Pop Out Summer has lasted a little too long for Kendrick Lamar. âI think itâs time for me to watch the party die,â he menaces on his latest song, a dour untitled track released, on Instagram, during the VMAs. The âI thinkâ belies his conviction. Channeling the worn black Air Force Ones in the accompanying photo, Kendrick raps with smoldering contempt, lamenting the state of âthe culture,â the institution he credited with killing Nipsey Hussle on âThe Heart Part 5â and empowering him to mollywhop Drake on âEuphoria.â The Boy and his shadow army of influencers receive a few subliminal shots here, but Kendrickâs more keen to ponder than punch.
The mellow instrumental, laced with a pillowy vocal loop, splashes of strings and piano, and a plucked bassline, ups the ruminative mood. The beef seems to have unleashed forces Kendrick canât control, out in the culture and within his own psyche. Haunted by ghosts and lost in the âsunken place,â he rattles off questions and gripes, wondering a few times how Christian rapper Lecrae resists temptations. His are vengeful. âI want agony/Assault and battery, I see a new Earth/Filled with beautiful people makinâ humanity work,â he confesses, imagining his enemies purged and replaced.
This vision of righteous wrath is a bit funny coming from next yearâs Super Bowl performerâthatâs a pretty big party. And after the open vitriol of the preceding diss tracks, the cryptic threats feel somewhat anticlimactic. But for better or worse, Kendrick remains rapâs most compelling hypocrite.
Listen to the untitled song on Instagram.