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  • Good Kid, M.A.A.D City is the second studio album by American rapper Kendrick Lamar. The

  • album was released on October 22, 2012, by Top Dawg Entertainment, Aftermath Entertainment,

  • and was distributed by Interscope Records. The album serves as Lamar's major label debut,

  • after his signing to Aftermath and Interscope in early 2012. It was preceded by the release

  • of Kendrick's debut studio album Section.80, released exclusively through the iTunes Store

  • independently. The album was recorded mostly at several studios

  • in California with producers such as Dr. Dre, Just Blaze, Pharrell Williams, Hit-Boy, Scoop

  • DeVille, Jack Splash and T-Minus, among others. Billed as a "short film by Kendrick Lamar"

  • on the album cover, the concept album follows the story of Lamar's teenage experiences in

  • the drug-infested streets and gang lifestyle of his native Compton, California. Upon its

  • release, Good Kid, M.A.A.D City received rave reviews from music critics, who praised its

  • thematic scope and Lamar's lyrics. Good Kid M.A.A.D City earned Lamar four Grammy Award

  • nominations at the 56th Grammy Awards including Album of The Year.

  • The album debuted at number two on the Billboard 200 chart, selling 242,000 copies in its first

  • weekearning the highest first-week hip hop album sales of 2012 from a male artist,

  • along with the best-selling debut from a male artist of the year. It became Lamar's first

  • album to enter the UK Albums Chart, peaking at number 16, and entering the UK R&B Albums

  • Chart at number two. The album was also met with rave reviews from music critics, being

  • named to many end-of-the-year lists. It was certified platinum by the Recording Industry

  • Association of America and, by March 30, 2014, had sold 1,226,000 copies, according to Nielsen

  • SoundScan. The album's release was supported by five

  • singles – "The Recipe" featuring Dr. Dre, "Swimming Pools", "Backseat Freestyle", "Poetic

  • Justice" featuring Drake, and the remix of "Bitch Don't Kill My Vibe" featuring Jay-Z.

  • All five singles received varied chart success. Lamar also went on a world tour between May

  • and August 2013, featuring the other members of the hip hop collective Black Hippy.

  • Background

  • After the release and success of his 2011 studio album Section.80, Lamar signed a major

  • label record deal with Interscope and Dr. Dre's Aftermath. He told HipHopDX he did not

  • want to work with high-profile producers, but with those he had established himself

  • with, mainly producers from Top Dawg's in-house production team Digi+Phonics.

  • In an interview for XXL, Lamar said that the album would not sound like Section.80, but

  • will return to his Compton, California roots: "I couldn’t tell you what type of sound

  • or where I’ma be in the next five years as far as music ... Going back to the neighborhood

  • and going to different spots, chilling with my homeboys, put me back in that same space

  • where we used to be, bringing back them thoughts, reminiscing how I was feeling. I got myself

  • right back in that mode and I got inspired by that. So this album won’t sound like

  • Section.80. Completely nothing like it.” Lamar also said that the album will showcase

  • the influence of his hometown: "The kid that’s trying to escape that influence, trying his

  • best to escape that influence, has always been pulled back in because of circumstances

  • that be". Before the album's title was officially revealed, fans had already been calling Lamar's

  • major label debut Good Kid, Mad City or Good Kid in a Mad City, as it was a nickname of

  • some sort that Lamar had given himself. The album's title mainly refers to Lamar's childhood

  • innocence and how the notorious city of Compton, California affected that and his life. After

  • keeping the album title's acronym concealed, Lamar later revealed M.A.A.D is an acronym

  • with two meanings: "My Angry Adolescence Divided" and more importantly "My Angels on Angel Dust",

  • with Lamar stating: "That was me. I got laced. The reason why I don't smoke, and it's in

  • the album. It's in the story. It was just me getting my hands on the wrong thing at

  • the wrong time, being oblivious to it." The cover artwork for Good Kid, M.A.A.D City

  • fits to the concept of the album. The album cover features Kendrick Lamar, two of his

  • uncles, and his grandfather, with the elders' eyes censored. Though there is no confirmed

  • explanation for why Kendrick chose to do this, he explained that the reason why he had not

