Maybe things that tackle the idea of the great man and the idealisms required for such a mindset to exist
lemme think about that and get back, im always bad at naming books off the top of my head
I think his narrative remains spot on, in that we have to individually better ourselves before we can care for being seen as the savior of others.
Like u said, I can't wait to see where his head will be at in a few years, who knows he might come to term with everything and start doing the best of both worlds
And, it seems Irving -- who was seen on Instagram Live on Thursday bumping the new Kendrick album -- isn't taking it that way. The point guard commented on the song during a recent Twitch stream, saying, "I'm not mad. I'm not indifferent. I'm just grateful. How about that?"
In a recent social media post ahead of the release of the new project, Kyrie also captioned a pic of Lamar with the words "We appreciate you Dot....."
Where the second part is coming from ?
@Scratchin_Bandit
actual thoughts below;
I think from a detached standpoint, there's an interesting overlap here with the mythology of mainstream culture in general. I know you're coming at it from a more political angle, but I think there's another angle which I think is underexplored. Firstly, I don't usually like over-intellectualizing music or peoples' lives, but in regarsd to someone who's a celebrity making themselves a spectacle (inadvertently or otherwise), Kendrick has still put himself in a position to be looked at in this manner, at least in a comparative sense to others who's gone down the same path.
Arguably the core of western cultural mythos is the Hero's Journey, but it's rare that someone asks; what happens after the Hero's Journey? The Hero's Journey is often depicted as a cycle, but this because of the finite nature of depiction in art or media. In reality, when you extrapolate the Hero's Journey not from the art itself, but to the artist, you get a lot more interesting of a picture. Many artists go through a cycle in their music which alludes to the Hero's Journey - not just in music but any form of art. Eventually, it's after they meet their most lauded and praised albums that the real next stage of the Hero's Cycle - cynicism and loathing. In any great mythology, there's a reason the story always ends after the Return & Redemption; if someone "saved the world", would they not be responsible for then what the world has become after such? If a great hero has saved the world how can they feel anything but loathing for the inevitable imperfections of the world otherwise? Sometimes in a Hero's Journey, the journey is only about themselves, but the same thing applies - if you "save" yourself, would you not then feel responsible for what you've become down the line?
Kendrick's being wrapped up in idealism throughout the early part of his career I'm going to go out on a limb here - it's because he never go to see the end of Pac's Hero's Journey. He only saw maybe the first half. So the mythos of Pac will always be that he was destined to do great things had his life not been cut short. Contrast this with Kendrick's Christian beliefs and the importance placed on the individual within Christianity as well as the idea of attonement and such. Unlike someone like Pac however, whose mythos was continued largely toward the western equivalent of folklore and legend, Kendrick got his flowers while he was still here - he got to see what dropping an album everyone considered a culmination of idealism is, with songs like Alright which even began to be used at protests. Kendrick probably very quickly realized however following this, and following the sheer intensity of the amount of work and the level of talent, timing, luck, etc. that all went in the journey up to TPAB followed by the utterly absurd ebb and flow of social discourse in the years following - holy s*** this has done absolutely nothing of value besides satisfy people's need for entertainment. And let's look at this idea wthin the framing of like A Society of the Spectacle or a Baudrillard-type idea; it doesn't matter what the message was, or how artistic it was; the art would only ever be consumed as entertainment, and even the symbol within the culture will never truly evolve past the culture of which it has originated - it will never be "revolutionary" because of its origins. I contrast this with a similar idea - why the 60s failed to "really" change things beyond a further delve into "individualist" capitalism; did anyone think shows funded by Wallstreet Bankers & Investment Speculators (i.e. Woodstock) would ever truly be revolutionary, even if the artists believed they would be?
Now I'm going to say this from the outside, and from the perspective of how little Kendrick has involved himself in public situations - something which is obviously purposeful as it makes his art shine more. I think this genuinely broke him as he had trouble reconciling this with his idealistic view of what a person or art could achieve, but also with his own christian view of what individuals can do within the faith and the importance of such there. I think this is why the tone between TPAB and DAMN shifts so much - Kendrick starts dabbling with Israelite ideas and such, the idea that the reason his individualistic idealism isn't working is because it must be due to some greater force - like it must be a curse or something. But at the same time, Kendrick is obviously aware of the misgivings from TPAB - the idea that "okay well art didn't change s*** so I guess I may as well make it accessible". I've always felt TPAB is a hopeful album overall, but by contrast DAMN is more solemn and carries this idea of cosmic fate and things outside of the control of the individual.
But then, after DAMN, Kendrick really got to see the explosion of social discourse with stuff like Trump, COVID, BLM, etc. and I think him basically just going black out on all social was him being like "I can't take this s*** anymore". Because following that cycle, Kendrick's reflecting on himself and on how little this entity which his music has helped integrate into ("the culture") has really changed in any meaningful manner, and every piece of discourse is dictated more by arbitration and self-reference than anything actually important or meaningful. I think that's where this album comes in - he's gone through this whole cycle only to come to the conclusion not only does he literally not care anymore, but that he shouldn't have cared to begin with, because what he was trying to save or redeem was never redeemable or meaningful to begin with. I think that's why this album is also so all over the place emotionally and topically; at this point he's just writing for himself and doing what he wants and tracing his own thoughts and steps. He's saying "fuck it, consume my music if you want to. i don't care."
In the same way as I mentioned in the original release thread many other artists have done as well over their career - people like Mark Kozelek getting the point of cynicism with his fans, the media, and the world that his songs are just stream of conscious spoken word. It's not about making 15 minute epics meant to achieve a level of musical achievement anymore. It's just about them doing want they want, with the nagging cynicism of their history and the world around them. It doesn't matter necessarily if it's political, social, etc. - I think it's just clear that having gone through these journies, artists like Kendrick are tired. They know the critics have their opinions formed before they even put it out. They know what the fan reaction will be, and what "effect" it'll have on the world. So why double down on it? Instead, why not be self aware. It's a product. Listen to it if you want; I'm just doing what I want to at this point, feel free to join along.

