Life is Good
Life Is Good: The Cost of Survival, The Beauty of Reflection There is a difference between aging and maturing. Hip-hop has always struggled with that distinction—too often discarding its elders while celebrating youth as the only currency that matters. But Life Is Good does something radical. It ages. Released in 2012, the album finds Nas not chasing relevance, but redefining it. This is not the hungry poet of Illmatic , nor the embattled warrior of Stillmatic . This is a man who has lived—through love, loss, wealth, failure, fatherhood—and has come out the other side with something more valuable than dominance: perspective. This is not an album about proving anything. This is an album about understanding everything. The Suit and the Dress The cover says it all. Nas sits composed, tailored, controlled. Beside him—a wedding dress, draped like memory, like evidence. It is not bitterness. It is not shame. It is acknowledgment. The past is not hidden; it is displayed. Divorce ...