Click HERE to read K. Dot’s cover story with MASS APPEAL
Only a month from its release, Kendrick Lamar’s critically-acclaimed album To Pimp A Butterfly has reached GOLD status – on its way to Platinum soon as well. During a sit-down with the good folks over at Mass Appeal, the Compton rapper opened up in-depth on the concept behind the controversial album cover.
Set from the Nation’s capital on the front lawn of the White House, K. Dot touched on the individuals being portrayed as Menace II Society’s by judges (one pictured laid out) and being a product of their environment.
With football numbers being handed out left and right every week in court rooms to youths having no chance at life, Lamar explains the background behind the first track “Wesley’s Theory”; representing people of his color without money, but more so having great wealth from being rich in spirit. After you watch the clip above, find out which track he would’ve liked the great Makaveli to contribute lyrics on if he was still alive.
Do you think a violent rebellion like Pac was suggesting in the interview soundbites at the end of TPAB could happen?
Once the true rebellion happens, there’s no going back. It’s like war with two enemy ’hoods; it basically never ends. And I think it’s enough frustration in the world now if something crack off on a major, major, major scale, it’s gonna be destruction. I’m talkin’ ’bout through the whole world. This is the Rapture. This is God comin’ back and you’re hearin’ the horns and the skies crackin’ open. You dig what I’m sayin’? They puttin’ chips in people’s bodies now, y’know? So with that being said, hopefully it’s more about us as people sayin’, “Enough is enough,” and educating the next man with some wisdom that I have or that you have, and makin’ it a collabo thing where we can all benefit from it in a positive way. Rather than takin’ it out in full rage, like we want to — like I want to, like he want to, like she want to. If we can deal with it like that, then that’ll be a plus on our end. But, if we decide we don’t, then you know what drama that brings.
If Pac was alive, what song would you have wanted him to kick a verse on?
You know when the beat switches on “The Blacker The Berry”? I’d have him go off over that, and tone it all the way down, but in his aggressive tone, man. And give it more of a sincere attribute to the song because the song is so aggressive. But you know when he comes on, his spirit is just so warm, he’s gonna speak nothing but the truth. So when that beat breaks down into that, and then goes into “You Ain’t Gotta Lie,” that’s all him.
OS REWIND: Glasses Malone – Thuggin’ (feat. Kendrick Lamar)
OS REWIND: Kendrick Lamar Throws First-Pitch Strike for the Los Angeles Dodgers
OS REWIND: BJ The Chicago Kid – It’s True (Remix) (feat. Kendrick Lamar, ScHoolboy Q & Punch)