Kendrick lamar’s “good kid m.a.a.d city” is good.. But not classic

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Aug 17, 2011
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#1
Kendrick Lamar’s “good kid m.A.A.d city” is Good.. But Not Classic @ WeSerious.com

Don’t get me wrong. Kendrick Lamar is definitely a good rapper. His new album, “good kid m.A.A.d city”, slated for an October 22nd release, is undeniably well produced and sequenced better than anything released in recent memory (Dr. Dre, anyone). I’d go as far as saying that it’s GREAT as a conceptual album. But make no mistake, the album is NOT a classic and Kendrick Lamar is NOT the savior of the west coast. As a matter of fact, I’d say that’s the main problem with “good kid m.A.A.d city”… the album has no regional sound whatsoever. If I had to guess without knowing, I’d say it came from Atlanta, possibly even the midwest. But it doesn’t have a distinct regional sound, and when it comes down to it, all the classic albums of the past have had a regional sound to them. Think about it… If Kendrick put the same album out claiming any other city, no one would know the difference. A rapper cannot “bring back the west” when their sound does not identify with the region. It’s impossible. Not that Kendrick isn’t a good rapper, because like I said, he is. Is he the greatest rapper? Technically, he’s everything you could ask for in an emcee. He’s got the lyrics, the flow, the concepts. What holds him back from being amongst the elite, though, is his current lack of identity. The charisma is not there, as Kendrick raps his verses in a similar monotone manner, track after track. The flow is definitely there. Ask Andre 3000, he’ll tell ya (though Andre did it better). Lyrically, as well. I gotta’ tip my hat to Kendrick as far as the lyricism goes. But if I could explain the overall sound of this album in three words, I’d say “Outkast meets Drake”. Which brings me to my next problem with Kendrick. The voice he uses and the often whiney cadence he raps with is reminiscent of the signature Young Money style. The flow and lyrics are lightyears ahead of any Young Money artist, but the hipster image is still there. Lets not pretend like it isn’t, because it’s borderline hipster rap. The technical aspects of his rapping skills are all on point, and I thought the album was solid. Some stand-out tracks include “Good Kid”, “m.A.A.d City” (nice to see MC Eiht on the album), “Money Trees”, “The Art of Peer Pressure”, to name a few. But sorry to those hailing it as a masterpiece and claiming the album “the return of the west coast”…because you’re wrong, to put it politely. FINAL RATING: 7.5/10
 

NAMO

Sicc OG
Apr 11, 2009
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#4
Kendrick Lamar’s “good kid m.A.A.d city” is Good.. But Not Classic @ WeSerious.com

Don’t get me wrong. Kendrick Lamar is definitely a good rapper. His new album, “good kid m.A.A.d city”, slated for an October 22nd release, is undeniably well produced and sequenced better than anything released in recent memory (Dr. Dre, anyone). I’d go as far as saying that it’s GREAT as a conceptual album. But make no mistake, the album is NOT a classic and Kendrick Lamar is NOT the savior of the west coast. As a matter of fact, I’d say that’s the main problem with “good kid m.A.A.d city”… the album has no regional sound whatsoever. If I had to guess without knowing, I’d say it came from Atlanta, possibly even the midwest. But it doesn’t have a distinct regional sound, and when it comes down to it, all the classic albums of the past have had a regional sound to them. Think about it… If Kendrick put the same album out claiming any other city, no one would know the difference. A rapper cannot “bring back the west” when their sound does not identify with the region. It’s impossible. Not that Kendrick isn’t a good rapper, because like I said, he is. Is he the greatest rapper? Technically, he’s everything you could ask for in an emcee. He’s got the lyrics, the flow, the concepts. What holds him back from being amongst the elite, though, is his current lack of identity. The charisma is not there, as Kendrick raps his verses in a similar monotone manner, track after track. The flow is definitely there. Ask Andre 3000, he’ll tell ya (though Andre did it better). Lyrically, as well. I gotta’ tip my hat to Kendrick as far as the lyricism goes. But if I could explain the overall sound of this album in three words, I’d say “Outkast meets Drake”. Which brings me to my next problem with Kendrick. The voice he uses and the often whiney cadence he raps with is reminiscent of the signature Young Money style. The flow and lyrics are lightyears ahead of any Young Money artist, but the hipster image is still there. Lets not pretend like it isn’t, because it’s borderline hipster rap. The technical aspects of his rapping skills are all on point, and I thought the album was solid. Some stand-out tracks include “Good Kid”, “m.A.A.d City” (nice to see MC Eiht on the album), “Money Trees”, “The Art of Peer Pressure”, to name a few. But sorry to those hailing it as a masterpiece and claiming the album “the return of the west coast”…because you’re wrong, to put it politely. FINAL RATING: 7.5/10
 
