kendrick lamar mr. morale and the big steppers genius
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Letra de Mr. Morale
Letra y video de Mr. Morale de Kendrick Lamar feat. Tanna Leone.
LetrasBD Kendrick Lamar
Mr. Morale & The Big Steppers
Mr. Morale
Mr. Morale letra
Mr. Morale letra Kendrick Lamar feat. Tanna Leone
VISITAS2.096
LEYENDO2
LANZAMIENTO13 de Mayo, 2022
INFORMACIÓN
Mr. Morale es una canción interpretada por Kendrick Lamar, con Tanna Leone, publicada en el álbum Mr. Morale & The Big Steppers en el año 2022.
MR. MORALE LYRICS
It was one of the worst performances I've seen in my life
I couldn't sleep last night because I felt this shit
Ooh, ah, ooh, ah
Ooh, ah, ah, ooh, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yee
Enoch, your father's just detoxed, my callin' is right on time
Transformation, I must had a thousand lives
And like three thousand wives
You should know that I'm slightly off
Fightin' off demons that been outside
Better known as myself, I'm a demigod
Every thought is creative, sometimes I'm afraid of my open mind
Shit on my mind and it's heavy
Tear you in pieces 'cause it's way too heavy
My diamonds, the choker is heavy
More lifе to give on demand, are you rеady?
Who keep 'em honest like us?
Who in alignment like us?
Who gotta heal 'em all? Us (Us)
When there's no one to call
Don't need no conversation
It ain't about the business, shut the door now
Bitch', it's a celebration
And if this shit ain't bussin', what's it for now?
Steppin' out when the weight lifts
Floatin' on em (Ooh-ooh-ooh, da-da)
Floatin' on em (Float, float, ooh-ooh-ooh, da-da)
Floatin' on em (Float, float, ooh-ooh-ooh, da-da)
Floatin' on em (Float, ooh-ooh-ooh, da-da)
Steppin' out when the weight lifts
Floatin' on em (Ooh-ooh-ooh, da-da)
Floatin' on em (Float, float, ooh-ooh-ooh, da-da)
Floatin' on em (Float, float, ooh-ooh-ooh, da-da)
Floatin' on em (Float, float, ooh-ooh-ooh, da-da)
Uzi, your father's in deep meditation
My spirit's awaken, my brain is asleep
I got a new temperature
Sharpenin' multiple swords in the faith I believe
I think about Robert Kelly
If he weren't molested, I wonder if life'll fail him
I wonder if Oprah found closure
The way that she postered the hurt that a women carries
My mother abused young
Like all of them others back where we from
SSI bury family members
At the repass, they servin' Popeyes chicken
What you know about Black trauma?
Half in this, kickin' back is another genre
Tyler Perry, the face of a thousand rappers
Using violence to cover what really happen
I know somebody's listenin'
Past life regressions to know my conditions
It's based off experience
Comma for comma, my habits insensitive
Watchin' my cousin struggle with addiction
Then watchin' her firstborn make a million
And both of them off the grid for forgiveness
I'm sacrificin' myself to start the healin'
Shit on my mind and it's heavy
Tear you in pieces 'cause it's way too heavy
My diamonds, the choker is heavy
More life to give on demand, are you ready
Who keep 'em honest like us?
Who in alignment like us?
Who gotta heal 'em all? Us (Us)
When there's no one to call us (Us)
Say, "Hydrate, it's time to heal"
Safe, you're frustrated, I can feel
Huddle up, tie the flag, call the troops, holler back
Huddle up, tie the flag, call the troops, holler back
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah
People get taken over by this pain-body
Because it's energy field that almost has a life of its own
It needs to, periodically, feed on more unhappiness
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Mr. Morale lyrics
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BUSCAR
MR. MORALE & THE BIG STEPPERS
Letra de United In Grief
Letra de N95
Letra de Worldwide Steppers
Letra de Die Hard
Letra de Father Time
Letra de Rich Spirit
Letra de We Cry Together
Letra de Purple Hearts
Letra de Count Me Out
Letra de Crown
Letra de Silent Hill
Letra de Savior
Letra de Auntie Diaries
Letra de Mr. Morale
Letra de Mother I Sober
Letra de Mirror Ver más letras
Kendrick Lamar: Mr Morale & the Big Steppers review – rap genius bares heart, soul and mind
After a five-year hiatus, the Pulitzer winner returns with an exhilarating hip-hop feast that ties personal pain to collective trauma – and lets no one off the hook
Kendrick Lamar
Kendrick Lamar: Mr Morale & the Big Steppers review – rap genius bares heart, soul and mind
After a five-year hiatus, the Pulitzer winner returns with an exhilarating epic that ties personal pain to collective trauma – and lets no one off the hook
Alexis Petridis
Fri 13 May 2022 15.52 BST
116 A
s Kendrick Lamar notes on Mr Morale & the Big Steppers’ opening track, it’s been 1,855 days since he last released an album. By his own account, the intervening five years have been something of a rollercoaster ride. He and his partner started a family (his children are on the album’s front cover), he made an acclaimed acting debut, performed at the first ever Super Bowl half-time show centred around hip-hop, and watched as the praise for his work shifted into an unprecedented realm. He won the Pulitzer prize for music, becoming not just the first rapper but the first pop artist period to receive the award.
