12 Thoughts on Kendrick's 2016 Grammy Performance

TheFuser

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
(before I start, if you think his performance set anything back, you lack basic context comprehension skills)

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  1. Kendrick walks out on stage in a chain gang. And it’s artfully done. This isn’t to PROMOTE prison culture. This is to honor his friends who are locked up. When “i” was released, Kendrick constantly talked about how he made that song not for the masses, but for his friends and elders locked up who were/are tired of hearing mindless music. Who are tired of hearing violent music. People locked up want to hear about love and hope because they’re the only things they have left to hold on to.
  2. “You never liked us anyway, f*** your friendship, I meant it.” Blacker the Berry is a direct assault on White Supremacy. And I love that so many people are offended by it. Because it’s doing it’s job. It's not an assault on White People. It’s an assault on White Supremacy. Why would that be offensive unless you support or promote white supremacy. Just like folks said “Formation” was an assault on Police. NO, it’s an assault on Police brutality. If you’re offended by these two songs, you really need to unpack that. That says more about you than the lyrics.
  3. “Trap our bodies, but can’t lock our minds” - another ode to his friends/fam/elders locked away. It’s also a larger metaphor for the state of Black America right now.
  4. When the hook drops…. that turn up may never be matched at the Grammys again.
  5. The African drumming and saxophone bridge. Three black art forms, tradition African music, Jazz, and hip hop all on stage during ONE performance.
  6. Every single time I hear “Alright” it takes me to a place of serenity. There were times in late 2014 and 2015 where it’s all we had. I remember marching after Ferguson, and Baltimore while police officers hit my kids with bikes. While they pepper sprayed and arrested them for exercising their constitutional rights. And we got tired. And depressed. We were all in dark places. And someone would play Alright, and it always gave us the power to keep going. It was also the anthem for the 2015 PYPM team. Sometimes you just need to hear how “we gone be alright.” It matters.
  7. Traditional African Dance to “Alright.” On the Grammys. It reminds me of how this elder told me 808s are nothing but an emulation of African drums and it’s why we get so entranced by them. It’s why we turn up to them.
  8. Traditional African Dance to “Alright” with dancers dressed in traditional African clothing AND with the brothas dressed in County Blues. On a side note, after the performance, the dancers got interviewed backstage and was asked if they understood how the performance would create controversy. The response, “Hi Controversy!” UNAPOLOGETIC!
  9. Kendrick's entire last run was about Trayvon and how his death connects to a larger world. “In February 26th I lost my life too. It’s like I’m living a dark dream. Nightmares, the screams recorded. Saying they sound distorted but I know who it was. That was me yell for help while he drowned in his blood...” This shit is so important to me. Kavi has an amazing poem about the night we found out about Zimmerman’s acquittal. We were in a van coming back from a slam with 14 teenagers. I’ve never felt so helpless and hopeless in my life. A piece of us died that night. A piece of ALL OF US in that van died that night. And all we could do was cry as we drove in silence on the NJ Turnpike. I’m thankful he and Kavi were able to put that feeling into words because I’ve never been able to do it.
  10. The Africa/Compton pic. If you listened to TPAB, you know Kendrick had a revelation when he went to Cape Town. He now has a greater understanding of how connected Africans and African-Americans are. He said he was gonna take this understanding back to Compton. It reminds me of Malcolm’s revelation after taking his Hajj to Mecca and his trips to meet with African leaders.
  11. How all the black folks in the crowd, and a huge number of us who’ve watched the video are reacting like “CHURRRRRRRRRCH!!!!!” RiRi knew he shut it down. She could barely contain herself. Common looked like a 15 year old boy at his first hiphop concert. Rev Run looked like a proud father knowing he helped birth that performance. Then when you read the tweets. Busta said it was the most inspiring thing he's seen in hip hop in the last 20 years. Jidenna said it was mind-blowing. India.Arie said it was history making. LeVar Burton, Taraji, Snoop, Laverne Cox, Kobe, Diddy… The White House official Twitter account even said something.. His peers and his elders respect what he did and what he's doing. This is what happens when you stay true to yourself. Take note young artists. BE YOU. Speak for what matters to YOU. Speak for WHO matter to you.
  12. What he and Beyonce have done these past two weekends is an act of rebellion and freedom. Rebellion in the sense that we’ve thought these days were over. Artists at the peak of their popularity making statements on LARGE stages. UNAPOLOGETICALLY. Knowing the backlash will come. Knowing they have a lot to lose but not caring. Freedom in the sense that this gives other artists the inspiration or courage they’ve needed to create the art they want. Beyonce could just keep making club anthems. Kendrick could just keep being slick with his words while saying nothing. They’ve chose to not do that. And if they can do it, so can everyone else.
 
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What is it suppose to change though?? i swear some of you cant see the forest from the trees...


This performance will get acclaim and all that. But like I said what Is it going to do to change the landscape of the industry?


Just like when we sing & March after one of us is gunned down in the street. We sing we march we have speeches for about 2 weeks then


Silence again.
 
This performance will get acclaim and all that. But like I said what Is it going to do to change the landscape of the industry?


Just like when we sing & March after one of us is gunned down in the street. We sing we march we have speeches for about 2 weeks then


Silence again.

What are you doing, curios?? secondly answer the question what was it suppose to change?? thirdly change doesnt take place after 1 thing; its a collectively of things that go/happen to create change; Ex: Can President Obama change the entire justice system overnight by himself? Or will it change just because he became president twice?? But the conversation, some actions, etc have begin to move forward on change; Just like in any industry, including music, its a collective that helps to change shit...
 
