Best Posts in Forum: Kendrick Lamar

  1. rapmusik
    Posts: 18,561
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    Oct 20, 2015
    yes. yes it does
     
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  2. Boos
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    Boos Nova Nation

    Sep 3, 2020
    Behind the scenes videos on this guys Instagram story
    https://instagram.com/corybarkermusic?igshid=13z4r4u6ybw3s



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  3. Trackz
    Posts: 9,457
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    Joined: Mar 17, 2011

    Trackz BARCODE

    Apr 16, 2018


    The award is given “for distinguished musical composition by an American that has had its first performance or recording in the United States during the year,” according to the Pulitzer Prize Board.

    Released in April, 2017, d---, has been defined by the Pulitzer committee as “a virtuosic song collection unified by its vernacular authenticity and rhythmic dynamism that offers affecting vignettes capturing the complexity of modern African-American life.”

    The TDE rapper is the first non-classical or jazz artist to win the award. Congrats to K.Dot and the TDE team!
     
    Apr 30, 2025
  4. Xmipod
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    Feb 8, 2018
     
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  5. Sqrt Sqrt
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    Sqrt Sqrt Basketball Shorts with the Gonzales Park Odor

    Nov 3, 2017
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    Eazy Breezy Thugger Girls out now
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  6. Ordinary Joel
    Posts: 29,094
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    Joined: Mar 23, 2015

    Ordinary Joel Happiness begins when selfishness ends

    Oct 17, 2017
    https://i-d.vice.com/en_uk/article/j5gwk7/an-in-depth-conversation-with-kendrick-lamar

    [​IMG]

    By Touré photos by Craig McDean

    OCT 16 2017, 10:25PM
    In a rare interview, the Compton rapper discusses Trump, Obama and how we can all make a difference.

    "I… don't… know," Kendrick Lamar says when asked to explain why Donald Trump became President of the United States. Few people understand America the way Kendrick does, so surely he must know something about how the billionaire reality TV star has happened to his country. He's sitting in a little dark gray room backstage at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York, on a Sunday afternoon. It's just a few hours before his show. He's in silver Nike Air Max and a maroon sweatsuit, top and bottom, with the TDE logo. That's Top Dawg Entertainment, Lamar's label. He's calm and softly spoken and radiates intensity because his words are well chosen and carry weight. Kendrick isn't voluble but he is deep. He's perceptive, wise and quite often brilliant, so like many Americans, when it comes to Trump he's still in shock. "We all are baffled," he says. "It is something that completely disregards our moral compass." The shift is almost tangible for Kendrick because Obama is not just a President he respected and admired, he's also a friend who loves his music and invited him to the White House.

    "I was talking to Obama," he says, "and the craziest thing he said was, 'Wow, how did we both get here?' Blew my mind away. I mean, it's just a surreal moment when you have two black individuals, knowledgeable individuals, but who also come from these backgrounds where they say we'll never touch ground inside these floors." A pause. He briefly recalls his grandmother, who died when Kendrick was a teenager; how incredible might she have found this, a black man in office, talking to her grandson. "That's what blows me up. Being in there and talking to him and seeing the type of intelligence that he has and the influence that he has, not only on me, but on my community. It just always takes me back to the idea of how far we have come along with this idea about how [much] further we can go. Just him being in office sparks the idea that us as a people, we can do anything that we want to do. And we have smarts and the brains and the intelligence to do it."

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    Both Barack and Kendrick came from nothing and ascended to legendary status on the strength of their words and their gifts for oration. They sat and talked in the Oval Office about the improbability of their lives – how did we both get here? And now, as far as the White House is concerned, both are all but considered enemies of the state. "It's a complete mindfuck," Lamar says of going from visiting the White House to feeling hated by it.

    "The key differences [between Obama and Trump] are morals, dignity, principles, common sense," he says. Where Obama was an inspiration, it's hard for him to even respect Trump. "How can you follow someone who doesn't know how to approach someone or speak to them kindly and with compassion and sensitivity?" But ultimately the rise of Trump has brought out something new in Kendrick. "It's just building up the fire in me. It builds the fire for me to keep pushing as hard as I want to push."