As Mr Morale & the Big Steppers makes clear, he also struggled with his mental health, sought therapy and endured a two-year stretch of writer’s block – cured, he suggests, when he “asked God to speak through me”.
Clearly his prayers were answered in no uncertain terms: on the evidence here, the block ended like a dam bursting. The album is 18 tracks and nearly 75 minutes long. Anyone who learned to be wary of rappers who confused quantity with quality in the CD era, when every hip-hop album came stretched out to a disc’s maximum playing time, should note that there isn’t a moment of padding here.
Mr Morale & the Big Steppers is absolutely crammed with lyrical and musical ideas. Its opening tracks don’t so much play as teem, cutting frantically from one style to another – staccato piano chords and backwards drums; a frantic, jazzy loop with a bass drum that recalls a racing heartbeat; a mass of sampled voices; thick 80s-film-soundtrack synth and trap beats. On Worldwide Steppers, Lamar’s words rattle out at such a pace that they threaten to race ahead of the backing track, a muffled, dense, relentless loop of Nigerian afro-rock band the Funkees that suddenly switches to a burst of laidback 70s soul and back again.
On N95, the tone of his delivery changes so dramatically and so often that it sounds less like the work of one man than a series of guest appearances. When it comes to actual guest appearances, it casts its net wide – Ghostface Killah, Sampha, Summer Walker, the singer from Barbadian pop band Cover Drive – and occasionally delights in some unlikely juxtapositions. One interlude features a string quartet and 74-year-old German self-help author Eckhart Tolle discussing the perils of a victim mentality alongside Lamar’s cousin, rapper Baby Keem, whose concerns are more earthy: “White panties and minimal condoms”.
The album keeps executing similar tonal handbrake turns, from deeply troubled to lovestruck and from furious to laugh-out-loud funny, the latter switch covered by We Cry Together, an ill-tempered duet with actor Taylour Paige that drags everything from the rise of Donald Trump and the crimes of Harvey Weinstein to the question of why “R&B bitches don’t feature on each other’s songs” into a heated domestic dispute. Even by hip-hop standards, there’s a quite phenomenal amount of swearing involved: no one has made more creative capital out of two people telling each other to fuck off since Peter Cook and Dudley Moore reinvented themselves as Derek and Clive.
Lamar’s lyrical skill is prodigious enough to make gripping rhymes from some very well-worn topics: fake news, the projection of false lifestyles via social media, the pressures of fame. But more notable still is his willingness to take risks.
Auntie Diaries, a lengthy, heartfelt lobbying on behalf of the trans community, is new territory for mainstream hip-hop. It confesses Lamar’s past homophobia and lashes out at the church and his fellow rappers in dextrous, convincing style. On Savior, he upbraids pop’s censorious moral climate as an unthinking exercise in liberal box-ticking. Elsewhere, the track turns its ire not merely on white people glomming on to the Black Lives Matter movement (“one protest for you, 365 for me”), but the black community and indeed himself.
Kendrick Lamar performing in 2018. Photograph: Theo Wargo/WireImage
He employs Kodak Black, a rapper whose lengthy legal issues include pleading guilty to assault and battery. This guest spot will be seen by some as an ethical failing but Lamar seems uninterested in moral purity, and more in how environment and other factors shape behaviour. Tellingly, the next track begins with Tolle: “Let’s say bad things were done to you when you were a child, and you develop a sense of self that is based on the bad things that happened to you…”
He saves the album’s most shattering moment until the end. Mother I Sober offers a devastating series of verses that draw together slavery and sexual abuse, and deal unflinchingly with a sexual assault experienced by his mother and an episode in which a young Lamar, being questioned by his family, denied that a cousin had abused him. He was not lying but the disbelief that greeted his answer, he suggests, led to feelings of inadequacy that left him “chasing manhood” and nearly losing his partner in the process. It’s difficult but compelling listening, held together by a fragile chorus sung by Portishead’s Beth Gibbons.
