Meebo

Friday 2 September 2011

What's Taking Dre So Long With Detox?

In April 2010, Dr. Dre traded in his White Sox cap for a Red Sox jersey during a public appearance at Fenway Park before the MLB season. The reclusive hip-hop icon's normally stoic grimace turned to a childlike grin as he took batting practice, participating in the spectacle in the name of promoting the "Red Sox Edition" of his Beats By Dr. Dre headphones, and not—as many fans had hoped—his decade-or-so-in-the-making third record, Detox.

At a press conference during the event, Dre finally did mete out a couple of details about the project—that its lead single, "Under Pressure" featuring Jay-Z, could be released in two weeks, and that the entire album would "definitely" drop in 2010. Both assertions turned out to be false. After weeks turned to months, the Internet decided to put out "Under Pressure" for Dre in June by leaking it, prompting him to issue this statement: "The song that's on the Internet is an incomplete song that I'm still working on. When it's ready, you'll be hearing it from me."

    Rapper Soopafly called Dre a "perfectionist" this week, echoing what 50 Cent said about him in 2007.

This summer, Dre released the first two singles from Detox, "Kush" featuring Snoop Dogg and Akon, and the Eminem collaboration "I Need a Doctor." But a year and a half after his Fenway stunt, a release date for the record has yet to materialize. Posting under the "Kush" video, a YouTube commenter said it best: "i used to say 'when pigs fly' now i say 'when detox comes out [sic].'"

Dr. Dre is part of a lineage of great artists who've had trouble producing the follow-up to a notable album. Notoriously, Guns N Roses' 2008 record, Chinese Democracy, was a critical and commercial failure that took 15 years and more than $13 million to produce (Detox has become known as the "Chinese Democracy of hip-hop"). An article in Psychology Today called "Axl Rose: Obsessive Monomaniac Perfectionist," speaks of the album in terms of "the latest act of a tortured genius in the great tradition of other tortured geniuses."

Uncomfortable with the superstardom wrought by the runaway success of her only studio album, The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill, Lauryn Hill retreated sanctimoniously into obscurity. Despite her husband Rohan Marley's claims about the singer's prolific songwriting around the house—she writes "in the bathroom, on toilet paper, on the wall," he told People in 2008—by now, those who once held their breath for a Hill comeback have either exhaled or expired.

The list continues: After putting out great records, My Bloody Valentine, The Avalanches, Neutral Milk Hotel, and D'Angelo have all seemingly ground to a creative halt. Amy Winehouse passed away as the fifth anniversary of Back to Black, her breakthrough last album, approached.

A few factors are at play, usually. Artists who become known as musical geniuses are often rewarded with an autonomy that does away with the usual record label strictures—deadlines and checks and balances—that ensured that their previous records actually saw the light of day. Issues like addiction, alcoholism and legal troubles can also play a part in delaying an artist's work, as was the case with Winehouse, and D'Angelo, who started making his third album, James River, in 2002.

Dre, himself, has already faced this challenge. His previous, critically acclaimed, multi-platinum album, 2001, came seven years after his equally successful solo debut, The Chronic. Compare this low productivity rate with that of his fellow hip-hop artist/producer/studio-mad-scientist Kanye West, who has managed to release six popular, critically lauded albums during Dre's time away from the spotlight.

It's likely that the most frequent cause for creative paralysis in the wake of landmark albums is the pressure put upon musicians by their own work—that they look back at their last effort and think, how did I do that?

It's a reasonable thing to wonder, says Dr. Simon Sherry, an assistant psychology professor at Dalhousie University. Mathematically, most talented people don't live up to their own past achievements.

"In the statistical sense, it's far more likely that following an exceptional, well-above-average performance, the performance drops," he says. "You see that all the time in the world of sports, where an athlete has an exceptional year... hitting 50 home runs in baseball. That's their peak performance, and it's much more likely that they're going to then regress towards a more average one."

But for Dre, "average" is not an option—possibly to his detriment.

