Kendrick Lamar Siblings
Kendrick Lamar’s third studio album, “To Pimp a Butterfly,” is a 16-track grand opus chronicling the pursuit of balance while living with money and fame. Kendrick Lamar Duckworth is an American hip hop artist born on 17 th July 1987. He was interested in rapping and songwriting since his childhood. Lamar was inspired by his idols Dr. Dre and Tupac Shakur.
Kendrick Lamar has responded to critics who called him out for buying his 16-year-old sister a Toyota Camry for her high school graduation.
Akdong Musician's Chanhyuk completes military service after two years in marine corpsIf you thought the lead single from his DAMN album, HUMBLE, was just a figure of speech you will find yourself mistaken. Kendrick is just trying to teach his little sibling a lessons about life and humility.
After Kayla Duckworth — who appeared very grateful for the gift — posted a photo of the car on Instagram, the Compton rapper was bombarded with criticism from people who believed that he was making too much money to have bought her a Toyota.
In his defense it was the 2017 Toyata Camry, like, the most recent one.
Sitting down with hosts on Power 106’s The Cruz Show, Kendrick addressed what we can’t believe has became a controversial topic in the first place with a dash of humour. His response had us laughing along with him.
‘They had me dying,’ he responded. ‘Man, I was crying laughing. I don’t know what they expected a 16-year-old with no licence to get — a Lamborghini?’
Afterwards, the 30-year-old did what he does best and shared a bucket-load of logic in direct response to critics who strongly believed that a rapper was being cheap.
More: Music
But the King Kunta rapper says there are far more important things to consider about his little sis first whip.
For starters she can’t even drive yet.
‘It also teaches her to appreciate the value of things,’ he continued. ‘Jumping in a fast car and possibly hurting herself or not appreciating where we come from.’
Young Kayla is lucky to have a wise big brother like Kendrick.
MORE: Notorious B.I.G’s mum refuses to accept Kendall and Kylie’s t-shirt apology as Sharon Osbourne gets her claws out
MORE: Kendrick Lamar denies he’s got a surprise second album coming
A drizzly Sunday morning in Compton, the sky an un-California-ish gray. Into the parking lot of a local hamburger stand pulls a chromed-out black Mercedes SUV, driven by 27-year-old Kendrick Lamar, arguably the most talented rapper of his generation. There are a half-dozen guys from the neighborhood waiting to meet him: L, Turtle, G-Weed. “I grew up with all these cats,” Lamar says. He nods to Mingo, a Compton-born sweetheart who is roughly the size of the truck he arrived in: “I don’t need to hire a bodyguard. Look how fucking big he is!”
The burger joint, Tam’s, sits at the corner of Rosecrans and Central, a famous local spot recently made infamous when Suge Knight allegedly ran over two men with his truck in the parking lot, killing one of them. “Homey died right here,” G-Weed says, pointing to a dark spot on the asphalt. “That security camera caught everything. They’re building a case.”
Related
Kendrick Lamar's 'To Pimp a Butterfly': A Track-by-Track Guide
Meet Thundercat, the Jazz-Fusion Genius Behind Kendrick Lamar's 'Butterfly'
Lamar grew up just six blocks from here, in a little blue three-bedroom house at 1612 137th St. Across the street is the Louisiana Fried Chicken where he used to get the three-piece meal with fries and lemonade; over there is the Rite Aid where he walked to buy milk for his little brothers. Tam’s was another hangout. “This is where I seen my second murder, actually,” he says. “Eight years old, walking home from McNair Elementary. Dude was in the drive-thru ordering his food, and homey ran up, boom boom — smoked him.” He saw his first murder at age five, a teenage drug dealer gunned down outside Lamar’s apartment building. “After that,” he says, “you just get numb to it.”