  • censored his own eyes was that the story was told through his eyes, and the story is based

  • around his experiences. The uncle who is holding Lamar also is displaying the Crips gang sign

  • with his hand, which also fits the story of the album, and how Kendrick was stuck in a

  • lifestyle of gangs and drugs. The poster above the head of Kendrick features him and his

  • father. Recording and production

  • Recording sessions for the album took place at PatchWerk Recording Studios in Atlanta,

  • Encore Studios in Burbank, TDE Red Room in Carson, and "At [Kendrick Lamar's] Mama's

  • Studio" in Los Angeles. Lamar stated Good Kid, M.A.A.D City would soundnothing

  • like Section.80, his previous album: “I couldn't tell you what type of sound or where

  • I’ma be in the next five years as far as music,” he said. “It’s a big difference

  • from the next project compared to the last. And that’s what happened with this album.

  • Going back to the neighborhood and going to different spots, chilling with my homeboys,

  • put me back in that same space where we used to be, bringing back them thoughts, reminiscing

  • how I was feeling. I got myself right back in that mode and I got inspired by that. So

  • this album won’t sound like Section.80. Completely nothing like it,” he told XXL

  • magazine. The first song Lamar and Dr. Dre ever worked on together was "Compton", the

  • twelfth track on the album, which serves as the standard edition's closing track.

  • On August 15, 2012, Lady Gaga announced via Twitter, that she had collaborated with Lamar

  • on a song entitled "Partynauseous", for good kid, m.A.A.d city, and that it would be released

  • on September 6, 2012. However, on August 23, 2012, Gaga announced that the song was no

  • longer being released on that date and apologized to fans for the delay. Eventually, it was

  • confirmed that Lady Gaga would not be featured on the album due to timing issues and creative

  • differences. The song was later revealed to be re-titled "Bitch, Don't Kill My Vibe".

  • On November 8, 2012 Gaga released the version she was featured on, which had her singing

  • the chorus and a verse. Lamar expressed he was surprised and happy that Gaga released

  • her version of the song, as it showed confidence in their work together.

  • Music and lyrics

  • Good Kid, M.A.A.D City has a low-key, downbeat production, with atmospheric beats and subtle,

  • indistinct hooks. It eschews contemporary hip hop tastes, and generally features tight

  • bass measures, subtle background vocals, and light piano. Writers draw comparisons of the

  • music to OutKast's 1998 album Aquemini. Andrew Nosnitsky of Spin cites the music's "closest

  • point of reference" as "the cold spaciousness of ATLiens-era OutKast, but as the record

  • progresses, that sound sinks slowly into the fusionist mud of those sprawling and solemn

  • mid-2000s Roots albums." Sasha Frere-Jones of The New Yorker finds its use of "smooth"

  • music as a backdrop for "rough" scenarios to be analogous to Dr. Dre's G-funk during

  • the early 1990s, but adds that "Lamar often sounds like Drake ... whose various dreamy

  • styles have very little to do with the legacy of the West." Okayplayer's Marcus Moore writes

  • that its "expansive and brooding" instrumentals eschew "California's glossy West Coast funk"

  • for a "Dungeon Family aesthetic." Lyrically, the album chronicles Lamar's experiences

  • in his native Compton, California and its harsh realities, in a nonlinear narrative.

  • The songs address issues such as economic disenfranchisement, retributive gang violence,

  • and downtrodden women, while analyzing their residual effects on individuals and families.

  • Lamar introduces various characters and internal conflicts, including the contrast of his homesickness

  • and love for Compton with the city's plagued condition. Del F. Cowie of Exclaim! observes

  • a "transformation" by Lamar's character "from a boisterous, impressionable, girl-craving

  • teenager to more spiritual, hard-fought adulthood, irrevocably shaped by the neighbourhood and

  • familial bonds of his precarious environment." Slant Magazine's Mark Collett writes that

  • Lamar executes the character's transition by "tempering the hedonistic urges of West

  • Coast hip-hop with the self-reflective impulses of the East Coast." David Amidon of PopMatters

  • views that the album provides a "sort of semi-autobiographical character arc", while MSN Music's Robert Christgau

  • writes that Lamar "softspokenly" enacts a "rap-versus-real dichotomy".

