Kendrick Lamar's epic 'Mortal Man' features fiery 2Pac interview

In the hours after Kendrick Lamars new album To Pimp a Butterfly was released a week early, one track, Mortal Man, started getting traction.

For good reason: Its a 12-minute epic that features wondrous Lamar verses about Nelson Mandela, devotion, spiritual enlightenment and power. More important, after a postscript Lamar spoken-word piece, the artist conducts a time-travel interview with the late Tupac Shakur that gradually rises into a free-jazz jam seeminglybeamed from 1967.

Its a fiery few minutes in which the two converse about, among other things, fame, the fattening of the upper class and the lifecycle of the black mans power, something that Shakur says diminishes at an early age. Once you turn 30 its like they take the heart and soul out of a man, out of a black man in this country. And you dont wanna fight no more. And if you dont believe me you can look around, you dont see no loudmouth 30-year-old [black men]. (That and other quotes viaGenius.com.)

Lamar updates the dead rapper on the current situation by saying theres nothing but turmoil going on.

With that, Shakur makes a (cuss-heavy) prediction, one sure to fuel right-wing fear-mongering for the rest of the year. I think that [black men] is tired-a grabbin' ... out the stores and next time its a riot theres gonna be bloodshed for real. I dont think America can know that. I think America think we was just playing and its gonna be some more playing but it aint gonna be no playing. Its gonna be murder, you know what Im saying, its gonna be like Nat Turner, 1831 ...

Lamar's response, which is followed by a parable about a caterpillar and its cocoon: "In my opinion, only hope that we kinda have left is music and vibrations. A lotta people dont understand how important it is. Sometimes I be like, get behind a mic and I dont know what type of energy Imma push out, or where it comes from. Trip me out sometimes."

The same could be said about "To Pimp a Butterfly," currently tripping out much of the music world.

Looking for music tips? Follow Randall Roberts on Twitter: @liledit

See the original post:

Kendrick Lamar's epic 'Mortal Man' features fiery 2Pac interview

Related Posts

Comments are closed.