It’s almost noon, but Lamar is just starting his day — having spent a late night in the studio scrambling to finish his new album, To Pimp a Butterfly, which has to be done in five days. He’s dressed casually in a gray hoodie, maroon sweatpants, and white socks with black slides, but recognizable enough that an old lady in line decides to tease him while complaining about the heat inside. “Y’all need to put the air conditioner on,” she calls to the manager. “Kendrick Lamar is here!”
Lamar may be a two-time Grammy winner with a platinum debut executive-produced by Dr. Dre, and with fans from Kanye West to Taylor Swift. But here at Tam’s, he’s also Kendrick Duckworth, Paula and Kenny’s son. Inside, a middle-aged woman who just left church comes up and gives him a hug, and he buys lunch for a cart-toting lady he knows to be a harmless crack addict. (“She used to chase us with sticks and stuff,” he says.) Outside, an old man in a motorized wheelchair scoots over to introduce himself. He says he moved here in 1951, when Compton was still majority-white. “Back in the day, we had the baddest cars in L.A.,” he says. “I just wanted you to know where you came from. It’s a hell of a neighborhood.”
On his breakthrough album, 2012’s good kid, m.A.A.d City, Lamar made his name by chronicling this neighborhood, vividly evoking a specific place (this same stretch of Rosecrans) and a specific time (in the summer of 2004, between 10th and 11th grade). It was a concept album about adolescence, told with cinematic precision through the eyes of someone young enough to recall every detail (as in: “Me and my niggas four deep in a white Toyota/A quarter tank of gas, one pistol, one orange soda”).
Lamar’s parents moved here from Chicago in 1984, three years before Kendrick was born. His dad, Kenny Duckworth, was reportedly running with a South Side street gang called the Gangster Disciples, so his mom, Paula Oliver, issued an ultimatum. “She said, ‘I can’t fuck with you if you ain’t trying to better yourself,’ ” Lamar recounts. “‘We can’t be in the streets forever.’ ” They stuffed their clothes into two black garbage bags and boarded a train to California with $500. “They were going to go to San Bernardino,” Lamar says. “But my Auntie Tina was in Compton. She got ’em a hotel until they got on their feet, and my mom got a job at McDonald’s.” For the first couple of years, they slept in their car or motels, or in the park when it was hot enough. “Eventually, they saved enough money to get their first apartment, and that’s when they had me.”
Lamar has a lot of good memories of Compton as a kid: riding bikes, doing back flips off friends’ roofs, sneaking into the living room during his parents’ house parties. (“I’d catch him in the middle of the dance floor with his shirt off,” his mom says. “Like, ‘What the . . . ? Get back in that room!’ ”) Then there’s one of his earliest memories — the afternoon of April 29th, 1992, the first day of the South Central riots.
Kendrick was four. “I remember riding with my pops down Bullis Road, and looking out the window and seeing motherfuckers just running,” he says. “I can see smoke. We stop, and my pops goes into the Auto-Zone and comes out rolling four tires. I know he didn’t buy them. I’m like, ‘What’s going on?’ ” (Says Kenny, “We were all taking stuff. That’s the way it was in the riots!”)
“Then we get to the house,” Lamar continues, “and him and my uncles are like, ‘We fixing to get this, we fixing to get that. We fixing to get all this shit!’ I’m thinking they’re robbing. There’s some real mayhem going on in L.A. Then, as time progresses, I’m watching the news, hearing about Rodney King and all this. I said to my mom, ‘So the police beat up a black man, and now everybody’s mad? OK. I get it now.’ ”
We’ve been sitting on the patio a while when Lamar sees someone he knows at the bus stop. “Matt Jeezy! What up, bro?” Matt Jeezy nods. “That’s my boy,” Lamar says. “He’s part of the inner circle.” Lamar has a few friends like this, guys he’s known all his life. But often he’d rather be by himself.