  • The album features naturalistic, vérité-like skits that dramatize the characters' limitations.

  • Jon Caramanica of The New York Times finds them to be a part of the album's "narrative

  • strategy", with "prayers and conversations and different voices and recollections and

  • interludes, all in service of one overarching story: Mr. Lamar's tale of ducking Compton's

  • rougher corners to find himself artistically." Pitchfork Media's Jayson Greene feels that

  • they reinforce the album's theme of "the grounding power of family", interpreting "family and

  • faith" to be "the fraying tethers holding Lamar back from the chasm of gang violence

  • that threatens to consume him." Lamar exhibits a tempered delivery on the

  • album, and raps with dense narratives, internal rhyme, double and triple time flow, and multiple

  • voices for different characters. Music journalist Jody Rosen characterizes him as "a storyteller,

  • not a braggart or punch-line rapper, setting spiritual yearnings and moral dilemmas against

  • a backdrop of gang violence and police brutality." Singles

  • The album's first single, "The Recipe", was released on April 3, 2012. The song features

  • his mentor, record producer and fellow rapper Dr. Dre and was produced by Scoop DeVille.

  • It peaked at number 38 on Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs and at number 3 on Bubbling Under Hot

  • 100 Singles. Kendrick shot a video for it featuring Dr. Dre at a mansion in Los Angeles

  • in May 2012. He also claimed the video will have a feel of 2Pac's California Love clip.

  • The album's second single "Swimming Pools" was released on July 31, 2012, as a digital

  • download, while the music video premiered on August 3, 2012. The song became a hit,

  • peaking at number 17 on the Billboard Hot 100. "Swimming Pools" was also certified Gold

  • in the United States by the RIAA. The week of the album's release, "Backseat

  • Freestyle" debuted on the Billboard Bubbling Under Hot 100 Singles chart at number 106.

  • It was later revealed to be released as the third single in the United Kingdom on January

  • 7, 2013. The music video was released on January 2, 2013. Lamar's father appears in the video.

  • The song peaked at number 29 on the US Billboard Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs.

  • "Poetic Justice" was released third single in North America, featuring Drake and production

  • from Scoop DeVille. The song began to impact American rhythmic contemporary radio on January

  • 15, 2013. The song has since peaked at number 26 on the Billboard Hot 100. "Poetic Justice"

  • was also certified Gold in the United States by the RIAA.

  • On March 9, 2013, Kendrick told Rap-Up that his next single off the album would probably

  • be "Bitch, Don't Kill My Vibe". On March 13, 2013, Jay-Z's engineer Young Guru premiered

  • a snippet of the song's official remix, featuring rapper Jay-Z. Lamar called it an accomplishment

  • to have a song with Jay-Z featured on it. Shortly after the remix premiered he would

  • confirm that, "Bitch, Don't Kill My Vibe" would be the next single. The full version

  • of the remix was premiered by Funkmaster Flex on March 17, 2013. The remix was released

  • as the album's fourth single to rhythmic contemporary radio on April 9, 2013. The song has since

  • peaked at number 32 on the Billboard Hot 100. The music video for the original version of

  • the single was released on May 13, 2013. Comedian Mike Epps makes a cameo appearance in the

  • video. The same day an extended version of the music video was released featuring a cameo

  • from Juicy J, and a bonus clip of a new song by Schoolboy Q from his own respective major

  • label debut album, Oxymoron. Promotion

  • Before and after the album's release, Kendrick toured as a supporting act with other various

  • artists such as Drake and Steve Aoki. On May 5, 2013, he begun his first headlining tour

  • with the good kid, m.A.A.d city World Tour, in West Palm Beach, Florida. The tour consisted

  • of 23 headlining shows, 22 international music festivals, and 15 United States music festivals.

