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Behold the latest incarnation of the MC’s mom-honoring epic

Depending on which school of thought you subscribe to, the release of Kanye West’s 10th solo album Donda was either a series of false starts or ingenious promotion by way of three separate stadium-filling Apple Music-exclusive listening events that served to give fans deeper insight into West’s creative process and aesthetic vision. But while announced release dates came and went and became something of a guessing game among fans, the content of the actual final product was rarely in doubt: a 27-track opus (plus five more on this deluxe version) that encapsulates nearly all of the music he played over the course of the IRL previews, including multiple versions of several songs.

As presented over the course of his three stadium events (at Atlanta’s Mercedez-Benz Stadium and Chicago’s Soldier Field), Donda was continuously evolving, with West seemingly adding and removing celebrated guest appearances, adjusting sequencing, and futzing with the project’s sonics until the very last minute. All the theater, intentional or not, makes the case for Kanye West as one of the most skilled musical architects alive.

Donda is lush and expansive with a consistent gospel undertone, West seemingly including everything and everyone he’s enjoyed over the course of his illustrious career. There are allusions to the roots of his solo material (the funky bassline and Lauryn Hill sample of “Believe What I Say”), leaps forward in his decades-long mission to perfect the happy medium between gospel and secular music (“Lord I Need You,” “Pure Souls”), and then the kind of stadium-rap anthems that have made Kanye West live shows some of the most consistently can’t-miss events of his era (“Hurricane,” “Praise God”).

Though he declined to officially credit any of the project’s many guests in the tracklist, West sought out a great many of contemporary rap’s most important (and, in some cases, most contentious) voices, including Lil Baby, Lil Durk, Lil Yachty, Roddy Ricch, Young Thug, Jay Electronica, Travis Scott, The LOX, Kid Cudi, Fivio Foreign, Westside Gunn, Conway The Machine, Playboi Carti, JAY-Z, Shenseea, DaBaby, the late Pop Smoke, and André 3000 (who talks about his own mother on the deluxe version’s much-discussed “Life of the Party”). These appearances play mostly as showcases for their respective artistry, their verses not always aligning with the themes of any given collaboration—but with West always setting the table for those moments. Outside of his long-standing religious devotion, West alludes in rhyme to his hopes for the world at large, an unending dedication to his children, and even the struggles that led to the much-publicized dissolution of his marriage. It’s the closest thing yet to an open book on one of pop culture’s most enigmatic figures. But that would imply that there was an editor: Instead, Donda is the raw, sometimes unwieldy genius of a man two years—and a heap of world-shifting events—removed from Jesus Is King, a project about the MC yielding to a power greater than his own.

© Apple Music