Kendrick Lamar Best Posts: Jazz savior Kamasi Washington talks about Kendrick Lamar fans and their "vast musical knowledge"

  1. Malvo
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    Apr 14, 2016
    I don't think you need a vast musical knowledge to appreciate it, but there's no way you gonna say its not an amazing album when you're familiar with the last 50 years of black music.

    It almost made me cringe when my friend told me it was experimental...no, it's cultural. From the rhythms to the melodies, nothing on this album is experimental. He's also right when he says it's one of the most lush albums I've ever heard from any genre. You can literally compare its musical composition to any jazz or funk album from any era and it will stand strong. Musically, this album incoporates all the ideas black musicians tried to pioneer these last decades.
     
    May 3, 2025
  2. Tripstarr
    Posts: 622
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    Apr 15, 2016
    its musical complexity is actually the reason why you catch new things with each listen, that s--- actually reminds me of a lot of layered albums that used to drop in the early 80s
     
    May 3, 2025
  3. stainzz
    Posts: 423
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    Apr 14, 2016
    He's right when he says there's a lot more music heads now than there have ever been but most of them are just like me, old heads.
     
    #5
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  4. h Allu
    Posts: 459
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    Apr 14, 2016
    not the first time I see this thread?

    But yeah, I consider myself as a knowledgeable person when it comes to music and its history
     
    May 3, 2025
  5. Charlie Work
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    Charlie Work Level 5 Goblin

    Apr 14, 2016
    "jazz savior" lol
     
    #9
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  6. stainzz
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    Apr 14, 2016
    yeah but then again I'm almost 40, so of course I have an appreciation for this sound.
     
    #4
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  7. Goku187
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    Apr 15, 2016
    put this on this guy's fuccing tombstone
     
    May 3, 2025
  8. stainzz
    Posts: 423
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    Apr 15, 2016
    then its a good thing its not just an opinion on this forum. because tpab >>>>>>> gkmc
     
    Last edited: Apr 15, 2016
    May 3, 2025
  9. tehparadox
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    Apr 15, 2016
     
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    May 3, 2025
  10. derro13
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    Apr 14, 2016
    :sweatt:
     
    #3
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  11. WPG
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    WPG sxn80 Rory Gilmore

    Apr 15, 2016
     
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  12. DouBle
    Posts: 722
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    Apr 14, 2016
    I love it despite having the most limited knowledge on the entire forum but I'll graciously accept the compliment.
     
    May 3, 2025
  13. Soldier
    Posts: 29,047
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    Soldier big cuntry's alias

    Apr 15, 2016
    The pretentiousness is at an all time high
     
    May 3, 2025
  14. Poohdini
    Posts: 13,809
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    Poohdini MVP MVP

    Apr 15, 2016
    If I wanna hear jazz I'll turn on Anchorman and watch Ron Burgundy play the jazz flute.

    Everyone stopped taking you guys seriously when the majority of the SXN started saying TPAB was >>> GKMC.
     
    May 3, 2025
  15. Skippy
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    Skippy vr

    Apr 15, 2016
    captain savage
     
    May 3, 2025
  16. lil uzi vert stan
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    Apr 15, 2016
    HAHAHAH wtf. get off the internet u weirdo
     
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  17. Thhuglife
    Posts: 384
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    Apr 15, 2016
    He's not lying, more and more people definitely enjoy high calibre and very dense music again

    s--- was time though, almost took us 20-30 years to see it back again in the mainstream
     
    May 3, 2025
  18. derro13
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    Apr 15, 2016
    hes widely considered as the best jazz artost of the last few years
     
    May 3, 2025
  19. Soldier
    Posts: 29,047
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    Soldier big cuntry's alias

    Apr 15, 2016
    omg the responses in this thread
     
    May 3, 2025
  20. derro13
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    Apr 14, 2016
    Kamasi Washington's playing is all over Kendrick Lamar's groundbreaking 2015 album To p---- A Butterfly. But being so intrinsic to the sound of the album has not affected his appreciation for the music and the power of the messages contained within.

    "I think it's changed things for everybody. I think Kendrick made a genre defining album. It's one of those things that, you'll look back in history and it's a movement changer.

    "I think what he did is dispel this myth that people of this generation aren't smart enough to be able to enjoy high calibre music. If you look at To p---- A Butterfly, it's one of the most lush albums I've ever heard from any genre, from any era, from any person. Melodically, rhymically, structurally, let alone lyrically what he's doing on top of it. There's so much to chew on through that album.


    "The notion that people need something that's simple, something that doesn't require a lot of thought, he completely destroyed that idea."

    He believes that the success of Lamar's record is proof that young music lovers are far more musically mature than older generations give them credit for.

    "Their capacity for understanding is higher than it's ever been," he says. "To comprehend a record like Kendrick Lamar's record you have to have a pretty vast knowledge of music. There are probably more music heads now than there have ever been, because it's easier now.

    "When I was coming up, if you had 1,000 records that meant music was your thing. Nowadays every kid has access to hundreds of thousands of records. Millions of records. That changes the scope of what society is.

    "What Kendrick did is shine a light on that. It opened the doors for me and eventually it's going to open the doors for music in general."

    http://doublej.net.au/news/features...rick-ryan-adams-and-the-best-year-of-his-life
     
    May 3, 2025