  • The tour ran through August 24 and also featured the other members of Black Hippy on all the

  • US dates. After titling the album "a short film" by

  • Kendrick Lamar, in an interview with GQ he said "he plans on doing a short film to bring

  • his story to life." He also expressed interest in directing this short film too. Lamar also

  • threw out names like Tristan Wilds to portray him, Taraji P. Henson and Rihanna as potential

  • names he'd want to have if he could choose anybody to work with. On December 23, 2013,

  • the music video for the song "Sing About Me", was released. The video was directed by Darren

  • Romanelli. Critical reception

  • Good Kid, M.A.A.D City received rave reviews from contemporary music critics. At Metacritic,

  • which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the album

  • received an average score of 91, which indicates "universal acclaim", based on 36 reviews.

  • Pitchfork Media's Jayson Greene felt that "the miracle of this album is how it ties

  • straightforward rap thrills" to its "weighty material" and narrative. David Amidon of PopMatters

  • felt that the album is simultaneously accessible and substantial, as it can appeal to both

  • underground and mainstream hip hop listeners. Fact magazine's Joseph Morpurgo called it

  • an autobiographical "triumph of breadth" and a "wide-ranging, far-reaching success". Sputnikmusic

  • found its reach comparable to Kanye West's 2010 album My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy,

  • "but with much subtler shades". Jaeki Cho of XXL called it "one of the most cohesive

  • bodies of work in recent rap memory" and wrote that each song is "both complexly arranged

  • and sonically fitting, foregrounding Kendrick’s vivid lyricism and amazing control of cadence."

  • Jim Carroll of The Irish Times viewed it as an important and entertaining that is forward

  • thinking, even though it echoes the past era of West Coast hip hop. AllMusic editor David

  • Jeffries characterized the album as "some kind of elevated gangsta rap" and wrote of

  • its subject matter:

  • Besides all the great ideas and life, this journey through the concrete jungle of Compton

  • is worth taking because of the artistic richness, 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 subtract the hype, and this one is still potent enough to rise to the

  • top of the pile.

  • In a mixed review, Hazel Sheffield of NME asserted that the album "might lack the raw

  • appeal of" Section.80, "but it's a big-budget reminder that [Lamar] hasn't forgotten his

  • roots." Alex Macpherson of The Guardian criticized "Lamar's depiction of downtrodden women" as

  • "unnecessarily prurient and unconvincing", but praised his "ability to pull the listener

  • inside the action while retaining an alienated detachment". Although he observed "some degree

  • of self-indulgence", Andrew Nosnitsky of Spin found the album's production "surprisingly

  • cohesive" and commented that Lamar "manages to hold everything together in the midst of

  • such chaos through sheer craftsmanship." Jody Rosen of Rolling Stone felt that the album

  • "warrants a place in that storied lineage" of "Seventies blaxploitation soundtracks and

  • Nineties gangsta-rap blaxploitation revivals". Greg Kot of the Chicago Tribune commended

  • Lamar for giving "gangsta tropes ... a twist, or sometimes upend[ing] them completely",

  • and wrote that the album "brims with comedy, complexity and the many voices in Kendrick

  • Lamar's head." Robert Christgau of MSN Music felt that its "commitment to drama has musical

  • drawbacks", but stated, "the atmospheric beats Dr. Dre and his hirelings lay under the raps

  • and choruses establish a musical continuity that shores up a nervous flow that's just

  • what Lamar's rhymes need." Accolades

  • Good Kid, M.A.A.D City appeared on several year-end top albums lists by music critics.

  • It was named the best album of 2012 by BBC, Complex, Fact, New York, and Pitchfork Media.

  • The album was also ranked number two by Billboard, the Chicago Tribune, MTV, Spin, and Time,

  • number four by Filter, Jon Pareles of The New York Times, and Ann Powers of NPR, number

  • five by The Guardian, number six by Rolling Stone, and number eight by Entertainment Weekly.