Kendrick Lamar
Released as a double album, Mr. Morale & The Big Steppers is Kendrick Lamar’s fifth and final studio album with Top Dawg Entertainment. TDE founder and CEO Anthony Tiffith teased
112
1 Annotated Cover ALBUM
Mr. Morale & The Big Steppers
Mr. Morale & The Big Steppers Kendrick Lamar
Released May 13, 2022
24K
MR. MORALE & THE BIG STEPPERS TRACKLIST
1
United in Grief Lyrics
170 430.7K 2
N95 Lyrics
206 397.2K 3
Worldwide Steppers Lyrics
154 328.9K 4
Die Hard by Kendrick Lamar, Blxst & Amanda Reifer Lyrics
172 284.9K 5
Father Time (Ft. Sampha) Lyrics
222 342.3K 6
Rich (Interlude) Lyrics
164.2K 7
Rich Spirit Lyrics
123 246K 8
We Cry Together by Kendrick Lamar & Taylour Paige Lyrics
296 421.7K 9
Purple Hearts by Kendrick Lamar, Summer Walker & Ghostface Killah Lyrics
116 209K 10
Count Me Out Lyrics
146 215.1K 11
Crown Lyrics
72 163.1K 12
Silent Hill by Kendrick Lamar & Kodak Black Lyrics
98 186.5K 13
Savior (Interlude) Lyrics
110.9K 14
Savior by Kendrick Lamar, Baby Keem & Sam Dew Lyrics
123 259.5K 15
Auntie Diaries Lyrics
412 524.6K 16
Mr. Morale by Kendrick Lamar & Tanna Leone Lyrics
85 210.7K 17
Mother I Sober (Ft. Beth Gibbons) Lyrics
215 344.1K 18
Mirror Lyrics
118 211.2K MORE ON GENIUS
Read All The Lyrics To Kendrick Lamar’s New Album ‘Mr. Morale & The Big Steppers’
Kendrick Lamar Can’t Buy Peace Of Mind On New Song “United In Grief”
xPyE 224,888 9 months ago
I spend most of my days with fleeting thoughts. Writing. Listening. And collecting old Beach cruisers. The morning rides keep me on a hill of silence.
I go months without a phone.
Love, loss, and grief have disturbed my comfort zone, but the glimmers of God speak through my music and family.
While the world around me evolves, I reflect on what matters the most. The life in which my words will land next.
As I produce my final TDE album, I feel joy to have been a part of such a cultural imprint after 17 years. The Struggles. The Success. And most importantly, the Brotherhood. May the Most High continue to use Top Dawg as a vessel for candid creators. As I continue to pursue my life’s calling.
There’s beauty in completion. And always faith in the unknown.
Thank you for keeping me in your thoughts. I’ve prayed for you all.
See you soon enough.
-oklama
nu thoughts — Oklama
I spend most of my days with fleeting thoughts. Writing. Listening. And collecting old Beach cruisers. The morning rides keep me on a hill of silence. I go months without a phone. Love, loss, and grief have disturbed my comfort zone, but the glimmers of God speak through my music and family.
+99
berkeaydin 107,055
a month ago YOOOOOOOOOOO MAY 13 +38 Jeshh1 81,333 4 months ago
This must be the year of K. Dot
+33 LooxooM 25,718 a month ago
GUYS WE DID IT. KENDRICK NEW ALBUM.
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Cypress Hill 'Insane In The Brain' Official Lyrics & Meaning | Verified
About “Mr. Morale & The Big Steppers”
10 contributorsReleased as a double album, Mr. Morale & The Big Steppers is Kendrick Lamar’s fifth and final studio album with Top Dawg Entertainment. TDE founder and CEO Anthony Tiffith teased fans during a May 2020 Instagram Live, saying “Stay patient” and “King…
read more » +280 2
“MR. MORALE & THE BIG STEPPERS” Q&A
Translations
French Translation*
Italian Translation*
Portuguese Translation*
Russian Translation*
Spanish Translation*
Turkish Translation*
+15 1 contributor
Why is Kendrick leaving Top Dawg Entertainment?
On August 20, 2021, Kendrick Lamar released a statement on his new website offering details about his recent work and whereabouts. Here is a key excerpt from what appears to be a message to fans:
As I produce my final TDE album, I feel joy to have been a part of such a cultural imprint after 17 years. The Struggles. The Success. And most importantly, the Brotherhood. May the Most High continue to use Top Dawg as a vessel for candid creators. As I continue to pursue my life’s calling.
There’s beauty in completion. And always faith in the unknown.
In summary, it seems as though Kendrick is simply ready for the next chapter in his creative pursuit. There has also been speculation going as far back as October 2020 that Kendrick was having a falling out with his former label, as covered by such publications as Billboard, Hypebeast, and others. This coincided with the launch of his and Dave Free’s new production company, pgLang.
+31 2 contributors
Will there be a tour for this album?
Yes, Kendrick officially announced “The Big Steppers Tour” through his oklama.com website on May 13, 2022—the same day as the album’s release.
Guys, does anyone know the answer?