Kendrick Lamar - To Pimp A Butterfly (2015)

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Pretty sure if that intro was intended as a response to Nicki it would have been phrased as a VERSE rather than the on-running monologue is actually is.

Matt DC, Thursday, 26 March 2015 16:48 (nine years ago) link

ok in no way is it even slightly related to a long-running lineage of black female pop (obviously not just nicki), fine, whatever

lex pretend, Thursday, 26 March 2015 16:52 (nine years ago) link

Isn't it drawing on a caricature that is also addressed from a different direction in said long-running lineage of black female pop? It's the whole shared source material rather than direct influence thing again.

Matt DC, Thursday, 26 March 2015 16:55 (nine years ago) link

I mean I've lost count of the number of movies or TV shows I've seen with that specific caricature in them.

Matt DC, Thursday, 26 March 2015 16:56 (nine years ago) link

it's a long-running trope in depictions of black relationships & kendrick is underscoring what that trope is really about

xp!

swae lee is the sremmurd for rae dad (crüt), Thursday, 26 March 2015 16:57 (nine years ago) link

do you guys think the woman in the track has an actual real life uncle named Sam or something

some dude, Thursday, 26 March 2015 17:01 (nine years ago) link

That's not the argument being made. The argument being made is that it is a subversion of expectation; the "black woman" you think is being disrespected on this song is not actually a black woman. The entire point is that America uses black men in the same manner typified by the "gold digger" stereotype, which is blatantly clear from even half-listening to the lyrics of the song and the final response from the hypothetical gold digger in the song "I'mma get my Uncle Sam to fuck you up. You ain't no king."

xposted into irrelevancy but dammit, I typed it so I'm hitting submit

DJP, Thursday, 26 March 2015 17:01 (nine years ago) link

But still. There are an awful lot of evil women amongst the symbols that Kendrick uses, right?

Frederik B, Thursday, 26 March 2015 17:09 (nine years ago) link

... No? Unless you think every female character on Section.80 is evil, which is a stretch. As far as I can tell, it's just Sherane (who isn't even actually evil but rather is as much a product of the environment as Kendick, his friends and their enemies are) and Lucy (who is literally The Devil and not actually a woman)

DJP, Thursday, 26 March 2015 17:12 (nine years ago) link

i dont think keisha, tammy and sherane (on section.80 and GKMC) are supposed to be "evil" in the least. i guess you could argue about whatever lucy represents on butterfly but i don't buy that even the latter is meant as any sort of blanket sexist statement

are... are you saying you fucked a gazelle? (slothroprhymes), Thursday, 26 March 2015 17:13 (nine years ago) link

daaaaaamnit DJP shot first

are... are you saying you fucked a gazelle? (slothroprhymes), Thursday, 26 March 2015 17:13 (nine years ago) link

Lucy (who is literally The Devil and not actually a woman)

this is sledgehammer obvious, no?

Οὖτις, Thursday, 26 March 2015 17:16 (nine years ago) link

and DJP otm that the Uncle Sam crack makes it clear what's going on w that character/voice

Οὖτις, Thursday, 26 March 2015 17:16 (nine years ago) link

ilxor: kendrick's got yams in the conference room
RT: Yeah, I'd like to bite on some of that!
ilx: o_O

<Tanuki goes to conference room, sees the yams are actually a metaphor derived from contemporary black culture and literature with direct political implications>

RT: Noooooo!!!!!!!!!!!!

Maybe in 100 years someone will say damn Dawn was dope. (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 26 March 2015 17:17 (nine years ago) link

There are a ton of things about this album that are sledgehammer obvious that people are hemming and hawing over being "difficult" and "dense" because it's a collection of (IMO intentionally) contradictory viewpoints coming from a black man about being a black man in America in 2015.

DJP, Thursday, 26 March 2015 17:19 (nine years ago) link

can someone explain the "yams are the powers that be" thing to me...? that's one that's gone by me

xp

Οὖτις, Thursday, 26 March 2015 17:20 (nine years ago) link

Jesus Christ you guys

deej loaf (D-40), Thursday, 26 March 2015 17:56 (nine years ago) link

aint no fun if the homies cant have none was also a metaphor for institutional structures keeping black communities from accessing america's riches.

― StillAdvance, Thursday, March 26, 2015 11:44 AM (1 hour ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

I'm boggling at this

deej loaf (D-40), Thursday, 26 March 2015 17:57 (nine years ago) link

go looking for a humorous yam image and you just come across yet another example of how crazy this country is...

http://www.antiquelabelcompany.com/store/secure/images/products/496.jpg

scott seward, Thursday, 26 March 2015 17:58 (nine years ago) link

i had to order this cd on the internet. which i hate to do. but i don't know when i will ever get to a town with a store, so, you gotta do what you gotta do.

scott seward, Thursday, 26 March 2015 17:59 (nine years ago) link

He's a great curator. The production is another level.

