Fluxblog
October 21st, 2016 12:57pm

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Saba featuring Noname “Church/Liquor Store”

Saba and Noname are speaking a lot of truth in this song about systemic racism – he’s mainly focused on a legal system set up to get as many black kids in jail as possible, and she’s talking about gentrification, a comparatively subtle method to the same end of pushing non-affluent black people out of cities. This could be shrill, but it’s not, even a little bit. Both performances are very nuanced – Saba more on a lyrical level, as he expresses frustration without shrinking the problem down so it loses its complexity. His depiction of Chicago isn’t particularly sentimental, but he’s heavily invested in the place and keeps his details vivid and specific. This isn’t just any city, it’s his city. Noname has a similar approach, but her cadence and delivery add another layer of depth. She has a gift for communicating volumes of emotional detail in subtle inflections and sighs, so even a familiar riff on gentrification feels fresh if just for how many mixed emotions and variations on exasperation and grief get packed into just a few lines.

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