    The fire inside must be blazing right now because Kendrick's newest release, d---, his fourth studio album, is both a commercial and a critical smash. It's sold over two million copies and has every review writer struggling to outdo the praise showered by all those who superpraised Kendrick before them. Pitchfork's review calls d---, "a widescreen masterpiece of rap, full of expensive beats, furious rhymes, and peerless storytelling about Kendrick's destiny in America." Lamar's vision for d--- meant asking his producers, "'What can we do to make it live in another space and be ourselves, but also challenge ourselves?' As far as the sonics of the album, we wanted to make it where it was really back to the future, something you've never heard before, but something you've heard before. If that makes sense." At this point the hip-hop universe seems to be unanimous in its belief that the greatest MC in the world right now is Kendrick Lamar. He could win a battle against most underground MCs and he could outsell most pop rappers. He is the undisputed current king of hip-hop.

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    Kendrick lives a life that befits the king of hip-hop, if you think what truly befits the king of hip-hop is to basically live in the studio looking for the perfect beat and the ultimate rhyme. "I can sometimes cut the whole world off to write a verse that is perfect to me," he says. "I could be in the studio all day and turn the phone off and completely zone out, because I feel like this was what I was chosen to do. And I can't let anyone get in between that." Unlike many MCs, when Kendrick creates, he's not high. "I want to make the music in the most sober mind as possible, that way I know it's me making it, not just the liquor!" If hip-hop is a game, Kendrick wants to win. "Hip-hop plays two ways in my head. It plays as a contact sport, and also as something that you connect to – songwriting. Growing up and listening to battles between Nas and Jay-Z, that's the sport for me. That's where it can get funky, that's where I can say whatever I want, however I want, whenever I want. Then there's the other side, which is showing something that people can actually relate to, and connect with. I have that competitive nature, and I also have the compassion to talk about something that's real."

    "Hip-hop plays two ways in my head. It plays as a contact sport, and also as something that you connect to – songwriting. Growing up and listening to battles between Nas and Jay-Z, that's the sport for me."

    Asked if he's written the perfect rhyme yet, Kendrick decides the album's 12th song, Fear, contains the best verses he's ever written. "It's completely honest," he says. "The first verse is everything that I feared from the time that I was seven years old. The second verse I was 17, in the third it's everything I feared when I was 27. These verses are completely honest." He got to that honesty through years of work with a studio family that helped keep the king humble. "Everything you write is not dope," he says. "Even if you're a great writer, a bunch of the stuff you write is wack. But most people don't have somebody around to be like, 'That's wack.'" Kendrick has friends who are empowered to tell him what's not working and he says that has made a huge difference. "I've been in that studio writing terrible verses, writing terrible hooks, with homeboys and friends and people that you trust telling you, 'That's garbage.' I grew thick skin and got back in there and did it all over again. And then you eventually grow an ability to know when something is too far. I learnt how to challenge myself to take it to the next level."

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    But for Kendrick to reach his throne he's had to do much more than learn how to rhyme. He grew up in Compton, California, a rough place that has s----d up many souls, a place where gangs, killers and dead bodies littered Rosecrans Avenue, where he lived until relatively recently. Music wasn't just an outlet, he needed it to save his spirit. He grew up obsessed with Snoop, Dre, Pac, Public Enemy, KRS-One, Rakim, Jay-Z and Kanye, as well as Michael Jackson, Quincy Jones, Prince, Marvin Gaye, the Isley Brothers, Luther Vandross and also Malcolm X. "His ideas rooted my approach to music," he says. Reading The Autobiography of Malcolm X as a teenager contributed to shaping Kendrick as an artist. "That was the first idea that inspired how I was going to approach my music. From the simple idea of wanting to better myself by being in this mind-state, [the] same way Malcolm was." Without music to give him purpose, he might have grown lost. "We used to have these successful people come around and tell us what's good and what's bad in the world, but from our perspective it didn't mean s--- to us, because you're telling us all these positive things but when we walk outside and see somebody's head get blown off, whatever you just said went out the window. And it just chips away at the confidence. It makes you feel belittled in the world. The more violence you're exposed to as a kid, the more it chips away at you. For the most part, the kids that I was around, it broke them. It broke them to say, 'f--- everything, I'm gonna do what I'm gonna do to survive.'" How did he escape falling into that? "Before I let it chip away at me 100%, I was making my transition into music."

