Review: We can't believe it's been 10 years since the king of hip-hop first laid his claim to the coveted crown and title. 'Good Kid, M.a.a.d City', a deeply personal reflection by Compton, CA-born rapper Kendrick Lamar about, well, life, has grown to command a much wider gravitas today than it did upon its first release. Back then, it had enough pop appeal to hype up the mass of its listeners, while also intelligently working enough ironic political commentary about the nature of American hood experience into the lyrics, to have the effect of wisely 'nudging' the average popular international music consumer to wake up and listen up. This is an album about deep and open psychic wounds gashed across the social fabric of the USA, told through the isolated perspective of just one kid. A kid who, as a result of his own predicament, was compelled to embark on a quest of mastery over vernacular, flow, cadence, and rhyme, to give an unlikely yet loud voice to a deeply mistreated people.
… Read more