“He was always a loner,” Kendrick’s mom says. Lamar agrees: “I was always in the corner of the room watching.” He has two little brothers and one younger sister, but until he was seven, he was an only child. He was so precocious his parents nicknamed him Man-Man. “I grew up fast as fuck,” he says. “My moms used to walk me home from school — we didn’t have no car — and we’d talk from the county building to the welfare office.” “He would ask me questions about Section 8 and the Housing Authority, so I’d explain it to him,” his mom says. “I was keeping it real.”
The Duckworths survived on welfare and food stamps, and Paula did hair for $20 a head. His dad had a job at KFC, but at a certain point, says Lamar, “I realized his work schedule wasn’t really adding up.” It wasn’t until later that he suspected Kenny was probably making money off the streets. “They wanted to keep me innocent,” Lamar says now. “I love them for that.” To this day, he and his dad have never discussed it. “I don’t know what type of demons he has,” Lamar says, “but I don’t wanna bring them shits up.” (Says Kenny, “I don’t want to talk about that bad time. But I did what I had to do.”)
There’s a famous story from Tom Petty’s childhood in which a 10-year-old Tom sees Elvis shooting a movie near his hometown in Florida, takes one look at the white Cadillac and the girls, and decides to become a rock star on the spot. Lamar has a similar story — only for him it’s sitting on his dad’s shoulders outside the Compton Swap Meet, age eight, watching Dr. Dre and 2Pac shoot a video for “California Love.” “I want to say they were in a white Bentley,” Lamar says. (It was actually black.) “These motorcycle cops trying to conduct traffic but one almost scraped the car, and Pac stood up on the passenger seat, like, ‘Yo, what the fuck!’ ” He laughs. “Yelling at the police, just like on his motherfucking songs. He gave us what we wanted.”
Being a rapper was far from preordained for Lamar. As late as middle school, he had a noticeable stutter. “Just certain words,” he says. “It came when I was excited or in trouble.” He loved basketball — he was short, but quick — and dreamed of making it to the NBA. But in seventh grade, an English teacher named Mr. Inge turned him on to poetry — rhymes, metaphors, double-entendres — and Lamar fell in love. “You could put all your feelings down on a sheet of paper, and they’d make sense to you,” he says. “I liked that.”
At home, Lamar started writing nonstop. “We used to wonder what he was doing with all that paper,” his dad says. “I thought he was doing homework! I didn’t know he was writing lyrics.” “I had never heard him say profanity before,” says his mom. “Then I found his little rap lyrics, and it was all ‘Eff you.’ ‘D-i-c-k.’ I’m like, ‘Oh, my God! Kendrick’s a cusser!’ ”
An A student, Lamar flirted with the idea of going to college. “I could have went. I should have went.” (He still might: “It’s always in the back of my mind. It’s not too late.”) But by the time he was in high school, he was running with a bad crowd. This is the crew he raps about on good kid, m.A.A.d City — the ones doing robberies, home invasions, running from the cops.
Once his mom found a bloody hospital gown, from a trip he took to the ER with “one of his little homeys who got smoked.” Another time she found him curled up crying in the front yard. She thought he was sad because his grandmother had just died: “I didn’t know somebody had shot at him.” One night, the police knocked on their door and said he was involved in an incident in their neighborhood, and his parents, in a bout of tough love, kicked him out for two days. “And that’s a scary thing,” Lamar says, “because you might not come back.”
After a couple of hours, the mood on Rosecrans starts to shift. An ambulance roars by, sirens blaring. In the middle of the street, a homeless man is shouting at passing cars. Lamar starts to grow uneasy, his eyes glancing at the corners. I ask if everything’s OK. “It’s the temperature,” he says. “It’s, uh, raising a little bit.” A few minutes later, one of his friends — who’s been cruising back and forth on his bicycle all afternoon, “patrolling the perimeter” — calls out, “Rollers!” and a few seconds later, two L.A. County sheriff cruisers round the corner. “There they go,” Lamar says, as they hit their lights and take off.