    Later that night, at Brooklyn's Barclays Center, Lamar comes up from under the floor to a screaming, sold out crowd. He's wearing a yellow tracksuit with black trim, recalling Bruce Lee in Game of Death, and he commands the stage, working alone for most of the show and dominating the arena. His small body exudes power as he moves about the stage. Like Rakim and Nas before him, he doesn't dance and he's as serious as a heart attack. The crowd can't take their eyes off of him. In between songs, Lamar is on the big screen in clips from The Legend of Kung Fu Kenny, a little film he made, inspired by 70s kung fu flicks. In it Lamar gets to look like he's in a kung fu movie, but this is not costume play, it gets at the core of who he is. In those movies there was often an obsession with acquiring skill and showing off mastery and an internal battle to excel. That's who Kendrick is as an artist – he's focused on polishing his skills and displaying his mastery and pushing himself to greatness. Asked about his favourite words, besides "perspective" Lamar says, "discipline." "I love that word," he says, "because it shows who you really are. There are so many vices in the world, especially being in the entertainment business. You're exposed to so much at any given time. Whatever you need is right there in your face. But how much discipline do you have when the camera's off, when the light's off? That inspires me. How to restrain that. And that shows who you really are. To control yourself, that is the ultimate power."

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    Kendrick is learning more and more about how to control himself, partly through daily meditation sessions each morning. "I need 30 minutes a day of just reflecting on the moment," he says. "When you're in this business, everything is," he snaps his fingers. "Years go by so quick, because you're working and you're also planning for more work within the next six months to a year. So for me, I just have to sit down and reflect on what's going on in these 30 minutes." His meditation practice helps him gain perspective, which he says is his, "number one favourite word".

    "I'm a human being, I'm a person, I have family, I have my own personal problems. But I have to give to the world. That's my responsibility. It's not just a job or entertainment for me; this is what I have to offer to the world."

    But he still lives in Trump's America, where racism is becoming more overt, more prevalent and more violent. Some in the resistance have adopted To p---- A Butterfly's Alright as an anthem and he knows the power that song has. "I'd say that's one of my greatest records because it gave these kids an actual voice and an actual practice to go out there and make a difference. They're going out and they're walking the walk and talking the talk whether it's inside their communities, whether it's inside their juvenile systems. They wanna make change." Is there a sense of accountability in some way; does Kendrick carry the weight of the community on his shoulders? "It's definitely a responsibility," he acknowledges. "I'm still a human being, I'm still a person, I still have family, I still have my own personal problems. But I have to give to the world. I think that's my responsibility, [to learn] from my mistakes [and to spread] the knowledge that I have, the wisdom that I have. It's not just a job or entertainment for me, this is what I have to offer to the world."

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    As well as his impact on global pop culture, Kendrick's local community is also benefitting from his success; he has helped dozens of his peers find jobs that aren't just "making money" but "earning a living". "You put YMCAs inside your community and you give a job to these cats that can't be hired anywhere else. You make the opportunities, and that's what I'm doing personally. Because once I put the power in their hands, they can put it in the next, and they can put it in the next. People can't believe that it can change that way. But it has to start with one." Dr. Dre and Venus and Serena Williams are also active in the city of Compton, while its female mayor, 35-year-old Aja Brown, is effecting real change. "This generation has opportunities that my generation didn't have," he notes, adding that to be present in these communities holds true power. It's not enough to merely donate or write powerful songs or tweet messages of positivity; you must show and prove. "There's a lot of people that are scared of their own people, the g--- culture that is still there, but you can't be scared. You gotta be there, because it shows confidence not only in yourself but in those in the neighbourhood. People want a reason to hate you. Don't give them that reason. What's going on now is that transformation of us not being scared of where we come from. And that idea is gonna get passed on."