For Free is sadly iron age and undeniably misogynistic, just like RTJ.

Album will go down as canon.

Arctic Noon Auk, Thursday, 26 March 2015 18:02 (nine years ago) link

Institutionalized sounds amazingly like a Quasimoto song. West Coast influences all over this album is fantastic. From Quas to Coup to Warren G to Quik to E40 to Pac, it's great. But unlike all those it has a more dark, claustrophobic feel to it.

Arctic Noon Auk, Thursday, 26 March 2015 18:08 (nine years ago) link

xpost how did u find such a luducrously appropriate raccoon gif so quickly

Arctic Noon Auk, Thursday, 26 March 2015 18:09 (nine years ago) link

idk i always felt Me Against The World was a pretty dark&claustrophobic record

ciderpress, Thursday, 26 March 2015 18:11 (nine years ago) link

yes but Pac had lots of well known undeniably open and bouncy songs (life goes on, changes, all eyez, ambitionz, i aint mad at cha, how do u want it etc)

Arctic Noon Auk, Thursday, 26 March 2015 18:15 (nine years ago) link

this album gets better and better the more you listen to it. busdriver was otm, as far as it being what FF/myka 9 should have made, but i feel like its the album lupe fiasco has been wanting to make, but has been too disillusioned/cynical to actually do. me against the world had temptation and old school on it but it was largely still def, dark, cynical (i mean, it had the song 'fuck the world' on it). plus that whole era sounded like that.

StillAdvance, Thursday, 26 March 2015 18:20 (nine years ago) link

2pac's Undeniably Open and Bouncy Mixtape

Maybe in 100 years someone will say damn Dawn was dope. (forksclovetofu), Thursday, 26 March 2015 18:25 (nine years ago) link

production wise the digi+phonics is reminding me a lot of the Organized Noize/Earthtone III production collective that seemed to also produce similarly successful cross-influenced results

Arctic Noon Auk, Thursday, 26 March 2015 18:28 (nine years ago) link

also, emma bunton in a banana suit with nicky wire!

scott seward, Thursday, 26 March 2015 18:39 (nine years ago) link

i guess i shouldnt be surprised that in 2015 it's just assumed that rappers are always spouting the literal thoughts on their minds in a given moment every time w/out any regard for bigger ideas or sense for irony or context

deej loaf (D-40), Thursday, 26 March 2015 18:45 (nine years ago) link

so no one's gonna explain the yams thing to me

Οὖτις, Thursday, 26 March 2015 18:47 (nine years ago) link

nope

DJP, Thursday, 26 March 2015 18:49 (nine years ago) link

i don't know much about yams tbh

i like this album more and more, it's getting better to me, like i'm used to the flow of it now and am more comfortable w/the arc of it and (as a result) less concerned about whether i'm parsing the overall themes & more able to just enjoy the songs themselves

that one writer thinks that "suicidal thoughts" is more of a jam than "king kunta"? hmmmmm

king kunta is my favorite type of rap song, like certain ones you hear them the first time and you just KNOW, it's like he can drop this song 5-6 years from now in a live set and he'll grab the mic and yell "I GOTTA BONE TO PICK" and the beat will drop and the crowd will lose it, certain songs are just undeniable like that

kurt kobaïan (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 26 March 2015 18:53 (nine years ago) link

this album is very 90s in a way i'm having trouble articulating, i mean it's very 90s in ways that are easy to articulate also, but the conceptual ambition of it is uncompromisingly broad in a way that feels very '90s, where people were reveling in the hip-hop's potential for grand possibilities....the breadth of it is very vast

deej loaf (D-40), Thursday, 26 March 2015 18:55 (nine years ago) link

i feel bad for "King Kunta" because a couple people who heard it last year went around hyping it to the media and it became this big deal everybody was speculating on before they heard it, then it leaked a few days before the album and felt really anticlimactic. but in the context of the album it sounds great and keeps sounding better every time i hear it.

some dude, Thursday, 26 March 2015 18:55 (nine years ago) link

"if you care about it this much please feel free to email all our editors"

i actually fault the record label more than the editors or writers.