Speaking about Detox to HipHoxDX.com this week, rapper Soopafly called Dre a "perfectionist" who "takes his time." It sounded a lot like what 50 Cent, in 2007, said of his label boss in an interview with the same website: "He's such a perfectionist. But sometimes that can be a bad thing. You create new pressure when you wait that long." HipHopDX.com

Sherry, a registered clinical psychologist who assesses and treats perfectionists, says that there are two main forms of perfectionism. One, known as "perfectionistic striving," whereby a creative person can't relax until they've lived up their own standard of excellence, can be motivational. The other is a more destructive form of perfectionism, referred to as "perfectionistic concerns."

The destructive form "involves things like a tendency to be harshly critical of yourself," Sherry says. "To doubt your actions and your performance abilities. To have an extreme, exaggerated concern over mistakes. And to often perceive or misperceive that other people around you require you to be perfect."  
   
"That aspect of perfectionism is more clearly related to a range of work-related difficulties, including procrastination."

It wouldn't be hard to make the case that Dre's been procrastinating. Over the years, he has set aside Detox multiple times to focus on other projects. There is his hugely profitable line of headphones. His brand of Cognac . Endorsement deals with Hewlett-Packard, Dr. Pepper, Coors Light, and Chrysler. The eight studio albums he has executive-produced through his label, Aftermath Entertainment, since 2003, including Eminem's Recovery, the highest-selling record of 2010. His newest protege, 21-year-old Compton rapper Kendrick Lamar. Time at the gym. Fun in the studio with Justin Bieber.

But between these departures, and a period in 2004 when he gave up on Detox altogether, the doctor has been squeezing in sessions for the album. By all accounts, the results have been extraordinary.

"The man is getting piano lessons from Burt Bacharach and he's reinterpreting Chopin symphony stuff ," longtime Dre cohort and reported Detox collaborator DJ Quik effused in a 2008 interview with Loud.com. "It's crazy, he's lost his mind. He's got like 400 records."

In December, another Dre affiliate, rapper Kurupt, told SOHH.com about the seismic effect the album would have on hip-hop at large.

"I think it's going to do the same thing [2001] did—it's going to change the game," he said. "The one thing you don't play with when it comes to this [rap] game is the doctor. Point blank. Never play with the doctor... Because he plays no games. He's a stickler. He's a stickler for perfection."

Dre's exacting sensibility can be heard in his production aesthetic, which has grown increasingly meticulous over the years. On The Chronic, he favored loose riffs lifted from funk and soul artists. For 2001, he developed a clean, quantized balance of rhythms and melodies.

But in the past few years, his obsession with precision has rendered many of his beats cold and mechanical to the point of lifelessness - the antithesis of funk. As Ian Cohen wrote in his Pitchfork review of Eminem's 2008 album, Relapse: "Dre has treated production like a test run for his very expensive headphones, concerning himself with only the most inert, stainless steel sounds."

Beyond Bacharach, the list of artists who have allegedly logged time on Detox is a cavalcade of Billboard heavyweights that includes Eminem, Jay-Z, Beyonce, R. Kelly, and Lady Gaga, to name a few.

If the hype is to be believed, Detox will be Dre's magnum opus, a true, modern rap classic, something more akin to the Sistine Chapel (which, incidentally, only took Michelangelo four years to complete) than Chinese Democracy. Should that happen, his protracted creative process will be vindicated, and the doctor will always be remembered.

The anxiety that people aren't acknowledging his legendary status could be the prime motivation for Dre's perfectionism. The notion that the public has neglected him has been a theme reiterated often throughout the post-millennial part of his career.

On 2001, we "Forgot About Dre," forcing him to respond that he's the same O.G.—but he's been low-key—before breaking down his vast inventory of accomplishments (the studio full of tracks; the wall full of plaques hanging up in his office like trophies; the careers of Snoop Dogg, Easy E, and NWA). On his previous single, he reminded you that he's "Still D.R.E." And on " The Watcher," from the same album, with the tone of a mother, upset that no one complemented her casserole, he admonished, "I started this gangsta shit, and this the motherfucking thanks I get?"