    Lots of people want change but how does true structural revolution happen? Is Alright just a song or is there something more behind it? Lamar promises that we gonna be alright, but how? How do we get to actually being alright in such a crazy nation? "I always go back to the community," Lamar says. "Simple as that. Because I see these kids growing up without a father and they don't have this confidence of knowing that they're better than the environment that they're in. So getting to alright is just installing confidence in them. To let them know that I come from where you come from, and you can ultimately make a change." Kendrick Lamar knows that he is an artist who has the power to change the world and he's working on trying to do just that. "When I'm gone," he says, "I can rest peacefully knowing that I contributed to the evolution of this right here, the mind."

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    Credits
    Text Touré
    Photography Craig McDean
    Fashion Director Alastair McKimm

    Grooming Francelle Daly at Art and Commerce. Photography assistance Nick Brinley and Maru Teppei. Digital technician Nick Ong. Styling assistance Sydney Rose Thomas and Madeleine Jones. Grooming assistance Ryo Yamazaki. Production Gracey Connelly and Dyonne Wasserman.

    Kendrick wears all clothing Prada.
     
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  7. jmillithauglybasedgod
    Posts: 5,102
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    Joined: Feb 26, 2017

    jmillithauglybasedgod Pray For Lucifert 2R

    Sep 17, 2017
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    On This Day In Hip-Hop History, September 17th, 2010, Kendrick Lamar dropped his critically acclaimed fifth mixtape, Overly Dedicated, which featured guest appearances from Jhené Aiko, ScHoolboy Q, Ab-Soul, BJ The Chicago Kid, Ash Riser, and Alori Joh. It was the last mixtape Kendrick released before his debut album, Section.80, was released the following year and is seen by many as his best mixtape and an underrated cult classic. What are your favorite tracks, beats, rhymes, and moments from this tape?

    Discuss. @KendrickSXN
     
    Apr 30, 2025
  8. Ordinary Joel
    Posts: 29,094
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    Ordinary Joel Happiness begins when selfishness ends

    Jun 26, 2017
     
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  9. Jehovah
    Posts: 13,355
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    Jehovah SB3

    Jun 22, 2017
     
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  10. vegardm
    Posts: 50
    Likes: 65
    Joined: Dec 3, 2016

    Apr 21, 2017
    I would choose Kanye West or Frank Ocean of the top of my head.
     
    Apr 30, 2025
  11. ThatsthenewYe
    Posts: 1,124
    Likes: 1,665
    Joined: Feb 20, 2011
    Location: Europe

    Apr 18, 2017
    NEW NEW UPDATE !!!!!!

    550K SPS !! INCLUDING 325K PURE SALES


    Kendrick Lamar will not only best Drake's first-week total for the top debut of the year—he'll do it by a substantial margin.

    d---. will surpass 300 million streams; it's only the second title to do so in a single week. The first, of course, was Drake's More Life with 385 million streams in the week ending 3/23/17. With album sales projecting to 325k (100k more than More Life), our SPS projection is now 550k, giving Kendrick, Top Dawg's TDE crew and Team Interscope the year's top debut by a decisive margin.

    Combined album and track sales for d---. will make up more than 60% of the first-week total. More Life's sales represented less than 50% of its first week.


    http://hitsdailydouble.com/news&id=306036

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    UPDATE 2

    DRAKE IS LIKELY TO BE HANDED HIS L

    around 510K-520 SPS
    more than 300K pure sales!!!!

