Music

Consequence Discusses 'Turning Points' He Wished Were Shown in Kanye Netflix Doc 'jeen-yuhs'

Reiterating a comment he made at the documentary’s SOBs screening in NY, Consequence explained that he felt the doc missed out on covering Ye’s mixtape days. 

Netflix’s jeen-yuhs gave fans a proper look at Kanye West’s early years, but some “turning points” in his career didn’t quite make the cut, according to Consequence.

The longtime Ye collaborator caught up with AllHipHop to discuss his upcoming LP, Nice Doing Business With You, and his thoughts on the Coodie & Chike documentary. Reiterating a comment he made at the documentary’s SOBs screening in New York, Consequence explained that he felt the doc missed out on covering Ye’s mixtape days.

“There’s always gonna be a narrative arc, where there’s a start, a beginning, a climax to build a story because television works on that, from that aspect,” he said. “But I think there were certain turning points that I would have loved to see just a tad bit of. Obviously, when you see episode 1, you see also when Kanye’s playing ‘All Falls Down’ for Chaka Pilgrim and it seems as though there’s no real feedback. You can’t go from that to all the sudden, ‘Tada, I’m on MTV now.’ That’s a process, and a big part of that was the mixtapes that we began to do.”

As Cons explained, he “initiated” Ye’s early tapes due to the fact that New York was seeing success in mixtapes from Dipset, G-Unit, and more.

“It was a currency within itself,” Cons said, comparing early tapes to Bitcoin. “The value that it gave you if you was hungry would exponentially increase any record deal you were gonna get anyway. When he’s playing ‘All Falls Down,’ he’s already at the label as a platinum producer, he did ‘H to the Izzo.’ What you gotta understand, especially in New York, it’s the top and the bottom. So yeah, you could have the swag straight, but if your bars ain’t straight, n---as ain’t respecting you.”

Cons then called mixtapes a “pivotal part of turning a no to a yes,” and said that the only way they were able to prove that Ye was a rapper—and not just a producer—was “though the mixtapes” they made, like Get Well Soon and Freshman Adjustment.

“That’s such a key notation that’s not included in that story that, for me, especially for any hip-hop purist, you wanna know the blueprint. At the end of the day, us as Black people, our history is already fragmented to begin with.”

Related Stories

Kanye West 'Jeen Yuhs' Netflix film 3
music

7 Revelations From the Final Part of Kanye West's 'Jeen-Yuhs' Documentary

The final part of Netflix's 'Jeen-Yuhs' documentary about Kanye West has arrived. Here are six revelations we had after watching the documentary film.

Jessica Mckinney1525 days ago
Chike, Ye and Coodie attend the jeen-yuhs experience
music

Kanye West Speaks On Black Future Month at 'jeen-yuhs' Doc Screening

Ye made an appearance at the screening alongside directors Clarence ‘Coodie’ Simmons and Chike Ozah, and gave a speech to commemorate the special moment. 

Brenton Blanchet1543 days ago
Kanye West performs at MTV's 'TRL' in 2004
pop-culture

Unreleased 'jeen-yuhs' Clip Shows Kanye Arguing at "Slow Jamz" Shoot: 'Y'all Are Forcing Me to Be the Assh*le'

'TIME' magazine debuted an unreleased clip from Netflix's 'jeen-yuhs' doc showing behind-the-seen footage from Kanye West's "Slow Jamz" video shoot.

Brad Callas1526 days ago

Stay ahead on Exclusives

Download the Complex App