12.4 x 14.1 x 1.3 cm; 106.03 g
- メーカー : ユニバーサル ミュージック
- EAN : 4988031242193
- 時間 : 46 分
- レーベル : ユニバーサル ミュージック
- ASIN : B073PD37RL
- ディスク枚数 : 1
- Amazon 売れ筋ランキング: - 254,821位ミュージック (ミュージックの売れ筋ランキングを見る)
- - 2,876位ヒップホップ (ミュージック)
- - 12,486位ソウル・R&B (ミュージック)
- カスタマーレビュー:
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トップレビュー
上位レビュー、対象国: 日本
レビューのフィルタリング中に問題が発生しました。後でもう一度試してください。
2017年12月3日に日本でレビュー済み
今回こそは失敗するのかと思ったら手堅い内容でした。No.I.Dのトラックが予想を上回る出来だった事が大きいと思います。8〜10曲目の流れが特にグッときました。
2017年7月15日に日本でレビュー済み
まず言っておきたいのが私はJay Zが好きだ。
だけどこのアルバムはダメだ。
まずビートの選び方がなっちゃいないと思う。
No.IDが手がけたみたいだけどどれもカッコよくないと思う。
特にひどいと思ったのがYouTubeでも公開されて凄い回数視聴された「The Story of O.J.」。
この曲の何がいいの?!って言いたくなるほど酷いと思った。
確かに歌詞が良いという言い分はわかる。
でも日本人でこの曲を聴く人のほとんどは歌詞カードを見なくちゃ意味がわからないのが現実。
となるとフロウとかが大事になってくるのだけど、今回のアルバムはJay Zは本調子じゃないのかなっていう感じ。
正直今この時期に聴くべき音楽は別にあると思う(ヒップホップだけに限らず)。
Jay Zが出したらすぐにクラシックだというのは、もうそういう時代じゃないと思う。
だけどこのアルバムはダメだ。
まずビートの選び方がなっちゃいないと思う。
No.IDが手がけたみたいだけどどれもカッコよくないと思う。
特にひどいと思ったのがYouTubeでも公開されて凄い回数視聴された「The Story of O.J.」。
この曲の何がいいの?!って言いたくなるほど酷いと思った。
確かに歌詞が良いという言い分はわかる。
でも日本人でこの曲を聴く人のほとんどは歌詞カードを見なくちゃ意味がわからないのが現実。
となるとフロウとかが大事になってくるのだけど、今回のアルバムはJay Zは本調子じゃないのかなっていう感じ。
正直今この時期に聴くべき音楽は別にあると思う(ヒップホップだけに限らず)。
Jay Zが出したらすぐにクラシックだというのは、もうそういう時代じゃないと思う。
他の国からのトップレビュー
Ayo
5つ星のうち4.0
La traición como recurso
2022年10月14日にスペインでレビュー済みAmazonで購入
El álbum está ciertamente construido en torno a una traición, pero su duplicidad, la correspondiente disculpa y su reevaluación son vehículos para su propia maduración. Antes, era inamovible, el supremo buscavidas sin error. La paternidad ha erosionado parte de esa frialdad, pero 4:44 deconstruye toda una visión del mundo.
Ayo
2022年10月14日にスペインでレビュー済み
このレビューの画像
Riley
5つ星のうち5.0
Possibly Jay’s best album
2017年9月27日にアメリカ合衆国でレビュー済みAmazonで購入
I know it’s a bold claim, but it might well be true. I’ve been listening to Jay-Z since he was still coming up. I’ve seen his career highs (“Reasonable Doubt,” “the Blueprint,” “The Black Album,” “Watch the Throne”) and lows (Vol. 3, those ill-advised collaborations with R. Kelly and Linkin Park, “Kingdom Come,”), and I honestly don’t think he’s ever released and album that is as seamless and consistent as “4:44.”
