Named after the address of his childhood home in North Carolina, J. Cole's third studio effort was released with no supporting singles, and there are no featured artists, either, because 2014 Forest Hills Drive is one of those personal, conceptual, and "heavy" albums. Most importantly, it's admirable bordering on excellent, sure to inspire returning fans to herald it as a classic even if it doesn't woo the skeptical, casually wandering out of its intro with two smooth and soulful numbers that are so free, they're just shy of being clumsy. Key cut "January 28th" puts gut-wrenching hard truths of the Pusha-T type ("What's the price for a black man's life?/I check the toe tag, not one zero in sight") next to wobbly wordplay that could have been lifted off some old Digable Planets LP ("Flow is bananas/Here, peel this back"), while "Wet Dreamz" finds J. Cole the producer offering a beat that's rather Alchemist or 9th Wonder inspired, and then slathering it in plush strings for a perfect single on an album that refuses singles. Later, "No Role Modelz" mixes a tribute to the late actor James Avery ("Rest in peace Uncle Phil"), with a bubbling beat that's a variation on cloud-rap (co-produced by Phonix Beats and Cole), and a snarky, snappy set of put downs that are like an elevated Fergie ("I don't want no bitch from reality shows/Out of touch with reality hos"), but all these flights of fancy fly freely since the album lacks an anchor. 2014 Forest Hills Drive comes off as a great, experimental, and advancing mixtape, but it's insider to a fault, as slight as that fault might be. ~ David Jeffries
Rovi
全米だけで70万枚超のセールスを記録した『Born Sinner』から1年半ぶり、J・コール乾坤一擲の3作目。告知からリリースまでに要した期間は3週間足らず、先行シングルもデラックス盤もなければゲストも一切ナシというセオリーをことごとく無視したアプローチを採りながら、結果的に2014年のヒップホップ作品最高の初動(約37万1,000枚)をマークする堂々たる成果を導き出した。自身のホームタウンの名をアルバム・タイトルに冠した自叙伝的内容、そして意表を突くネタ使い(冒頭の“January 28th”ではハイ・ファイ・セット“スカイレストラン”をサンプリング!)を交えたプロデューサーとしての成熟ぶりも含め、紛うことなきキャリア最高傑作。好敵手のケンドリック・ラマーと真の意味で肩を並べた感もある。
bounce (C)高橋芳朗
タワーレコード(vol.375(2015年1月25日発行号)掲載)