Great thread, i mostly agree and i think kendrick probably knows a lot of this deep down but hes creating from emotion rather than thought
Great album too
Why would I respond when you have this tone, you're lucky I haven't blocked your weird ass, but your meltdowns are too amusing for me to do that sorry
“This tone” as if some of you niggas don’t act like f***ing clowns when I say something. You don’t have a response it’s that simple.
I posted this in the album thread but I’ll share the sentiment in here as well
I listened to Mortal Man after hearing the album and realized what he expressed on this album wasn’t really a new feeling that whole song is him questioning his hero/savior status
At some point I feel like he thought it was a role he could fill but that illusion slowly started over time
This is really well written. KTT needs more of this, essays about thought provoking albums
Ultimately you're right. It seems like the arc of Kendrick's albums tells the story of him trying to heal the world (but mostly the community he grew up in) with the message of peace and unity, but it didn't work so now he's older and had kids an is choosing to isolate and focus on himself.
With the Noname thing, I'm guilty of saying Kendrick should have been more outspoken, and now that I've heard from his perspective I get it now. But i think Kendrick would've benefited a lot from having a conversation with her.
Noname started by making posts about uninformed political views, her fans said "no that's wrong" and lead her to the information she needed to see to change her perspective. I'm not saying Kendrick NEEDS to do this, or any artist for that matter, I'm just saying he would benefit from an honest conversation with her instead of addressing the situation years later on a song.
But overall, I do not think celebrities should be our savior. LeBron or J Cole or Kendrick's world view should not be the end all be all. We need political leaders that aren't politicians ( because politicians, regardless of ideology, have an agenda to push)
TL;DR: I agree
i think thats the point
it's exaggerating how the world tends to see him these days
Is that the reason for the gun on the cover? Like people see him as a messiah, but his more immediate concern is building/defending his family which often directly conflicts with the perception people hold of him
lemme think about that and get back, im always bad at naming books off the top of my head
Ofc ofc
“This tone” as if some of you niggas don’t act like f***ing clowns when I say something. You don’t have a response it’s that simple.
Why would anyone want to respond to you
“This tone” as if some of you niggas don’t act like f***ing clowns when I say something. You don’t have a response it’s that simple.
I have a response and I'm always open to talking about my beliefs in depth, especially with people who have different beliefs but are genuinely interested in hearing my perspective, but you came itt super antagonisically having a meltdown for no reason lol.
This is my last post responding to you, I hope you at least don't raise your heartbeat too much irl when you lose it at my posts
Is that the reason for the gun on the cover? Like people see him as a messiah, but his more immediate concern is building/defending his family which often directly conflicts with the perception people hold of him
Absolutely see that
You hit the nail on the coffin. After reading it and reading other posts this album became my second favorite. The album went over my head but now I understand the underlying message and now everything is clicking. The heart part 5 basically gave us s glimpse.
“Look for salvation when troubles get real
'Cause you can't help the world until you help yourself”
Although it’s Nipsey speaking:
“Reflectin' on my life and what I done
Paid dues, made rules, change outta love
Them same views made schools change curriculums
But didn't change me starin' down the barrel of that gun
Should I feel resentful I didn't see my full potential?
Should I feel regret about the good that I was into?
Everything is everything, this ain't coincidental”
I feel like this is also self reflection.
not gonna lie, I think part of the reason he chose those specific faces are all people who had a following that championed them until they fell from grace, with the exception of Nipsey who got killed and himself who's still around and still beloved(at least before the album dropped
)
At the end of the day, all it takes is a couple mistakes, all it takes is the passage of time for our "heroes" to get exposed as being just as flawed if not more flawed and broken than the people who follow them expecting them to be carrying the weight of the world like Superman or Atlas
I feel like a lot of artists overestimate the role of art in social change because it's the main way they engage with the world, TPAB was an incredible album but it's not like it really changed the world in a meaningful way
I mean who’s to say he didn’t do actually community work & seen it wasn’t going anywhere AND THATS what causes this cynicism in him? Especially if he was being called out despite doing so. it gotta be more than him just realizing his music alone can’t change the world
I’m sure there’s more to it than we can perceive
Thread definitely inspiring me to take that first step and commit to reading it shouldn’t be a trivial as long as there’s convo in between feel like knowledge could be a tool for healing depending on perspective
Remind me in a bit i'll get back to you
When it comes to introductory stuff i know more things outside of books, but i'll send u a bit of everything
I feel like a lot of artists overestimate the role of art in social change because it's the main way they engage with the world, TPAB was an incredible album but it's not like it really changed the world in a meaningful way
maybe pgLang is gonna do social work in the future, who knows?
Great thread, i mostly agree and i think kendrick probably knows a lot of this deep down but hes creating from emotion rather than thought
Great album too
I'd probably say that he's creating from more of a lack of ego as opposed to emotion and thought. It's a more eckhart tollian way to put things
Great write up
That’s how I felt too
Especially about Mirror being a response to noname
In fact I think a lot of this album was probably crafted after and due to that
I feel like his goodbye on Mirror isn’t him retiring, but saying he’s no longer gonna try and say anything “profound” on his albums
I think his next album on pgLang will sound like a more lyrical Baby Keem album
Remind me in a bit i'll get back to you
When it comes to introductory stuff i know more things outside of books, but i'll send u a bit of everything
That’s perfect it doesn’t just have to be books just need a world to get lost in these days and a understanding broader than the limited one I got now
Where the second part is coming from ?
On his IG