Aug 17, 2011
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#5
I didn't know Kendrick was from the bay. If you are going to taking writing seriously don't post a wall of text. Fuck you and your blog.


what u mean "wall of text"? just tryna make some points bout the new album....cats are goin insane over it, actin like its the album of the decade. this column is simply breakin down why it's solid, but not a west coast classic.
 

S.L.A.B

Hiphop-TV
Mar 26, 2006
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#8
I never thought it was gonna be a classic anyway and haven't heard someone else called it "the return of the west coast" or whatever, so I wonder where you got that from....

Probably from some Stan and those people will always talk with their favourite artist dick in their mouth so their word has no real value.

Can't wait to hear the album tho, always happy to hear some new good music!
 
Aug 17, 2011
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#10
I never thought it was gonna be a classic anyway and haven't heard someone else called it "the return of the west coast" or whatever, so I wonder where you got that from....

Probably from some Stan and those people will always talk with their favourite artist dick in their mouth so their word has no real value.

Can't wait to hear the album tho, always happy to hear some new good music!

peep different west coast sites around the net...many people are in fact hailing it a classic and "the return of the west"
 
Aug 17, 2011
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#11
its a good album...

thats all that matters.

what you want him to do rap over zapp beats wile braggin about slangin dope with his red rag around his 40 ounce of OE and yelling fuck the police and everybody needs to bow down cause he from the mighty untouchable west coast?

yes, it's a good album, high production value and nice lyrical concepts. but he doesn't only lack a regional identity. he lacks an identity as a rapper overall. he tends to rap like he's reading off of a paper with no true passion or energy of his own. it's something he can work on for his next release. also, i wouldn't call him a biter, but his sound is very borrowed, though.
 
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#12
first off i think its safe to say nobody cares about regional identity nowadays, but that album had more of a west coast influence than i've heard from most west coast major label projects lately. and second to say kendrick has no identity is ridiculous. i can't name anyone with a flow like that, along with his singing. to each his own though.
 
Jan 5, 2006
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Maybe you dont have to sound like every other west coast rapper/album? You gotta adjust to the times, that's why i fucks with Kendrick because he's different than most rappers, his flow is not even West Coast if you think about it, he actually touches on all regions from west to east and in between. I havent heard the album yet but heard most tracks, and if you're going to bring the west coast back, not like he said he was going to, but if you are, you gotta fuck with different producers and different rappers.

People wonder why Bay Area rap goes nowhere, because we're stuck in the same pool, no one goes to producers from different areas, its all the same producers which is why it sounds the same.
 
Props: Rasan
Aug 17, 2011
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#16
first off i think its safe to say nobody cares about regional identity nowadays, but that album had more of a west coast influence than i've heard from most west coast major label projects lately. and second to say kendrick has no identity is ridiculous. i can't name anyone with a flow like that, along with his singing. to each his own though.
Well, if no one cares about regional sounds, then regional sounds in music will eventually die, which is a bad thing. But that's really not true, anyways. A lot of peeps want their west coast music to capture the feel of their region. I also disagree that Kendrick has developed his own identity or signature personality. And no way is his sound original. A good amount of the album is reminiscent of outkast circa '96...the rest is a current sound that falls in line with drake, lil Wayne, Tyga, even traces of Kanye .. Don't get me wrong, he's a much better rapper, but he is cut from the same cloth as all of em.
 

fillyacup

Rest In Free SoCo
Sep 27, 2004
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#20
its a good album...

thats all that matters.

what you want him to do rap over zapp beats wile braggin about slangin dope with his red rag around his 40 ounce of OE and yelling fuck the police and everybody needs to bow down cause he from the mighty untouchable west coast?
yes to all that. tf happened to gangster rap? skinny jeans and all that shit..smh. dont get me wrong, ive seen some skinny jean wearing cats throw hands but shit, tf happened to gangster rap breh.

tell em chill, tell em to wiggle an gtfoh