― scott seward, Thursday, March 26, 2015 12:15 PM (2 hours ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

really? the sneak attack release is so much better than the protracted rollout. i know writers aren't to blame but editors can't wait a week?

flappy bird (spazzmatazz), Thursday, 26 March 2015 18:56 (nine years ago) link

i blame SEO

is there a single media outlet that wouldn't be improved by its editors not knowing what got the most clicks

lex pretend, Thursday, 26 March 2015 18:57 (nine years ago) link

i feel like this conversation is actually not as pertinent to one of the few albums released this year that people will be talking about and writing about for the entire year whereas it's everything else that will be discarded and deemed not worth publishing anything about after the initial hype cycle

some dude, Thursday, 26 March 2015 19:00 (nine years ago) link

king kunta is my favorite type of rap song, like certain ones you hear them the first time and you just KNOW, it's like he can drop this song 5-6 years from now in a live set and he'll grab the mic and yell "I GOTTA BONE TO PICK" and the beat will drop and the crowd will lose it, certain songs are just undeniable like that

― kurt kobaïan (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, March 26, 2015 2:53 PM (3 minutes ago) Bookmark

OTMFM

, Thursday, 26 March 2015 19:06 (nine years ago) link

i feel bad for "King Kunta" because a couple people who heard it last year went around hyping it to the media and it became this big deal everybody was speculating on before they heard it, then it leaked a few days before the album and felt really anticlimactic. but in the context of the album it sounds great and keeps sounding better every time i hear it.

― some dude, Thursday, March 26, 2015 1:55 PM (12 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

this otm as well

deej loaf (D-40), Thursday, 26 March 2015 19:08 (nine years ago) link

king kunta is my favorite type of rap song, like certain ones you hear them the first time and you just KNOW, it's like he can drop this song 5-6 years from now in a live set and he'll grab the mic and yell "I GOTTA BONE TO PICK" and the beat will drop and the crowd will lose it, certain songs are just undeniable like that

― kurt kobaïan (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, March 26, 2015 2:53 PM (3 minutes ago) Bookmark

yeah definitely

lex pretend, Thursday, 26 March 2015 19:08 (nine years ago) link

house parties too

lex pretend, Thursday, 26 March 2015 19:09 (nine years ago) link

just still catching up to how hard this album is hitting me

I'm letting the lyrics settle in slowly, remembering how some of the crazier things on the Public Enemy or Paris albums went over my head or even lost me (i.e. a major label album with a sample suggesting the U.S. government invented AIDS as a weapon was a lot to take in at the time). The fact that I'm having the same reactions to this, I'm just grateful, this record is trusting that the audience is as sharp as he is

The production is what's killing me though, for whatever insane reason, this feels completely free of any self-consciously retro aesthetic. Tons of references to history, lots of love letters & consolidation, but the way this balances live performances with anything-can-happen-at-any-moment studio decisions is so gratifying I can't even sum it up. One of my favorite records is 'The Faust Tapes', which was straight up experimental, but... this is close, and it's a mainstream pop record that millions of people are going to let sink in

Milton Parker, Thursday, 26 March 2015 19:15 (nine years ago) link

@ Outic: I read somewhere that Yams is a symbol of status in Chinua Achebe's novel Things Fall Apart.

Frederik B, Thursday, 26 March 2015 19:19 (nine years ago) link

ah! I haven't read that book since college

Οὖτις, Thursday, 26 March 2015 19:28 (nine years ago) link

oh wow that's a cool reference (i also haven't read that since college)

kurt kobaïan (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 26 March 2015 19:38 (nine years ago) link

I mean, the claim is that Yams were statussymbols in Ibo societies in Nigeria, it's not something the novel makes up. Just in case that was unclear.

Frederik B, Thursday, 26 March 2015 19:42 (nine years ago) link

it's a long-running trope in depictions of black relationships & kendrick is underscoring what that trope is really about

xp!

― swae lee is the sremmurd for rae dad (crüt), Thursday, 26 March 2015 16:57 (2 hours ago) Permalink

do you guys think the woman in the track has an actual real life uncle named Sam or something

― some dude, Thursday, 26 March 2015 17:01 (2 hours ago) Permalink

That's not the argument being made. The argument being made is that it is a subversion of expectation; the "black woman" you think is being disrespected on this song is not actually a black woman. The entire point is that America uses black men in the same manner typified by the "gold digger" stereotype, which is blatantly clear from even half-listening to the lyrics of the song and the final response from the hypothetical gold digger in the song "I'mma get my Uncle Sam to fuck you up. You ain't no king."

xposted into irrelevancy but dammit, I typed it so I'm hitting submit

― DJP, Thursday, 26 March 2015 17:01 (2 hours ago) Permalink

I read this track as "rap fandom's" relationship with KDot, but I can see how silly that seems in retrospect.

RAP GAME SHANI DAVIS (Raymond Cummings), Thursday, 26 March 2015 19:46 (nine years ago) link

i feel bad for "King Kunta" because a couple people who heard it last year went around hyping it to the media and it became this big deal everybody was speculating on before they heard it, then it leaked a few days before the album and felt really anticlimactic. but in the context of the album it sounds great and keeps sounding better every time i hear it.

― some dude, Thursday, March 26, 2015 2:55 PM (54 minutes ago) Bookmark

king kunta is openly awesome i have no idea what you guys are talking about

J0rdan S., Thursday, 26 March 2015 19:51 (nine years ago) link


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