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Good Kid: M.A.A.D City
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Good Kid: M.A.A.D City

Good Kid: M.A.A.D City

$17.50

Original: $49.99

-65%
Good Kid: M.A.A.D City

$49.99

$17.50

The Story

FEATURES

  • 2xLP pressed on 180g Black Vinyl
  • Housed in a Gatefold Jacket

DESCRIPTION

Hip-hop debuts don't come much more "highly anticipated" than Kendrick Lamar's. A series of killer mixtapes displayed his talent for thought-provoking street lyrics delivered with an attention-grabbing flow, and then there was his membership in the Black Hippy crew with his brethren Ab-Soul, Schoolboy Q, and Jay Rock all issuing solo releases that pleased the "true hip-hop" set, setting the stage for a massive fourth and final. Top it off with a pre-release XXL Magazine cover that he shared with his label boss and all-around legend Dr. Dre, and the "biggest debut since Illmatic" stuff starts to flow, but Good Kid, M.A.A.D. City would be a milestone even without the back story, offering cool and compelling lyrics, great guests (Drake, Dr. Dre, and MC Eiht), and attractive production (from Pharrell, Just Blaze, Tabu, and others). Here, Kendrick is living his life-like status and cash was extra credit.

It is what makes this kid so "good" as he navigates his "mad" city (Compton) with experience and wisdom beyond his years (25). He's shamelessly bold about the allure of the trap, contrasting the sickness of his city with the universal feeling of getting homesick, and carrying a Springsteen-sized love for the home team. Course, in his gang-ruled city, N.W.A. was the home team, but as the truly beautiful, steeped-in-soul, biographic key track "The Art of Peer Pressure" finds a reluctant young Kendrick and his friends feeding off the life force of Young Jeezy's debut album, it's something Clash, Public Enemy, and all other rebel music fans can relate to.

Still, when he realizes that hero Jeezy must have risen above the game -- because the real playas are damned and never show their faces -- it spawns a kind of elevated gangsta rap that's as pimp-connectable as the most vicious Eazy-E, and yet poignant enough to blow the dust off any cracked soul. Equally heavy is the cautionary tale of drank dubbed "Swimming Pools," yet that highlight is as hooky and hallucinatory as most Houston drank anthems, and breaks off into one of the chilling, cassette-quality interludes that connect the album, adding to the documentary or eavesdropping quality of it all. Soul children will experience d?j? vu when "Poetic Justice" slides by with its Janet Jackson sample -- sounding like it came off his Aunt's VHS copy of the movie it's named after -- while the closing "Compton" is an anthem sure to make the Game jealous, featuring Dre in beast mode, acting pre-Chronic and pre-Death Row.

This journey through the concrete jungle of Compton is worth taking because of the artistic richness within, plus the attraction of a whip-smart rapper flying high during his rookie season. Any hesitation about the horror of it all is quickly wiped away by Kendrick's mix of true talk, open heart, open mind, and extended hand. Add it all up and even without the hype, this one is still potent and smart enough to rise to the top of the pile.

~ David Jeffries

TRACKLIST

  1. Sherane A.K.A Master Splinter's Daughter
  2. Bitch
  3. Don't Kill My Vibe
  4. Backseat Freestyle
  5. The Art Of Peer Pressure
  6. Money Trees
  7. Poetic Justice
  8. Good Kid
  9. M.A.A.d City
  10. Swimming Pools (Drank) (Extended Version)
  11. Sing About Me
  12. I'm Dying Of Thirst
  13. Real
  14. Compton
  15. The Recipe
  16. Black Boy Fly
  17. Now Or Never

LISTEN

Available on Desktop & Mobile

Good Kid: M.A.A.D City - Image 2

Details & Craftsmanship

Every detail has been carefully considered to bring you the perfect product.

Good Kid: M.A.A.D City - Image 3

Details & Craftsmanship

Every detail has been carefully considered to bring you the perfect product.

Description

FEATURES

  • 2xLP pressed on 180g Black Vinyl
  • Housed in a Gatefold Jacket

DESCRIPTION

Hip-hop debuts don't come much more "highly anticipated" than Kendrick Lamar's. A series of killer mixtapes displayed his talent for thought-provoking street lyrics delivered with an attention-grabbing flow, and then there was his membership in the Black Hippy crew with his brethren Ab-Soul, Schoolboy Q, and Jay Rock all issuing solo releases that pleased the "true hip-hop" set, setting the stage for a massive fourth and final. Top it off with a pre-release XXL Magazine cover that he shared with his label boss and all-around legend Dr. Dre, and the "biggest debut since Illmatic" stuff starts to flow, but Good Kid, M.A.A.D. City would be a milestone even without the back story, offering cool and compelling lyrics, great guests (Drake, Dr. Dre, and MC Eiht), and attractive production (from Pharrell, Just Blaze, Tabu, and others). Here, Kendrick is living his life-like status and cash was extra credit.

It is what makes this kid so "good" as he navigates his "mad" city (Compton) with experience and wisdom beyond his years (25). He's shamelessly bold about the allure of the trap, contrasting the sickness of his city with the universal feeling of getting homesick, and carrying a Springsteen-sized love for the home team. Course, in his gang-ruled city, N.W.A. was the home team, but as the truly beautiful, steeped-in-soul, biographic key track "The Art of Peer Pressure" finds a reluctant young Kendrick and his friends feeding off the life force of Young Jeezy's debut album, it's something Clash, Public Enemy, and all other rebel music fans can relate to.

Still, when he realizes that hero Jeezy must have risen above the game -- because the real playas are damned and never show their faces -- it spawns a kind of elevated gangsta rap that's as pimp-connectable as the most vicious Eazy-E, and yet poignant enough to blow the dust off any cracked soul. Equally heavy is the cautionary tale of drank dubbed "Swimming Pools," yet that highlight is as hooky and hallucinatory as most Houston drank anthems, and breaks off into one of the chilling, cassette-quality interludes that connect the album, adding to the documentary or eavesdropping quality of it all. Soul children will experience d?j? vu when "Poetic Justice" slides by with its Janet Jackson sample -- sounding like it came off his Aunt's VHS copy of the movie it's named after -- while the closing "Compton" is an anthem sure to make the Game jealous, featuring Dre in beast mode, acting pre-Chronic and pre-Death Row.

This journey through the concrete jungle of Compton is worth taking because of the artistic richness within, plus the attraction of a whip-smart rapper flying high during his rookie season. Any hesitation about the horror of it all is quickly wiped away by Kendrick's mix of true talk, open heart, open mind, and extended hand. Add it all up and even without the hype, this one is still potent and smart enough to rise to the top of the pile.

~ David Jeffries

TRACKLIST

  1. Sherane A.K.A Master Splinter's Daughter
  2. Bitch
  3. Don't Kill My Vibe
  4. Backseat Freestyle
  5. The Art Of Peer Pressure
  6. Money Trees
  7. Poetic Justice
  8. Good Kid
  9. M.A.A.d City
  10. Swimming Pools (Drank) (Extended Version)
  11. Sing About Me
  12. I'm Dying Of Thirst
  13. Real
  14. Compton
  15. The Recipe
  16. Black Boy Fly
  17. Now Or Never

LISTEN

Available on Desktop & Mobile

Good Kid: M.A.A.D City | Helix Sounds