Kendrick Lamar
As Kendrick Lamar recently pointed out, genuine feeling is the only thing that
can save a rap feud.
The rapper from Los Angeles responded to Drake's continuing fight this morning
with a six-minute tirade that targeted Drizzy not just as a rapper but also,
and maybe more significantly, as a person.
"Euphoria" conveys not just Drake's connection to the blockbuster
drama series "Euphoria" on MAX, but also the degree of happiness
Lamar probably feels once he's finally able to let these things out. In the
history of animosity between the two rap legends regarded as part of hip-hop's
millennial Mount Rushmore, Kendrick Lamar's song represents the most recent
development. This history spans more than ten years, and it was just rekindled
in early 2024 with a flurry of clumsy diss recordings, both real and fake.
In the opening line,
Lamar delivers the song in a cold, collected, and menacing manner, saying,
"Know you a master manipulator, and habitual liar, too
However, his poems rapidly explode into the most profound, blood-curdling,
tunnel-visioned contempt. Lamar rips out Drake for not being a good father to
his baby, makes fun of his Toronto lingo, makes fun of his alleged plastic
surgery, suggests that he is a snitch, brings up old feuds that Drake hasn't
spoken about, and even goes so far as to cast doubt on Drake's Black identity.
Even if they are insulting, these poetic pictures aren't all that
dramatic.
In actuality, rap fans
are already familiar with these charges against Drizzy because of
the disses from Rick Ross, Megan Thee Stallion, and Pusha T.
This kind of callout,
delivered quickly after one another, is so genuine and emotional that it's
exactly what this rap feud has been lacking. Rap fans and music journalists
alike have found a lot of this well-publicized hip-hop spat to be strange.
artificial, sticky, and lackluster. Even the verbal sparring between Drake, J.
Cole, and Kendrick Lamar (along with a few others) has been characterized in
this era of manufactured everything by its disengagement from the creative idea
of rap beef, which is to showcase one's abilities, raise the stakes, and humiliate
one's opponent into submission.
March 26 marks one month
since Lamar launched the initial blow in the protracted spat between him and
his sub on the Future and Metro Boomin song "Like That".
J. Cole withdrew his diss and declared in public that he was bowing out of the
fight entirely when performing at his label's annual Dreamville Fest on April
5, following the release of the tune "7 Minute Drill" on April 5 in
response to "Like That." Cole stated that his heart wasn't in the
beef.
After much anticipation, Drake responded to Kendrick Lamar officially on April
19 with "Push Ups," ridiculing the pop-leaning characteristics of the
rapper in the past and his "pip-squeak" stature. However, how
"Push Ups" was released led to a new level of misunderstanding among
rap fans in the Internet Age. When the low-quality internet leak originally
surfaced, several people believed it to be an AI-generated front and not Drake.
Although live streamer DJ Akademiks verified the authenticity of "Push
Ups" and finally made it to DSPs, Drake was able to profit from the extra
layer of Internet conversation that was produced by the confusion. Only a few
days later, Drake doubled down on his rebuttal to Lamar with another tune,
"Taylor Made Freestyle," demonstrating that he was drawing ideas from
social media timelines. This time, however, he opened the song with artificial
intelligence-generated lines by Snoop Dogg and the late Tupac Shakur.
The attempt to annoy
Lamar by manipulating the voices of two West Coast icons was a very 2024-style
tactic, but in the end, it diminished the song's impact. The song was swiftly
removed from social media after the Toronto rapper received a stop-and-desist
letter from the Shakur estate for "unauthorized use of Tupac's voice and personality."
Taking a break on a Tuesday morning and returning with a song as raw and
passionate as "Euphoria" on YouTube is seen as a throwback vibe in
the age of limitless distribution channels and a chess move that always goes
back to the original source. This song is overflowing with K. Dot's obvious
long-standing, simmering animosity toward Drake. Fundamentally,
"Euphoria" is driven by K. Dot's resentful, worn-out, and
emotional baggage, which has only become heavier over time and is impossible to
replicate or fake. It is devoid of ChatGPT, media personalities, gimmicks, and
gatekeeping. Either this beef has ended or it has just begun. This time, for
real.
Comments
Post a Comment
Kindly drop your comments