What are you doing, curios?? secondly answer the question what was it suppose to change?? thirdly change doesnt take place after 1 thing; its a collectively of things that go/happen to create change; Ex: Can President Obama change the entire justice system overnight by himself? Or will it change just because he became president twice?? But the conversation, some actions, etc have begin to move forward on change; Just like in any industry, including music, its a collective that helps to change shit...


So in other words you don't have the answers


:lol:

It's going to take a lot more than Kendrick & fuckin Beyoncé to spark some kind of revolution.

And I don't take part in any of this social media fake activism bullshit.
 
So in other words you don't have the answers


:lol:

And I don't take part in any of this social media fake activism bullshit.

What did you answer; exactly, you dont take part but yet u make comments on social media about what someone else isnt doing :hmm: you sir sound foolish...typical fake people shit though...
 
I said i don't take part it social media activism. Its not like I'm hating on Kendricks performance but my question still remains.


Now what?

How do black people ride this pro black movement all the sudden that Beyoncé and Kendrick are on
 
I said i don't take part it social media activism. Its not like I'm hating on Kendricks performance but my question still remains.


Now what?

How do black people ride this pro black movement all the sudden that Beyoncé and Kendrick are on


It's actually art mirroring the times. It usually works that way.
 
What is this going to change tho?

it could change everything.
everyone has to do their part. kendricks part is artistry and capturing the voice of the people during times of turmoil
its like asking marvin gaye what's making "what's going on" and "mercy mercy me" going to change?

you wouldn't
so you shouldn't here either. kendrick is doing his part in his lane. everyone else has to do their little part too in the best way that they can.
 
This performance wont go down well with BGOL members who hate Africans or anything to do with Africa...
 
There's no one really out there in hip hop doing it on Kendrick's level right now. :yes:
Dude is a legend.

He warned us this was coming after Control. Said he was gonna keep setting the bar. Even the interviews after Control said how he was gonna do important shit since talking slick on wax had become easy. I'm looking forward to seeing what comes next for K.Dot.
 
He warned us this was coming after Control. Said he was gonna keep setting the bar. Even the interviews after Control said how he was gonna do important shit since talking slick on wax had become easy. I'm looking forward to seeing what comes next for K.Dot.

Yeah man.... dude's been on a tear. Honestly I understood he was on a higher plane once I digested Good Kid Maad City but it was his first live performance on Stephen Colbert (with Bilal and Thundercat) that really made it clear to me dude is in his own lane for real for real. Talented brother.
 
Just occurred to me...

has Drake EVER made anything CLOSE to a socially conscious or political song...EVER?

I'm ok with him not doing anything like that. It's not for everyone I suppose. Or if I'm being honest, the people pushing him ain't really going for that shit. A better question I ask is, has Drake done anything original? He just kinda rides whatever wave is popping. He went from trying to sound like Phonte, to Lil Wayne, to now sounding like Future. He's no doubt a talented writer and rapper, but that's the difference between him and Kendrick. K.Dot is trying to push the culture forward. Drake is a culture sponge. It's never seemed authentic to me.
 
I'm ok with him not doing anything like that. It's not for everyone I suppose. Or if I'm being honest, the people pushing him ain't really going for that shit. A better question I ask is, has Drake done anything original? He just kinda rides whatever wave is popping. He went from trying to sound like Phonte, to Lil Wayne, to now sounding like Future. He's no doubt a talented writer and rapper, but that's the difference between him and Kendrick. K.Dot is trying to push the culture forward. Drake is a culture sponge. It's never seemed authentic to me.

you know that is a very fair point...

and SPOT ON.

but I would say he had reached a point with miss u that the singing rap was all his..and you cannot dispute his songwriting (I see u Meek) and ability to craft catchy hooks - Who those in the music business will tell you is GOLD and a rare and lucrative talent.

But he tends to jack the swagger of many a popular rapper but to be fair he has an uncanny knack for it and it usually sounds BETTER or fits right in.

That Cha Cha song was a hit yes but when Drake touched it? It was a damn INTERNATIONAL sensation

You can not minimize that. However I find it interesting he NEVER (at least to me) has ANY social or political leanings or is even ASKED.

I am curious if something happened SPECIFICALLY within the Jewish community in Toronto would he say anything?

Again he doesn't have to I don't look to him for that but I am CURIOUS that it has NEVER been addressed to him.
 
you know that is a very fair point...

and SPOT ON.

but I would say he had reached a point with miss u that the singing rap was all his..and you cannot dispute his songwriting (I see u Meek) and ability to craft catchy hooks - Who those in the music business will tell you is GOLD and a rare and lucrative talent.

But he tends to jack the swagger of many a popular rapper but to be fair he has an uncanny knack for it and it usually sounds BETTER or fits right in.

That Cha Cha song was a hit yes but when Drake touched it? It was a damn INTERNATIONAL sensation

You can not minimize that. However I find it interesting he NEVER (at least to me) has ANY social or political leanings or is even ASKED.

I am curious if something happened SPECIFICALLY within the Jewish community in Toronto would he say anything?

Again he doesn't have to I don't look to him for that but I am CURIOUS that it has NEVER been addressed to him.

Homie is talented as fuck, there's no arguing that. And he will take some shit and absolutely make it his own. But I wonder who he really is. He's reached icon level in music. He's at the point that he doesn't need to follow trends. He can create them.

On a sidenote, I'm looking forward to the Kendrick/Cole album. Hope Kendrick pushed Cole to spit outside of his comfort zone. I remember having so much hope for him on that "Just Begun" track on the last Reflection Eternal album. Talib, Jay Electronica, Cole and Mos on one track. Everyone bodied it but him. His verse wasn't trash, but it was the same slick talk shit he always did at that point. Had nothing to do with nothing. lol. FHD was a big step for him, I admit. Hope he has another one him. I think he does.

 
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