    Based on today’s numbers it appears Kendrick Lamar will beat Drake’s record for the year’s biggest debut. The TDE/Interscope star’s d---. is now looking to bow at about 510-520k SPS, surpassing the 505k for Drake’s More LIfe; it’s already eclipsed More Life in sales. While the race remains tight, Kendrick has emerged as the favorite. Stay tuned

    http://hitsdailydouble.com/news&id=306029


    ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    KENDRICK'S 300 MILLION (UPDATE) - HITSDAILYDOUBLE


    Kendrick Lamar (TDE/Interscope) 480-510k SPS (280-305k album)
    Kendrick Lamar will become the first artist other than Drake to collect more than 200 million streams for an album in a single week. And it's now looking like the set could reach heights as high as 300m. This would be only the second time since we’ve been monitoring streams that tracks from an album have been streamed over 300m times.
    The first, of course, was with Drake’s More Life only a few weeks ago, which pulled in 385m streams; More Life scored the year’s biggest debut with 505k.
    Tracks from d---. (TDE/Interscope) have racked up 150m combined streams at Spotify and Apple Music thus far. The d---. tracks occupy nine of the Top 10 slots on Spotify and the Top 11 slots on Apple Music.
    Could this streaming explosion put d---. (TDE/Interscope) in position to equal or surpass Drizzy’s 2017 record of 505k in first-week SPS?


    around 480K-510K SPS
    300K pure sales
    more than 300 million streams for the album
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    NEW Update confirming the numbers 4/19
    AN APPROPRIATELY d---ed, POST-EASTER TOP 20
    This puts Lamar in a close race for the year’s top debut, currently held by More Life with 505k. We’ll update daily as the race tightens. Here’s how things look at midweek:

    SPS:
    * Kendrick Lamar (TDE/Interscope) 490-515k SPS, 290-310k albums


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    http://hitsdailydouble.com/news&id=305967

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    BILLBOARD : old numbers BEFORE UPDATE

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    Kendrick Lamar is on course to earn his third No. 1 album on the Billboard 200 chart next week with d---. The new set, which was released on April 14 through Top Dawg/Aftermath/Interscope Records, could earn around 475,000 equivalent album units in the week ending April 20, according to industry forecasters.

    If d---. starts as expected, it will earn the second-largest week for an album of 2017, behind only the debut of Drake’s More Life, which launched with 505,000 units on the April 8-dated ranking, according to Nielsen Music.
     
    Last edited: Apr 20, 2017
    Apr 30, 2025
  12. lil peeps last xan
    Posts: 1,555
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    Location: Errol

    lil peeps last xan Errol will return in 2019

    Apr 17, 2017
    Let me preface this by saying I'm not a fan of Kendrick Lamar. By this I mean I don't look forward to his releases and I don't consider him to be one of my favorite artists. As you all probably know Kanye is by far my favorite artist and I'm pretty big on people like Frank and The Weeknd and I'd say I enjoy them more than Kendrick.

    THAT BEING SAID

    I have always had an admiration for Kendrick (while having a disdain for J. Cole, but that will be a thread for another time). I didn't like TPAB despite it's universal acclaim but I liked a few songs and appreciated his creative direction. I always thought he was slightly overrated but after d---. I can honestly say he deserves all praise and 0 hate.

    d---. is a great f---ing album. I don't know what else to say. He makes great music that even someone like me who doesn't care for the socially conscious style of music can 100% love and appreciate. I don't want to see Kendrick slander from anyone on this site ever again. When it will all be said and done he will be a top 5 artist of our lifetime.

    I won't be on the Kenny bandwagon going forward but I will defend him from slander because after this album I don't know how you can hate him, his music is constantly evolving and it's consistently good. I may not love him but myself nor anyone else can say he's anything less than a legend at this point.

    Also I'm back from Cali so my shitposting will resume shortly, thank you.
     
    Apr 30, 2025
  13. Oldboy
    Posts: 51,226
    Likes: 160,686
    Joined: Feb 14, 2011

    Apr 16, 2017
    ok lets take a risk here, i will vote for d--- cuz i honestly think it will hold up better

    dont respond with "too early"..no s---...this is just prediction and i will bump this in 6 months

    vote
     
    Apr 30, 2025
  14. Final
    Posts: 15,182
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    Joined: Nov 30, 2014

    Final

    Apr 7, 2017
     
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  15. Jehovah
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    Jehovah SB3

    Oct 20, 2016
     
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  16. xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
    Posts: 19,389
    Likes: 56,879
    Joined: Dec 14, 2015

    Oct 4, 2016
    I don't know about you guys but in the realm of rap music to be considered the best ever i believe that you must have at least 3 pure classics that lyrically and sonically incredible. While kendrick does have three classics i consider s 80 an underground classic. I know i know biggie is regarded as many as the best ever only having two classics. Heres why. One he died at the peak of his career after d dropping ready to die which is undoubtedly a top 10 ever rap album. Two the death of someone who drops an album of that quality is going to have there worth inflated and we have to considered life after death which is also a classic album. Ready to die is the most influential rap album ever in terms of rap flows.