Kendrick Lamar
As a teenager, “the majority of my interactions with police were not good,” Lamar says. “There were a few good ones who were actually protecting the community. But then you have ones from the Valley. They never met me in their life, but since I’m a kid in basketball shorts and a white T-shirt, they wanna slam me on the hood of the car. Iskysoft pdf editor free download. Sixteen years old,” he says, nodding toward the street. “Right there by that bus stop. Even if he’s not a good kid, that don’t give you the right to slam a minor on the ground, or pull a pistol on him.”
Lamar says he’s had police pull guns on him on two occasions. The first was when he was 17, cruising around Compton with his friend Moose. He says a cop spotted their flashy green Camaro and pulled them over, and when Moose couldn’t find his license fast enough, the cop pulled a gun. “He literally put the beam on my boy’s head,” Lamar recalls. “I remember driving off in silence, feeling violated, and him being so angry a tear dropped from his eye.” The story of the second time is murkier: Lamar won’t say what he and his friends were up to, only that a cop drew his gun and they ran. “We was in the wrong,” he admits. “But we just kids. It’s not worth pulling your gun out over. Especially when we
running away.”
Friends of his weren’t so lucky. Just after midnight on June 13th, 2007, officers from the LAPD’s Southeast Division responded to a domestic-violence call on East 120th Street, about five minutes from Lamar’s house. There they found his good friend D.T. allegedly holding a 10-inch knife. According to police, D.T. charged, and an officer opened fire, killing him. “It never really quite added up,” Lamar says. “But here’s the crazy thing. Normally when we find out somebody got killed, the first thing we say is ‘Who did it? Where we gotta go?’ It’s a gang altercation. But this time it was the police — the biggest gang in California. You’ll never win against them.”
On an otherwise positive song called “HiiiPower,” from his 2011 mixtape Section.80, Lamar rapped, “I got my finger on the motherfucking pistol/Aim it at a pig, Charlotte’s Web is going to miss you.” It’s an unsettling line, especially coming from a rapper who often subverts gangster tropes but rarely trafficks in them. “I was angry,” he says. “To be someone with a good heart, and to still be harassed as a kid . . . it took a toll on me. Soon you’re just saying, ‘Fuck everything.’ That line was me getting those frustrations out. And I’m glad I could get them out with a pen and a paper.”
About three years ago, Lamar was flipping through the channels on his tour bus when he saw on the news a report that a 16-year-old named Trayvon Martin had been shot to death in a Florida subdivision. “It just put a whole new anger inside me,” Lamar says. “It made me remember how I felt. Being harassed, my partners being killed.” He grabbed a pen and started writing, and within an hour, he had rough verses for a new song, “The Blacker the Berry”:
Coming from the bottom of mankind
My hair is nappy, my dick is big
My nose is round and wide
You hate me, don’t you?
You hate my people
Your plan is to terminate my culture. . . .”
But as Lamar wrote, he also started thinking about his own time in the streets, and “all the wrong I’ve done.” So he started writing a new verse, in which he turned the microscope on himself. How can he criticize America for killing young black men, he asks, when young black men are often just as good at it? As the song’s narrator put it, “Why did I weep when Trayvon Martin was in the street/When gangbanging make me kill a nigga blacker than me?/Hypocrite.”
When it was finally released last month, the song sparked a rash of think pieces, with some listeners saying Lamar was ignoring the real problem: the systemic racism that created the conditions for black-on-black crime in the first place. Coupled with a recent Billboard interview in which Lamar seemed to suggest that some of the responsibility for preventing killings like that of Michael Brown lay with black people themselves, some fans thought he sounded like a right-wing apologist. The rapper Azealia Banks called his comments “the dumbest shit I’ve ever heard a black man say.”
Lamar says he’s not an idiot. “I know the history,” he says. “I’m not talking about that. I’m talking from a personal standpoint. I’m talking about gangbanging.”
