Jay z empire state of mind youtube
The verses of "Empire State of Mind" are littered with specific details from Jay's biography, from shout-outs to his wife Beyoncé Knowles-"BK is from Texas"-to his trendsetting adornment of the Yankee hat, right down to a mention of a real address he once lived at, "my stash spot, 560 State Street."Īt the same time, Jay's New York, and the New York Alicia Keys sings about in the hook, is the same glittering metropolis of hopes and dreams that can be found in so many other songs. On one level, Jay-Z's New York is his New York.
The city at the heart of the song is both a real, gritty place and an idealized, flashy dream. What makes each of those songs so powerful-and what makes Jay-Z's "Empire State of Mind" such a worthy successor to the crown-is the combination of the deeply personal and the universally iconic. The A-list of old-school New York anthems might include the jazz standard "Autumn in New York," Frank Sinatra's legendary "New York, New York," and Billy Joel's classic piano song "New York State of Mind." From the hip-hop generation we have Nas' similarly titled but otherwise rather different "NY State of Mind," Ja Rule's "New York," and the Beastie Boys' "No Sleep Till Brooklyn," among many, many more. While tons of those songs are pretty obscure-"We Are New York and We Love Basketball" by Paulette LaMelle, anyone?-there's no denying that over the years we've seen plenty of top-notch New York songs from top-drawer New York artists. Wikipedia's less-than-definitive " List of Songs About New York City" includes nearly a thousand titles. There's just something about New York City that inspires song, apparently. Over the years, the Big Apple has inspired countless odes and lyrics in its honor. Is "Empire State of Mind" a new anthem-maybe even the new anthem-for New York City?