  • In December 2012, Complex also named Good Kid, M.A.A.D City one of the 25 classic hip

  • hop albums of the previous 10 years. Complex also ranked its album cover as the best of

  • 2012 while Pitchfork Media included it on its list of the 20 best album covers of the

  • year. In April 2013, Vibe placed the album at number 19 on its "The Greatest 50 Albums

  • Since '93" list. The album was nominated for Top Rap Album at the 2013 Billboard Music

  • Awards and the 2013 American Music Awards. In October 2013, Complex named it the second

  • best hip hop album of the last five years. It also won the award for Album of the Year

  • at the 2013 BET Hip Hop Awards. Good Kid M.A.A.D City earned Lamar five Grammy Award nominations

  • at the 56th Grammy Awards, for Album of The Year, Best Rap Album, Best New Artist, Best

  • Rap/Sung Collaboration for Now Or Never with Mary J. Blige and Best Rap Performance for

  • Swimming Pools. Commercial performance

  • The album debuted at number two on the US Billboard 200 chart, with first-week sales

  • of 242,000 copies. The album also entered the UK Albums Chart at number 16 on October

  • 28, 2012, as well as entering at number two on the UK R&B Albums Chart. The album also

  • peaked in the top ten of the album sales charts in Canada, New Zealand and the Netherlands.

  • In its second week it sold 63,000 more copies in the United States. Then over the following

  • four weeks it sold 176,000 more copies bringing its total sales to 481,000 in the United States.

  • On June 29, 2013, the album was certified platinum by the Recording Industry Association

  • of America, having shipped and sold one million copies in the United States. As of April 16,

  • 2014, the album had sold 1,234,000 copies, according to Nielsen SoundScan.

  • Controversy On October 23, 2012, after receiving much

  • critical acclaim from the hip hop community, outspoken rapper Shyne took to Twitter to

  • run down on the album, calling it "trash" and the production horrible. West Coast rappers

  • Nipsey Hussle, Schoolboy Q and Game quickly took offense to this, with Game calling Kendrick

  • non-confrontational in that he wouldn't respond to Shyne. Kendrick responded to Shyne's comments

  • on October 26, saying that he is not a sensitive person and was unfazed by his comments. In

  • addition he said Good Kid, M.A.A.D City was not necessarily a "classic" as some have called

  • it, but "classic worthy" if enough time passed. Kendrick also referred to Shyne in his song

  • "The Jig Is Up" saying, "I pray to God this beat good enough for Shyne". After this Shyne

  • stood by his comments and called Game his "little son". Game responded with a freestyle

  • calling out Shyne, titled "Cough Up a Lung". Shyne then responded with his own diss track,

  • towards Game named "Psalms 68." Track listing

  •  • Additional production • Co-producer Notes

  • "The Art of Peer Pressure" features uncredited vocals from JMSN.

  • "m.A.A.d city" features uncredited vocals from Schoolboy Q.

  • Sample credits "Bitch, Don't Kill My Vibe" contains a sample

  • of "Tiden Flyver" as performed by Boom Clap Bachelors.

  • "The Art of Peer Pressure" contains a sample of "Helt Alene" as performed by Suspekt.

  • "Money Trees" contains a sample of "Silver Soul" as performed by Beach House.

  • "Poetic Justice" contains a sample of "Any Time, Any Place" as performed by Janet Jackson.

  • "m.A.A.d city" contains a sample of "Don't Change Your Love" as performed by The Five

  • Stairsteps, "Funky Worm" by Ohio Players, and "A Bird In The Hand" by Ice Cube.

  • "Sing About Me, I'm Dying of Thirst" contains a sample of "Maybe Tomorrow" as performed

  • by Grant Green and "I'm Glad You're Mine" by Al Green.

  • "Compton" contains a sample of "What's This World Coming To" as performed by Formula IV.

  • "The Recipe" contains a sample of "Meet the Frownies" as performed by Twin Sister.

  • Personnel Credits for Good Kid, M.A.A.D City adapted

  • from Allmusic.

  • Charts Certifications

  • Release history See also

  • List of number-one R&B albums of 2012 List of number-one rap albums of 2012

  • References

  • Further reading Robert Christgau. "Respect yourself: Kendrick

  • Lamar's standing-room only Roseland show". MSN Music

  • Jeff Weiss. "Pazz & Jop: Kendrick Lamar, Finally Compton's Most Wanted". The Village Voice

  • External links Good Kid, M.A.A.D City at Discogs

  • good kid, m.A.A.d city at AnyDecentMusic?

Good Kid, M.A.A.D City is the second studio album by American rapper Kendrick Lamar. The

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