He grew up surrounded by gangs. Some of his close friends were West Side Pirus, a local Blood affiliate, and his mom says her brothers were Compton Crips. One of his uncles did a 15-year stretch for robbery, and another is locked up now for the same; his Uncle Tony, meanwhile, was shot in the head at a burger stand when Kendrick was a boy. But Lamar says he was taught that change starts from within. “My moms always told me: ‘How long you gonna play the victim?’ ” he says. “I can say I’m mad and I hate everything, but nothing really changes until I change myself. So no matter how much bullshit we’ve been through as a community, I’m strong enough to say fuck that, and acknowledge myself and my own struggles.”
When Lamar released the new album’s first single, “i,” last September, many fans weren’t sure what to make of it. A blast of pop positivity that samples an Isley Brothers hit recently heard soundtracking a Swiffer commercial, it felt like an odd move for Lamar, who’s known for more complex fare. People called it corny, mocked its feel-good, “Happy”-style chorus (“I love myself!”). “I know people might think that means I’m conceited or something,” Lamar says. “No. It means I’m depressed.”
Lamar is sitting in the Santa Monica recording studio where he made much of his new album, dressed in a charcoal sweatsuit and Reeboks. His baseball cap is pulled low over his sprouting braids, and he speaks softly and thoughtfully, with long pauses between sentences.
“I’ve woken up in the morning and felt like shit,” he says. “Feeling guilty. Feeling angry. Feeling regretful. As a kid from Compton, you can get all the success in the world and still question your worth.”
Lamar says he intended “i” as a “Keep Ya Head Up”-style message for his friends in the penitentiary. But he also wrote it for himself, to ward off dark thoughts. “My partner Jason Estrada told me, ‘If you don’t attack it, it will attack you,’ ” Lamar says. “If you sit around moping, feeling sad and stagnant, it’s gonna eat you alive. I had to make that record. It’s a reminder. It makes me feel good.”
Lamar also points out that the fans who scratched their heads at “i” had yet to hear “u” — its counterpoint on the album. “ ’i’ is the answer to ‘u,’ ” he says. The latter is four and a half minutes of devastating honesty, with Lamar almost sobbing over a discordant beat, berating himself about his lack of confidence and calling himself “a fucking failure.” It’s the sound of a man staring into the mirror and hating what he sees, punctuated by a self-aware hook: “Loving you is complicated.”
“That was one of the hardest songs I had to write,” he says. “There’s some very dark moments in there. All my insecurities and selfishness and letdowns. That shit is depressing as a motherfucker.
“But it helps, though,” he says. “It helps.”
Lamar has documented his inner struggles before, most notably on “Swimming Pools,” from good kid, which explores his past troubles with alcohol and his family’s history of addiction. But once he got successful, he says, things got more difficult, not less. One of his biggest issues was self-esteem — accepting that he deserved to be where he was. And some of that came from his discomfort around white people.
Download a free Revit LT trial. Revit LT is an intuitive 3D Building Information Modeling (BIM) application that can help you create high-quality designs. Available for Windows 64-bit. See system requirements. Did you know? Get Autodesk software free for 3 years. Students, teachers, and academic institutions worldwide are eligible for.
“I’m going to be 100 percent real with you,” Lamar says. “In all my days of schooling, from preschool all the way up to 12th grade, there was not one white person in my class. Literally zero.” Before he started touring, he had barely left Compton; when he finally did, the culture shock threw him. “Imagine only discovering that when you’re 25,” Lamar says. “You’re around people you don’t know how to communicate with. You don’t speak the same lingo. It brings confusion and insecurity. Questioning how did I get here, what am I doing? That was a cycle I had to break quick. But at the same time, you’re excited, because you’re in a different environment. The world keeps going outside the neighborhood.”
The week good kid was released, Lamar began keeping a diary. “It really came from conversations I had with Dre,” he says. “Hearing him tell stories about all these moments, and how it went by like that” — he snaps. “I didn’t want to forget how I was feeling when my album dropped, or when I went back to Compton.”