A couple years ago, when Jay dropped “Magna Carta, Holy Grail,” I basically thought the curtain had been drawn on his recording career. That album had some OK moments, but it was meandering and purposeless, and out of touch with the hip-hop scene around him (not to mention the unforgivable “repurposing” of the “Smells Like Teen Spirit” chorus, but Justin Timberlake). I hoped for a thoroughly astonishing final act, but my hope has diminished with each passing year. I was envisioning something huge, with myriad producers and guests, and epic, maximalist sounds and huge themes. But instead, kind of out of nowhere, came “4:44.” It’s short and condensed. It’s filler-free. The songs are all memorable and hummable and effective. Yes, the whole Sprint-platinum fiasco was ridiculous, and it’s uncomfrable to hear Jay calling out the man who is almost solely responsible for keeping him relevant into the 2000s and beyond (Kanye West... don’t argue), but this album just doesn’t have any weak spots. It’s entirely produced by the legendary No ID, who sprinkles the album with soul samples and strong beats, and gives it all a unified sound and sonic identity. “4:44” is sparse, compared to HOV’s larger-than-life affairs, but the tone serves the aging emcee well here, as the focus pivots from world-domination to self-examination. It’s a good look for an aging rapper of Jay’s caliber, of which there are few.
In terms of rapping, Jay is at his prizefighting best on tracks like “Marcy Me,” which paints a vivid picture of his journey from the Brooklyn projects to arena stages. Lyrically, Jay is far beyond the “Talib Kweli” he wished he’d become on “The Black Album,” and “March Me” and “Legacy” are the strongest testaments to this. (What’s Talib up to these days anyway? Nothing this good.)
The albums best moments are the opener, “Kill Jay-Z,” which is such a great song that even a Kanye dis can’t sour it; the Nina Simone sampling “Caught Their Eyes,” featuring Frank Ocean; and “Moonlight,” in which Jay launches a subtle and multi-tiered attack on both racism and the uninspired modern rappers who may or may not be named Aubrey Graham, and may or may not be objectively terrible (spoiler: I think it is about Drake, among others; also, Drake is objectively terrible).
The weakest points here are in “The Story of O.J.,” in which Jay makes a cringe-worthy comment about Jewish people and “credit.” But the track is so strong that even this HUGE misstep can’t ruin its overall effect. (Note: Jay has defended the lyric, saying the whole song and video use inflated stereotypes to make a point, so it’s silly to have an issue with the “Jewish people” line, and not the rest of the song. This is all well and good, but it doesn’t hold much water as an argument. However, I genuinely don’t think he meant any harm with the lyric.)
In terms of consistency, “4:44” is peerless in the HOV canon. Only “Reasonable Doubt” comes close to being as filler-free. Lyrically, it’s his least full of ****, and his most honest. It’s the most focused he’s been behind the mic in ages, and production-wise, it’s cohesive and powerful.
Like A Tribe Called Quest did with their 2016 return, “We Got it From Here... Thank You 4 Your Service,” Jay-Z has given us a “comeback” album that represents the best of what a comeback album can be. He’s offered up the best possible version of himself here. He’s not cashing in on modern trends, or trying to avoid his age, or shirk the sounds of his youth. He’s embracing the sounds of traditional hip-hop, and cleaning touching them up with a coat of new paint for 2017. I alswyas though I wanted Jay to drop some huge, mammoth epic album to end his run, but this album cuts all the **** entirely, and serves up something real and honest and good for countless repeat listens.
To put it another way, Kendrick Lamar released the (amazing) “DAMN.” this year — an album that takes on the world, and is infinitely more complex and layered and powerful. But for some reason, “4:44” is what I’ve spent the past few months blasting on repeat. That should pretty much say it all.
