Hot 97's Summer Jam: A Preview

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Summer Jam probably isn't the defining annual big-money rap moment that it was in years past. In the past two years, no major beefs have been started, extended, or ended on that Summer Jam screen, and there hasn't been a holy-shit surprise-guest moment on anything like the level of Jay-Z bringing out Michael Jackson. Mostly, these days Summer Jam is just the moment where people look at the lineup, scratch their heads, and then bitch about how bad rap is these days. But! I'm going, and I'm really looking forward to it. I've only been to the past two Summer Jams, but I've never not had fun, even last year, when the one big special surprise guest was an endlessly punishing and spirit-crushing day-long rainstorm. From where I'm sitting, Summer Jam is basically the equivalent of those traveling 50s and 60s variety shows when, like, the Supremes and Eddie Cochran and the Coasters and Waylon Jennings would get onstage, do their couple of big hits, and then disappear immediately. The stage managers at Summer Jam are just completely ruthless; two years ago, they cut T.I.'s half-hour set short just as "What You Know" was starting, and I'm surprised a riot didn't break out. The performers this year will have time to do their hits and bring out their guests, and that'll be it. And stadium-level efficiency like that makes for a good show. It just does. So after last year's wildly inaccurate speculation about what'd go down on Sunday's show, here's the sequel, which will probably be just as wrong.
Alicia Keys. Keys is the big special-guest late-addition, which makes me wonder whether ticket sales were way down this year and Hot 97 was just trying to do what Coachella did by shelling out ridonkulous sums of money to recruit Prince. If that's the case, I have to say, Alicia Keys is a deeply sad Prince equivalent, iron grip on radio playlists notwithstanding. And if the Mary J. Blige set from two years ago is any indication, Keys's set will be both the most professional and the most boring of the day. Stadium crowds are nothing new to Keys, and she's definitely got enough hits to keep everyone interested, but she's way too tasteful and bland of an artist to try for any of the headline-grabbing stunts of which Summer Jam legend are made. As for special guests, the best we can hope for is probably Damian Marley on the "No One" reggae remix.
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