    Now im certain of this, that if kendrick lamar died today (god forbid, may kendrick lamar live to over 100 years) he would be regarded as the best to ever do it because of gkmc and tpab. We all know that tpab is the greatest rap album ever. From kl ep all the way to uu is more than enough for him to claim the best ever status. So at this point realistically kendrick is top 6. That top 6 being andre 3000, pac, biggie, nas, jay z, kendrick.

    If kendricks next album is as good as gkmc or tpab
    or just below them. He will be the greatest to ever do it. Jay or nas wont hold a candle to kendrick becuase they both have one glaring weakness. They both have dropped more mediocre albums than classics. Jay has like 12 albums and realistically has 3 classics out of 12 albums. Nas no comment, one of the best to ever do it but has horrible beat choices. Nas also has alot of average albums. 3k has no solos, pac dropped some average s--- too, biggie died too early. If u mention eminem u deserve a slap. Kendrick has no bad projects from klep to uu. The stage is all set for him and his next album will be better than tpab.
     
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  17. shahidah
    Posts: 4,962
    Likes: 12,072
    Joined: Sep 9, 2015

    shahidah watch me work it JT

    Sep 18, 2016
    in todays Kendrick news....

    [​IMG]


    "Rapper Kendrick Lamar took home Lyricist of the Year at the 11th annual BET Hip-Hop Awards.


    After claiming his award, Lamar continued to praise Snoop Dogg — recipient of the “I Am Hip Hop” award on Saturday night at the Cobb Energy Performing Centre near Atlanta. The rapper also told the crowd music is one of the best ways to bring people together, and thanked BET for putting together the show."


     
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  18. pronx
    Posts: 419
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    Joined: Apr 14, 2016

    Aug 12, 2016
     
    Apr 30, 2025
  19. The Gooch
    Posts: 3,698
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    Location: Hillbillyville, NC

    The Gooch Gucci FlipFlops (aka Rap Game's Steven Adams)

    Aug 4, 2016
    The man tries to renegade every feature he's on, most of the time which ends up hurting the quality and cohesiveness of the songs.

    Ex. On Me, Autumn Leaves

    He says he does it out of competition but if that's the case then he's losing by making the song worse.

    His whole persona is nothing new, tpab is your generic conscious album but his fans ride him so much that they consider it new and innovative. People have been using funk and jazz production on rap songs for years.


    Now let's get into some of his corniest lines.

    "The head still good tho, the head still good tho"

    "I'm on the toilet when I rhyme"

    "Die from lead showers
    I pray my d-ck get big as the eiffel tower"

    "Head is the answer"

    "Sharing bars like you're in a 2 man cell" - s--- is so simple but he gets a pass bc hes Kendrick

    Anything to do with the "yams"

    The whole thing where he rapped in Spanish on collard greens. Any other rapper did that he would be a culture vulture.

    Could name so many more lines

    Not to mention how unbelievablely corny "Control" was, man said nothing in his verse until he decide to name drop a bunch of rappers then people jumped on it. Sean and Jay Elec were trying to say stuff in their verses but Kendrick once again had to try and steal the spotlight for "competition". Not to mention the impact he left on other rappers. Bc of that verse, the Chicago rapper Rico Recklezz thought he could do the same and call out every rapper from the Chi. Now he's getting death threats left and right.

    I could go on all day but I'll give y'all a chance to refute my facts
     
    Apr 30, 2025
  20. xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
    Posts: 19,389
    Likes: 56,879
    Joined: Dec 14, 2015

    Jul 22, 2016
     
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