A couple years ago, when Jay dropped “Magna Carta, Holy Grail,” I basically thought the curtain had been drawn on his recording career. That album had some OK moments, but it was meandering and purposeless, and out of touch with the hip-hop scene around him (not to mention the unforgivable “repurposing” of the “Smells Like Teen Spirit” chorus, but Justin Timberlake). I hoped for a thoroughly astonishing final act, but my hope has diminished with each passing year. I was envisioning something huge, with myriad producers and guests, and epic, maximalist sounds and huge themes. But instead, kind of out of nowhere, came “4:44.” It’s short and condensed. It’s filler-free. The songs are all memorable and hummable and effective. Yes, the whole Sprint-platinum fiasco was ridiculous, and it’s uncomfrable to hear Jay calling out the man who is almost solely responsible for keeping him relevant into the 2000s and beyond (Kanye West... don’t argue), but this album just doesn’t have any weak spots. It’s entirely produced by the legendary No ID, who sprinkles the album with soul samples and strong beats, and gives it all a unified sound and sonic identity. “4:44” is sparse, compared to HOV’s larger-than-life affairs, but the tone serves the aging emcee well here, as the focus pivots from world-domination to self-examination. It’s a good look for an aging rapper of Jay’s caliber, of which there are few.
In terms of rapping, Jay is at his prizefighting best on tracks like “Marcy Me,” which paints a vivid picture of his journey from the Brooklyn projects to arena stages. Lyrically, Jay is far beyond the “Talib Kweli” he wished he’d become on “The Black Album,” and “March Me” and “Legacy” are the strongest testaments to this. (What’s Talib up to these days anyway? Nothing this good.)
The albums best moments are the opener, “Kill Jay-Z,” which is such a great song that even a Kanye dis can’t sour it; the Nina Simone sampling “Caught Their Eyes,” featuring Frank Ocean; and “Moonlight,” in which Jay launches a subtle and multi-tiered attack on both racism and the uninspired modern rappers who may or may not be named Aubrey Graham, and may or may not be objectively terrible (spoiler: I think it is about Drake, among others; also, Drake is objectively terrible).
The weakest points here are in “The Story of O.J.,” in which Jay makes a cringe-worthy comment about Jewish people and “credit.” But the track is so strong that even this HUGE misstep can’t ruin its overall effect. (Note: Jay has defended the lyric, saying the whole song and video use inflated stereotypes to make a point, so it’s silly to have an issue with the “Jewish people” line, and not the rest of the song. This is all well and good, but it doesn’t hold much water as an argument. However, I genuinely don’t think he meant any harm with the lyric.)
In terms of consistency, “4:44” is peerless in the HOV canon. Only “Reasonable Doubt” comes close to being as filler-free. Lyrically, it’s his least full of ****, and his most honest. It’s the most focused he’s been behind the mic in ages, and production-wise, it’s cohesive and powerful.
Like A Tribe Called Quest did with their 2016 return, “We Got it From Here... Thank You 4 Your Service,” Jay-Z has given us a “comeback” album that represents the best of what a comeback album can be. He’s offered up the best possible version of himself here. He’s not cashing in on modern trends, or trying to avoid his age, or shirk the sounds of his youth. He’s embracing the sounds of traditional hip-hop, and cleaning touching them up with a coat of new paint for 2017. I alswyas though I wanted Jay to drop some huge, mammoth epic album to end his run, but this album cuts all the **** entirely, and serves up something real and honest and good for countless repeat listens.
To put it another way, Kendrick Lamar released the (amazing) “DAMN.” this year — an album that takes on the world, and is infinitely more complex and layered and powerful. But for some reason, “4:44” is what I’ve spent the past few months blasting on repeat. That should pretty much say it all.
Mr. D. Smith
5つ星のうち5.0
A DEEP ALBUM THAT CAME WITH A TIME MACHINE!
2017年12月21日にアメリカ合衆国でレビュー済みAmazonで購入
So many great reviews have already been written but I felt I had to say something short.
WOW.
JAY WENT DEEP.
I have not bought a Jay-Z CD since I ordered the American Gangster CD in 2007 and the only song I loved was "I Know".
Everything else after that did not interest me at all. I felt Jay was way too pop and heading into the void of repetition. Also I can't stand Kanye West so anything he was on, I turned off.
