The distortion field around Ye the performer and Kanye West the person makes it tempting to treat his newest album as a glorious return to the artist—the one who didn’t sell swastika merch. On Bully, he’s done away with the references to Hitler chains and untrustworthy Jews, and even the creepy soundbites of his ex-wife and disturbing ballads to his current wife. The bar is low, so it’s actually a relief when a zombified Ye does his best impression of his own past music: He’s a little underdoggy, a little indignant, a little meditative, drifting in Auto-Tune and rapping over an array of top-shelf samples. But even giving Ye some grace and squeezing your brain through the barbed-wire fence of context that threatens, at every turn, to ruin your enjoyment of the music, all you’re left with is a cheap hit of retro-Kanye—a copy of the classic spectacle.
Bully feels custom-designed to please the diehards exhausted by his noxious antics. Throw in some 808s-style Auto-Tune warbling here, some abrasive metallic beats from Yeezus there; add a Graduation reference, Chicago shoutouts, chopped-up soul samples. He even escapes his myopia to briefly acknowledge “mothers fightin’ for a livin’ wage” on “Punch Drunk,” one of the wooziest tunes blitzed silly on a shivery sample from the gospel act the Clark Sisters. “Beauty and the Beast” is slight and pretty, orbiting a hopeful image of a guy energized off “fresh new tires.” “All the Love” has the blissful throb of a radio hit from another era, cruising with ’80s synths and André Troutman, cousin of the legendary Roger Troutman, singing sweet talkbox affirmations. But then you remember that its original title was “Gas Chambers,” and the new lyrics Ye added—“We don’t have to hold on/To pain we left behind”—start to ring trite and desperate.
No score yet, be the first to add.
Most of the album is trapped in a nether-realm between post-breakdown and pre-whatever’s next. Ye’s a narcissist who knows he fucked up but doesn’t want to take ownership of it, so he softens to a slightly deflated ego, blaming the “system” and hiding shame in calls for rebirth. A shorter 10-track version of this album, BULLYV1, was released in March 2025, so it’s tough to pin down exactly what his foggy admissions and pronouncements are about, and which were written in the aftermath of his conveniently timed full-page apology to Jewish people in The Wall Street Journal this January. These are redemption raps with only the vaguest sense of what redemption might look like, a wishy-washy desire to both stomp the haters and be widely loved again. All we get are almost-lines like “I’m back to life like an Epi-Pen,” as he declares on “Father.” He says he’s “kicked the ego out of the door,” but also: “All the people swear my ego needs a repo/I won’t let go.” You can sum up the enervated waffling with the murky shrug of, “Had a change of heart, I felt different at first/Lot of pain, lot of hurt, but still, could’ve been worse.” Hopefully it means Ye is in a better headspace, but why should anyone care, let alone give him kudos for such weak introspection and feeble, characterless music?
