Kendrick Lamar, a rapper responsible for one of the best albums of 2012, gave one of the year’s worst performances Sunday at the Midland. Rarely has the disparity between the quality of an artist’s recorded work and a corresponding live performance been greater.
The format was partly to blame.
The multiple characters and complex plot lines featured on “Good Kid, M.A.A.D. City” merit a full theatrical production. Yet aside from a small table for a DJ, the Midland’s stage was barren. A folding chair served as Lamar’s sole prop.
The minimalist approach didn’t diminish the enthusiasm of the youthful audience of about 1,500. Most rapped along to each of the 15 selections Lamar performed. They only expressed dismay when Lamar’s appearance concluded after only 56 minutes.
The audience didn’t seem to mind that Lamar didn’t attempt to replicate the subtleties of his recorded work. The multiple voices Lamar uses to convey different characters and narrative perspectives on his albums was replaced by a monochromatic bellow. The original intent of several selections was obliterated by the diminished approach. “Backseat Freestyle” is intended as a satire of ignorant hip-hop on “Good Kid, M.A.A.D City.” Lamar seemed to embrace the song’s exaggerated mysogyny and glorification of senseless violence on Sunday. “Swimming Pool (Drank),” a cautionary tale about alcohol abuse, was transformed into a doltish celebration of excess.
Even Lamar’s acclaimed creativity seemed to have been dulled.
A freestyle rap at the conclusion of “P&P 1.5” was embarrassingly anemic. Only an a cappella rendition of “I Am” reflected Lamar’s capacity for greatness.
Unlike Lamar, Les Izmore doesn’t suffer from a lack of charisma.
Izmore’s commanding presence added a sense of urgency to an auspicious 25-minute opening set by the Kansas City-based Heartfelt Anarchy. With essential contributions from producer D/Will and trumpeter Hermon Mehari, Izmore rapped over icy industrial beats, dreamy indie rock and elastic soul-based grooves.
Heartfelt Anarchy’s set possessed a distinctiveness that was entirely absent from Lamar’s excruciatingly pedestrian headlining effort.
|Bill Brownlee, Special to The Star
Eh, my sons still enjoyed it. Having said that, one of them did mention that he thought it would have played better thru a theatrical narrative as well. And now I'll certainly get blasted for this "comparison", but I explained to them that I did witness that type of production once with Neil Young's Greendale @ Starlight. While it worked with that material and was sort of cool to see that one time, even that experience was ultimately saved by the Crazy Horse set of songs that followed.
Posted by: pellboy | December 03, 2012 at 12:03 PM
I enjoyed it and didn't mind the sparse setup. The audience was too boisterous for him to pull off what Bill felt was lacking.
Posted by: cer | December 03, 2012 at 04:45 PM
after reading this, I'm still especially glad that I saw Neil Young's Greendale performance at Starlight.
The set that followed was, without a doubt the best Neil show ever!
I wish this young rapper the best, & I'm going to give his stuff a listen. Betting the LP is interesting.
Thanks for the review, Bill.
Posted by: corky | December 03, 2012 at 05:16 PM