Fast forward 10 years AND WOW, I'M IN LOVE WITH JAY & HIS MUSIC AGAIN.
I'm happy to say I grew up with Jay's music since I was 16 in 1996 when "Reasonable Doubt" was released and I liked it but "In My Lifetime Vol. 1" was the album that made me cement my love for Jay and I bought everything from that point.
4:44 IS A MASTERPIECE. JAY-Z WENT DEEP LYRICALLY. HE POURED OUT HIS HEART. HE POURED OUT HIS TRUE FEELINGS. HE HELD BACK NOTHING.
JUST A PURE MATURE ALBUM.
NO I.D. AND HIS CLASSIC 1990'S SAMPLING STYLE AND PRODUCTION MADE THIS ALBUM. I'M SO GLAD HE WAS THE MAIN PRODUCER ON THIS. JAY & NO I.D. MADE A ALBUM FOR THE AGES AND IT WILL BE REMEMBERED AS A CLASSIC FOR THE REST OF MY LIFETIME.
This is not a mainstream dance record.
This is not a club banger.
You youngsters will not understand or appreciate this album.
This album, everytime I play it, it takes me back to the golden era of 90's rap hip hop.
It makes me think of my life.
It makes me think of my children and relationships.
Jay-Z.... Thank You For Making This Album.
We All Needed This.
Now I can't wait for a follow up album in a few years.
WOW.
JAY WENT DEEP.
I have not bought a Jay-Z CD since I ordered the American Gangster CD in 2007 and the only song I loved was "I Know".
Everything else after that did not interest me at all. I felt Jay was way too pop and heading into the void of repetition. Also I can't stand Kanye West so anything he was on, I turned off.
Fast forward 10 years AND WOW, I'M IN LOVE WITH JAY & HIS MUSIC AGAIN.
I'm happy to say I grew up with Jay's music since I was 16 in 1996 when "Reasonable Doubt" was released and I liked it but "In My Lifetime Vol. 1" was the album that made me cement my love for Jay and I bought everything from that point.
4:44 IS A MASTERPIECE. JAY-Z WENT DEEP LYRICALLY. HE POURED OUT HIS HEART. HE POURED OUT HIS TRUE FEELINGS. HE HELD BACK NOTHING.
JUST A PURE MATURE ALBUM.
NO I.D. AND HIS CLASSIC 1990'S SAMPLING STYLE AND PRODUCTION MADE THIS ALBUM. I'M SO GLAD HE WAS THE MAIN PRODUCER ON THIS. JAY & NO I.D. MADE A ALBUM FOR THE AGES AND IT WILL BE REMEMBERED AS A CLASSIC FOR THE REST OF MY LIFETIME.
This is not a mainstream dance record.
This is not a club banger.
You youngsters will not understand or appreciate this album.
This album, everytime I play it, it takes me back to the golden era of 90's rap hip hop.
It makes me think of my life.
It makes me think of my children and relationships.
Jay-Z.... Thank You For Making This Album.
We All Needed This.
Now I can't wait for a follow up album in a few years.
Leonard McAlary
5つ星のうち5.0
HOV!!
2019年12月8日にカナダでレビュー済みAmazonで購入
What can I say, Jay-Z really packed a punch with 4:44. Honestly it my opinion this is a very addicting album, and the reason I say that is because Jay really has a way of delivering a message that sticks with you. Example of that would be the songs, Moonlight and Smile. He always tells it like it is and I love that about him. I absolutely love this album. Moonlight he talks about how hip-hop is now changing to just rapper doing it for the money and not the value. Smile is just him basically saying don't get to hard on yourself just keep going and live it up. So much good quality content on the whole project... WOW🔥🔥🔥🔥
Melinda Lucum
5つ星のうち5.0
Needed it to complete the Carter story
2023年2月25日にアメリカ合衆国でレビュー済みAmazonで購入
After Oscar craving for more Jay-Z satisfied by this virtuosic honest album.
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