Lamar ended up filling multiple notebooks. “There’s a lot of weird shit in there,” he says. “Lot of drawings, visuals.” Whereas good kid was an exercise in millennial nostalgia, To Pimp a Butterfly is firmly in the present. It’s his take on what it means to be young and black in America today — and more specifically, what it means to be Kendrick Lamar, navigating success, expectation and his own self-doubt.
Musically, the album — at least the half that he’s comfortable sharing so far — is adventurous, borrowing from free jazz and 1970s funk. Lamar says he listened to a lot of Miles Davis and Parliament. His producer Mark “Sounwave” Spears, who’s known Lamar since he was 16, says, “Every producer I’ve ever met was sending me stuff — but there was a one-in-a-million chance you could send us a beat that actually fit what we were doing.” Ali says Lamar works synesthetically — “He talks in colors all the time: ‘Make it sound purple.’ ‘Make it sound light green.’ ”
But of all the album’s colors, the most prominent is black. There are allusions to the entire sweep of
African-American history, from the diaspora to the cotton fields to the Harlem renaissance to Obama. “Mortal Man” (inspired in part by a 2014 trip to South Africa) name-checks leaders from Mandela to MLK all the way back to Moses. On “King Kunta,” a stomping blast of James Brown funk, he imagines himself as the titular slave from Roots, shouting the punchline “Everybody wanna cut the legs off him!/Black man taking no losses!”
Hanging over it all, of course, are the tragedies of the past three years: Trayvon Martin, Michael Brown, Eric Garner, Tamir Rice. Says Sounwave, “To me, the album is perfect for right now. If the world was happy, maybe we’d give you a happy album. But right now, we are not happy.”
Lamar – who calls the album “fearful, honest and unapologetic” – is coy about what the title means. “Just putting the word ‘pimp’ next to ‘butterfly’ . . . ” he says, then laughs. “It’s a trip. That’s something that will be a phrase forever. It’ll be taught in college courses — I truly believe that.” I ask if he’s the pimp or the butterfly, and he just smiles. “I could be both,” he says.
Kendrick Lamar Personal Life
On the last day of February, Lamar and two dozen loved ones are gathered at a $6 million mansion in Calabasas, for a surprise birthday party for Sounwave. The estate belongs to “Top Dawg” Tiffeth, part of a group of properties so exclusive they’re protected by two security gates, the second presumably to keep out the riff-raff inhabiting the mansions inside the first. NBA star Paul Pierce lives across the street, and multiple Kardashians live around the block. “There’s probably a million dollars in this driveway,” says Lamar’s tour manager, a friendly dude named ret-One, as he surveys the Audis, Benzes and Range Rovers out front.
Lamar lives down the coast with his longtime girlfriend, Whitney (he has called her his “best friend”), in a tri-level condo he rents in the South Bay, on the water. He still hasn’t splurged on much: So far his biggest purchase is a relatively modest house in the suburbs east of L.A., which he bought for his parents more than a year ago. Top Dawg says that at first his mom didn’t want to take it, because it meant giving up their Section 8 status. Kendrick had to reassure her: “It’s OK, Mom. We’re good.” (“It was hard times, and we’ve been through a lot,” says Kenny. “But like Drake said: ‘We started from the bottom, now we’re here.’ ”)
In the kitchen, the girls are snacking and chatting, while the guys are in the home theater watching the new Kobe documentary. In the dining room, Lamar is talking to Sounwave and his manager Dave Free, trying to make last-minute changes to the record that’s due out in two weeks.
Eventually, Whitney comes in and rests her hand on Lamar’s shoulder. “They’re about to blow out the candles,” she says. Everyone moves into the kitchen to sing “Happy Birthday” to Sounwave, and Lamar stands beside Whitney, his arm around her waist. They look happy. Sounwave is about to blow out the candles when someone tells him to make a wish — but before he can, Lamar jumps in and makes one for him. “I wish,” he says, smiling, “for hot beats!”