André 3000 has addressed the criticism aimed at his New Blue Sun album, saying most of the negative reactions have come from OutKast fans — not Hip Hop or jazz heads.

Fans were shocked last year when the rap legend finally dropped his long-awaited debut solo LP, only for it to be an instrumental project built around woodwind instruments.

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Speaking to the Chicago Tribune ahead of his recent tour stop in the city, 3 Stacks shared a “funny” observation about where most of the backlash has come from.

“It’s kind of funny: The backlash is actually not from the rap community, or the jazz and spiritual jazz community. There’s actually more support — surprising support — from both sides,” he said.

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“I think it’s more [OutKast] fans, which I understand. I always try to put myself in their shoes: If my favorite rapper said, ‘I’m not rapping’ and I like it, I like it. But if I don’t, I move on. I think some people take it as blasphemy or something.”

André 3000 also admitted that he did not anticipate the amount of “ridicule” he would receive for his departure from rap.

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“In retrospect, I’ve asked myself, Would I have been better off releasing it under a new name? But I’m glad I didn’t,” he added. “The ridicule that I get from it is the thing I did not expect.

“If I’m a fan of anybody, I’m not waiting 17 years for this great rap album to come out. I’m thinking, ‘Well, that ship has sailed.'”

André 3000 Comes Clean About Flute Pivot: ‘I Actually Don’t Know What I’m Doing’
André 3000 Comes Clean About Flute Pivot: ‘I Actually Don’t Know What I’m Doing’

“I felt like the name ‘André 3000’ showed the bigger story — the journey from where I was to now. I kept it so that wouldn’t get lost.”

The Atlanta native previously admitted that his pivot to playing the flute was not planned.

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Speaking to the crowd during a performance in Los Angeles earlier this year, he said: “’How you just gon’ be rapping and then just get on stage playing fucking flutes?’ Like, I didn’t plan to be the flute n-gga. I didn’t plan to be that. It just kinda, like, it happened.

“When I started rapping, I didn’t know what it would be. It was just me and Big Boi at the crib watching rap videos. Then we was like, ‘Let’s try it.’

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“I know we have plans. I know we go to school. We have intentions, we plan for things — but we all freestyling. We all making this shit up as we go along. We have intentions but we don’t really know.”