"I don't talk about these things if I haven't lived them,” Kendrick Lamar says.
While discussing his “The Blacker The Berry” song, Kendrick Lamar
says he is not making statements about others, as some have claimed.
"It's not me pointing at my community,” the TDE rapper says during an interview with NPR. “It's
me pointing at myself. I don't talk about these things if I haven't
lived them, and I've hurt people in my life. It's something I still have
to think about when I sleep at night.”
The Compton, California rapper explains the reason why he’s rapping to himself on the song, which is featured on his acclaimed To Pimp A Butterfly album, in which he references the death of Chad Keaton, the younger brother of his best friend.
"The message I'm sending to myself — I
can't change the world until I change myself first,” Kendrick Lamar
says. "For instance, when Chad was killed, I can't disregard the emotion
of me relapsing and feeling the same anger that I felt when I was 16,
17 — when I wanted the next family to hurt, because you made my family
hurt. Them emotions were still running in me, thinking about him being
slain like that. Whether I'm a rap star or not, if I still feel like
that, then I'm part of the problem rather than the solution.”
Given his perspective, Kendrick Lamar says that he’ll include a certain amount of depth in his material.
"There's a lot of other artists doing
things outside of that depth that I enjoy — that music that I can
actually have fun to, and not be in depth and think about, then I
appreciate that," he says. "But as long as I'm doing it right now, I'ma
continue to say just a little bit more that pertains to what's going
on."

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