Asked if Dr. Dre's contentious attitude toward his audience could be related to his perfectionism, Dr. Sherry says it's probably more a product of ego.

"Often times, people who are narcissistic are disappointed with how other people treat them," he says. "Because others don't acknowledge their so-called brilliance or uniqueness or special talents. And that lends itself to a sort of defensive orientation towards the world where everyone's attacking you, and everyone's disappointing you."

His most recent single, "I Need a Doctor," advances that narrative to its apotheosis—we need Dre—while inflating his return to almost messianic proportions.

The song opens with two melodramatic verses by Eminem, who raps, "you're either getting lazy or you don't believe in you no more... I demand you remember who you are!" In 2011, even Dre has forgotten about Dre. Finally, vehemently, he emerges for the song's climactic third verse, concluding, "...I'm back, bastards. One more CD and then I'm packing up my bags, and as I'm leaving I guarantee they'll scream 'Dre, don't leave us like that, man.'"

Ultimately, the fact that Detox will be the 46-year-old rap legend's last project could best explain what's taking it so long. It's his swan song, one he hopes will be the perfect last installment in a classic trilogy of hip-hop albums.
So like a pitcher on the mound, winding up for his third strike, a nation of listeners waits to see if Dr. Dre can do it again.

9 comments:

  1. Great article, we can only hope the hype is true and detox will break new ground for hip-hop music

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  2. Bah, he's taking his time. He's become an old legend. I don't think people even care anymore. When no one cares, then he will release it. Tons of artists have released numerous album...enough said.

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  3. Detox isnt coming out

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  4. my theory.. i believe genre's go through cycles of good and bad, rock and roll went through ups and downs with the 60's being the golden years, the 70's the genre tried to hold onto that classic quality and the 80's the genre kinda died. The 90's however quality rock made a comeback with something different alternative rock. Rap is the same, 90's was the golden years and the 2000's tried to hold onto that quality, 2010's rap kinda died. I think quality rap will come back in the 20's but different. That's why i anticipate this album so much.. i think this will lead a new movement to put quality music back into the mainstream making concious rapping popular again and we will see a new genre of quality rap emerge with artists like kendrick and j cole and others leading that movement. we will see...

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  5. I can't wait for Dre's next single, I just hope it's a real banger that will put the aftermath and west coast back on the hip hop map like back in the days. I'm getting tired with the Rick Ross and Lil Wayne songs. I want that Dre shit!! But his next single has to be great! He has tried twice now and both failed in expectations and quality (Kush was ok). But I think Dre has finally figured out the concept and sound of his album, at least i hope so because the recent news indicates that imo. But only time will tell. My guess is that the release date wil be February 2012.

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  6. http://twitter.com/#!/JustBlaze/media/slideshow?url=pic.twitter.com%2FAhWjMFw

    Just Blaze working on Detox, new picture

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  7. i so agree with what's said in this article... that's exactly why all Dre's post Chronicporjects or were never realized (e.g.Helath Skeltah) or weren't even half as good as his previous works (e.g. Dr. Dre Presents the Aftermath or The Firm's The Album). he went through his best period during the N.W.A's and The Chronic/Doggystyle's time and then wasn't simply able to repeat creating such great music again.

    of course, he did produce some great stuff after Doggystyle, such as California Love, Natural Born Killaz or, most notably, his own 2001 album. but these were so good for different reasons than why e.g. The Chronic was so damn good. They were good because Dre took ages to produce them and he got an army of MCs/producers/musicians who helped him. The Chronic on the other hand was produced by Dre in the period of just few months, were he was practicaly the sole producer of the whole album.

    Eminem's Relapse is the best example of what i'm saying... some tracks, were Dre got help of others, including Eminem, were pretty nice, like Crack a Bottle or We Mady You... but most songs on this alum were at best avarage, at worst boring...

    of course, it doesn't explain why Dre is taking that long with Detox. with all that people he has already worked with, he should have been done with Detox long time ago... i guess, that he's trying really hard to make the best album there has been done in hip-hop and he is just willing to work whatever time it takes to finish it... or maybe he got lost so much with what he really wants to achieve with this album, that he doesn't know what direction to take anymore and scraps whatever gets done by him or by others...

    but don't worry.. even if Detox doesn't get released by Dre himself, after his death some greedy record company will release it for him.. the question is though, will it be as good, if it was released by dre himself...

