Three days later, he's
appeared on Saturday Night Live and called for the abolition of the 13th
Amendment of the US Constitution, which ended slavery - but the album has yet
to materialise.
Speaking to TMZ, the star explained he "didn't
finish" the album in time; and would to go to Africa to complete it.
"I just need to go and
grab the soil... and have the mic in the open, so you can hear nature while
we're recording.
"I felt this energy
when I was in Chicago. I felt the roots. We have to go to what is known as
Africa."
West added that the album
had been pushed back to Black Friday, 23 November, after a member of his
management team suggested he needed more time.
"I started
incorporating sounds that you never heard before and pushing and having
concepts that people don't talk about," West said of the work-in-progress.
"We have concepts
talking about body-shaming and women being looked down upon for how many people
that they slept with. It's just a full Ye album."
West also
clarified his comments about the 13th Amendment, which promptedoutcry from fellow musicians including Lana Del Rey and Questlove.
"Abolish was the wrong
language," he said. "I mis-spoke by saying abolish. Amend is the
right language… What's beautiful about our Constitution is we can amend
it."
He went on to explain that
he was referring to what's called the 13th Amendment's "exception
clause" - which allows forced labour to continue inside America's prisons.
"There's people
getting paid eight cent a week working for companies that are privately owned,"
said West. "A lot of them are first time offenders. A lot of them are
non-violent crimes.
"And then also, we're
not dealing with the mental health and the therapy. The majority of people that
are in prison are there due to a reaction to a situation that they are
in."
'I support our president'
The wide-ranging interview
with TMZ's Harvey Levin also saw West discuss his endorsement of President
Trump.
"As an American, I
support our president," he said, adding he would offer "my support
and brilliance to whoever is up in office" - despite his notorious
statement that "George Bush doesn't care about black people," in the
aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.
West also said he hoped to
set up a meeting between President Trump and Colin Kapernick, who was the first
NFL player to protest against racial injustice and police brutality by kneeling
during the US national anthem.
"I've been calling
Colin this morning, reaching him, so I can bring Colin to the White House and
we can remove that 'sons of bitches' statement," said West - referring to
a term Trump used to refer to kneeling players last year.
West said he believed
dialogue could prove productive.
"We keep having the
conversation until the conversation turns to love," he said. "We can
be on the same page." - BBC
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