How Meek Mill's Championships Brought Him Back To No. 1
By Trey Alston
The story of
Championships starts, like several things, with loss. In
Meek Mill’s case, it was agency; a decade-long cold war with the legal system stopped him in his tracks in 2014, keeping him ensnared up until this past April. In the midst of this turmoil in 2015, he split his fan base wide open
by provoking Drake and kindling a feud that would
prove unwinnable for him. By the time Meek was sentenced to two to four years in prison in November of 2017, he’d bottomed out from this combination of troubles. His path to victory — culminating in
his recent No. 1 entry atop the
Billboard 200 chart — started with the mental element he discovered while imprisoned that enabled him to take control of his relationships, his career, and his place as a public figure. He was released on bail in April and immediately embraced his tumultuous situation. His new album,
Championships, was forged in the dying fires of his past and acts as an analysis and swan song to the circumstances that got him here.
Meek’s unkempt straight-back braids and wide eyes made his early raps all of the more enticing. He was a creature from the black lagoon with a smoking tongue, barking tenacious punchlines about common rap talking points: the ability to allure ladies, popping shells, needless to say, braggadocio. He was Meek Millz at this time, and by the age of 21 had four solo mixtapes under his belt (an extra four with his right now defunct order The Bloodhoundz). That much work inspired his community. Videos of his rough freestyles feature seas of faces with grins stretching to their ears. He was Philadelphia and Philadelphia was him. This level of hard work and support wouldn’t go unnoticed – he caught a persons vision of label execs and then signed to Grand Hustle Records before switching course and aligning with Rick Ross’ Maybach Music Group.
Shareif Ziyadat/FilmMagicThe first piece of Meek’s career was about overzealousness, the kind that habitually leads to crashes, time and time again. He experienced a whirlwind of success with his studio debut,
Dreams and Nightmares, in 2012 and mixtape
Dreamchasers 3 in 2013. He rapidly catapulted over much of his competition at the time to be one of rap’s most famous faces and the mascot of MMG. From his success, and paired with his cockiness, came the initial blows – beefs with Cassidy and Drake that extinguished his momentum.
Cassidy, undoubtedly a higher end rapper, lyricist, and punchline fanatic, exposed that Meek wasn’t the lyricist that he, and much of each person else, thought he was. Immediately after trading diss songs in December of 2012, which, of the two, Cassidy won with his bruising punchlines. Cassidy’s 10-minute diss, “Raid,” came out in January, putting Meek out of business up until September once he released “Repo.” Cassidy then responded to Meek’s diss only three days later, effectively ending the lopsided battle. Nevertheless Cassidy’s victory would mean little outdoors of proving him a more dominating lyrical presence.
In 2015, Meek Mill’s
Dreams Worth More Than Money went No. 1 on the
Billboard 200 and sold 215,000 in the initial beginning week as his career, largely pushing Cassidy’s win onto the back burner. Meek took the assortment of units sold as a win and was anxious to flex his commercial appeal. This could be the cause of a self-provoked feud with Drake, who proved a much craftier opponent than Cassidy, choosing to assault Meek’s character by turning him into a running joke that people felt the need to scrape off their shoes. Meek released his project
DC4 in 2016 and moved only 87,000 units in its starting week, debuting at No. 3. Drake had quelled the beast.
Meek’s journey via legal system was the background noise that finally became addressed while he was sentenced to two to four years in prison for violating parole in November of 2017. The vehemence of the judge and the questionable circumstances surrounding the 2008 arrest that placed him on probation raised red flags about not only Meek’s treatment, yet also the infinite ways the justice system fails. Despite multiple #FreeMeekMill protests and celebrity support, Meek sat encaged. “All I was doing was consuming food a lot, getting fat, and being stressed,” he revealed
an in interview with Vulture in November.
Things changed as soon as he emerged from prison on bail in April, fundamentally affected by the events that transpired. Not just with his case, yet with his career and the relationships he built and/or burnt while doing so. Subsequent interviews following his release revealed a poised man with a purpose, looking to rectify past mistakes and help make the criminal justice system fairer in the future. He talked candidly about prison reform on CNN with Michael Smerconish, expressing a wise, informed stance on his harsh experience.
“There’s a lot of things in the system that clearly don’t make sense,”
he said. “It’s keeping several young black boys caught up in the system without even committing crimes.”
Immediately after being released from prison in April 2018, Meek dropped the
Legends of the Summer EP in July, a fast sampler showing that he may touch all of his bases and that he had not lost a step. Although he went musically dark afterwards, only appearing to speak about his experiences with the system and to discuss the required changes to it. (In September, he also mended his long-standing beef with Drake
onstage in Boston for the Toronto rapper’s Aubrey and the Three Migos Tour.) It was fitting that he first hinted at the album that would become
Championships in
an early November interview with Vogue about criminal justice perform, poetic almost. Just over two weeks later, accompanied by a rapid storm of hype,
Championships arrived in victorious splendor, featuring Meek’s voice, louder-than-ever, right now imbued with purpose.
The beating heart of
Championships comes from Meek’s voice and its warm embrace. He started his career as a bard boasting accomplishments on his journey and grew to be the voice of the marginalized on the new album. This larger reach, a product of renewed interest from fans that walked away a couple of years ago, made the album debut at No. 1 with 229,000 album-equivalent units sold in the initial starting week. As a substitute opposed to being satisfied with his return to top dawg status, Meek was still famished. His focus was fundamentally tweaked during prison; it’s all about the long game right now. “#1 album however yet still like #23 on the Forbes list I gotta get on my grind Asap!!,” He
tweeted a week immediately following the album’s release.
Championships is the culmination of a journey via absurd highs and lows. Peppered across its lengthy tracklist are dark emotions, melancholy reflection, and, most importantly, celebratory odes. Whether he’s spilling about love (“24/7”), or justifying his attachment to dilapidated environments, Meek approaches each subject with stunning attention to detail. Nevertheless one of the pervading messages of the album is that, some days, loss is needed required for the ultimate win. “Championships” is the album’s centerpiece that reckons with the ultimate meaning of his conquer. “Beat the system, beat racism, beat poverty / And right now we made it through all that, we at the championship,” Meek raps. By telling a story full of ups and downs, he reminds us that the growth spurred by those losses is the greatest win of all.
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