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  8. The Chronic was a team effort, period. To say it was solely Dre's work over a few months is absolute bullshit and everyone knows it. In fact, it's common knowledge (and before, an open secret) that Dre never actually did anything by himself. Even he admits he's more a conductor than a composer, the guy who takes the work of others and puts the pieces together until it's exactly right, and that's fine. He took credit for a lot of work that wasn't his in the Death Row days and you can even find Tupac ranting about that and the fact he takes absurd amounts of time to finish one song.

    During The Chronic days, it wasn't Dre sitting alone at the helm of it all, there were a lot of people involved in that record, and it wouldn't exist had there not been. Get that right.

    Detox took so long for a few reasons. One being Dre didn't focus on it for a while to do other shit, gave away great beats for it at the time to other artists (50, Game, Busta, etc.), and never could quite create a cohesive body of work or concept that really peaked where he wanted it. He's finished and scrapped that record multiple times and worked closely with different guys like Bishop Lamont to do it only to start fresh. This is a guy who needs it all to be perfect and that's hard to do when you're expected to take it to the next level and produce mind-blowing joint after joint until it's flawless. I know Jimmy Iovine canned one version because it wasn't "uptempo" enough. Shit like that happens and there are stories of what happened to the other Detox records. Simply put, this is his last album, Dre is an anal perfectionist, and he also happens to rely on a lot of talent to do the actual work. He isn't sitting in the studio by himself making songs - that just doesn't compute. Even 2001 was completely co-produced with Mel-Man. So get this nonsense out of your head that Dre produces anything by himself. These days he simply writes checks for others' beats, has his in-house producers, and he tweaks and mixes them to his liking. That is what Detox will be and what it's always been. Whether or not Dre made the beat isn't the point, but he has impeccable ears and is the best of the best when it comes to mixing and engineering, so it is his album regardless through and through since every minimal facet of it will be tweaked to his discretion.

    It will drop because Interscope has put too much money in it to not to, and the hype alone is worth its weight in gold for a shitload of promotion and selling Beats headphones. When it does come, it'll be a big thing, but it's coming for sure.

    As far as Dre's other projects not dropping in the past, that's just Dre. He loses interest, breaks promises, and doesn't see shit through; that's why you have a whole roster of former Aftermath artists that never put anything out or had a chance. Has nothing to do with The Chronic, Dre has always been about taking things to a new level and setting trends, that's why 2001 worked so well with its concept and execution, it the next evolution of gangsta rap and Dre wants Detox to be that next step in evolution as well.

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  9. To my knowledge it was Dre himself who did alot of the composing and even instrumentation( Drum Programming,and maybe even keyboard) on the original Chronic. I tell you what I really loved the sound he created on his last album with Mel-Man/ a more modern Westcost sound. I hope he will be able to One Up it with Detox . Take to an even further level with Detox with a more futuristic sound. I hope He can get a hold of Scott Storch again. The man is killer on the keys. I really like Khalils sound too. I really respect this guy as a producer along with Mr. Porter. I really believe Dre has who he needs to complete this and hopefully it will be out soon. I also hope that The Planets will see the light of day. It would be amazing to see what Dre could create without any lyrics. I really liked the lyrics from Die Hard(what we've heard so far) and hope that Detox will be consistent with them. After hearing Drug Test I was very disappointed with the lyrics although the beat was not that bad. As far as the music Dre is making I have no worries about that. When Detox drops it will be " Instant Classic " But the lyrics the whole Drugs,Blunts, Bitches, that stuff has to go. Whatever happened to " I'm not talking about lowriders blunts........" Stay true to your words, Dre , Tell us what you are really about Concerned fan

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