Entertainment

Rapper Jay-Z talks marriage troubles on new album, 4:44

Jay-Z lets his music do the talking with his new album, 4:44. The rapper addressed cheating on his wife Beyoncé, the birth of his twins and this year's Oscars best picture.

After Beyonce's Lemonade album hinted at infidelity, rapper comes clean about their marriage

Jay-Z performs at Brooklyn's Barclays Center on Oct. 20, 2015. The rapper put out his new album 4:44 on Friday, releasing it exclusively on his premium music streaming platform Tidal. (Mark VonHolden/Invision for HTC/AP)

Rapper Jay-Z let his music do the talking with his new album, 4:44 on Friday as he addressed cheating on his wife Beyoncé, the birth of his twins and this year's Oscars best picture.

In the title track, Jay-Z admitted in his lyrics that he "often womanize", more than a year after R&B star Beyoncé first shed light on his infidelities in her album Lemonade.

Jay-Z pens a remorseful ode to his fractured marriage in 4:44, rapping that it "took for my child to be born, see through a woman's eyes" in reference to the couple's daughter Blue Ivy.

He also mentioned their twins, who were reported to have been born this month but whose arrival has yet to be officially confirmed, saying it "took for these natural twins to believe in miracles, took me too long for this song, I don't deserve you."

Jay-Z, Blue Ivy Carter and Beyoncé Knowles attend the 66th NBA All-Star Game at Smoothie King Center on February 19, 2017 in New Orleans. The rapper talks about their fractured marriage on his new album. (Getty Images)

Jay-Z added: "What good is a ménage à trois when you have a soul mate? You risked that for Blue? ... my heart breaks for the day I had to explain my mistakes."

Fans were left stunned last year when Beyoncé made accusations in Lemonade that Jay-Z had cheated on her, a rare crack in the seemingly perfect facade of one of music's highest-profile couples.

In her song Sorry, Beyoncé referred to a mystery woman, calling her "Becky with the good hair", which is echoed in Jay-Z's track Family Feud, a duet with Beyoncé in which he raps "let me alone Becky."

Tidal exclusive release

4:44 was released exclusively on premium music streaming platform Tidal, founded by Jay-Z, in partnership with U.S. wireless carrier Sprint Corp., which purchased a 33 percent stake in Tidal this year and made the album available via a six-month Tidal subscription to Sprint mobile customers.

It can also be heard throughout Friday across 160 U.S. radio stations on iHeartRadio, the digital music service for a network of traditional radio stations. Canadians, however, must be Tidal subscribers if they want to listen to 4:44.

The 35-minute album features Blue Ivy on the track Legacy, in which the five-year-old asks "Daddy, what's a will?" as the rapper expresses hope that his children use their wealth to promote "black excellence."

In Moonlight, Jay-Z tackles the impact of the film La La Land being named best picture at this year's Oscars while in The Story of O.J., the rapper explores black identity in America.

The rapper, who will play a few festival dates in September and October, recently reinstated the hyphen in his stage name after dropping it in 2013.

With files from CBC News