In fact he carried out “Not Like Us.”
Within the lead-up to Kendrick Lamar’s headline efficiency on the Tremendous Bowl LIX halftime present on Sunday evening, many of the chatter centered on whether or not he would play the music that was successfully the knockout blow in his monthslong battle with Drake final 12 months. The music that grew to become Lamar’s signature hit, and a generational anthem. The music that received each report and music of the 12 months on the Grammys only a week in the past. The music that appeared to recalibrate hip-hop’s energy rankings, maybe completely.
So sure, Lamar performed the music. Towards the top of the set, after all, build up anticipation with a few temporary musical nods to it, toying with the viewers’s feelings and thirst.
However what is going to all the time be remembered from this efficiency just isn’t the musical decisions Lamar made, or the aesthetics of his choreography or the silhouettes of his outfit. What’s going to stay is his grin when he lastly started rapping that music. It was vast, persistent, nearly cartoonish in form. The grin of a person having the time of his life on the expense of an enemy.
Lamar is maybe essentially the most sober of all of hip-hop’s modern greats, a ferocious storyteller who values tongue-tripping polemics and introspection; he’s not precisely a beacon of pleasure. In the course of the beef, he appeared to tackle the dismantling of Drake as essential homework.
“Not Like Us” was a popped champagne cork, although. On the Tremendous Bowl stage on the Caesars Superdome in New Orleans, it was hinted at, parceled out, after which, lastly, launched into with a Lamar idiom: “They tried to rig the sport however you possibly can’t pretend affect.”
After which, that smile. What a smile. His subsequent efficiency was jubilant and a bit naughty. When he rapped, “Say, Drake, I hear you want ’em younger,” he appeared onerous into the digital camera whereas motioning downward along with his left hand, as if patting the pinnacle of a kid. He rapped the road naming Drake’s associates and their flaws. Given what the music contends about Drake — it refers to him as a “licensed pedophile,” amongst different issues — the choice to carry out it was nearly definitely closely pre-litigated. And there have been concessions made: Lamar didn’t rap the phrase “pedophile,” changing it with a prerecorded scream, and the digital camera switched away from him simply earlier than he landed the top of the sing-songy punchline, “A minorrrrrrr.”
It was fairly a spectacle — maybe the height of any rap battle, ever. And that’s not even counting the temporary second during which the tennis nice (and rumored former Drake paramour) Serena Williams was onstage, Crip strolling together with glee.
Provided that a lot of Lamar’s set, conceptually, got here all the way down to the query of “Not Like Us,” he largely saved issues curiously low-key the remainder of the time. Moderately than pack in every of his hits — there was no “Alright” or “Bitch, Don’t Kill My Vibe,” for instance — he leaned on songs from his most up-to-date LP, “GNX”: “Man on the Backyard,” “Peekaboo,” and on the very starting of the set, a little bit of an unreleased monitor that he used as album promotion.
SZA got here out to carry out two of their duets — “Luther” and “All of the Stars” — however they felt undercooked and nearly pointedly nonideological. They may very well be learn as a commentary on the type of concessions artists — Black artists specifically, and rappers much more specifically — have traditionally needed to make to make sure broader palatability and acceptance. (The halftime present had its first hip-hop headliner in 2022.)
Lamar himself underscored that time, with the inclusion of a one-man Greek refrain: Samuel L. Jackson, dressed as Uncle Sam and goading each Lamar and the viewers all through the set.
Simply after the 2 SZA songs, Jackson mentioned, “That’s what America needs — good, calm. You’re nearly there — don’t mess this …” which Lamar then interrupted with “Not Like Us.”
This was Lamar’s different successful stroke right here: weaving the metanarratives of the evening’s efficiency into the efficiency itself. Ought to he carry out a music that’s already the topic of a defamation swimsuit? Can a Black performer ethically carry out on the halftime present of the Tremendous Bowl, the crown jewel of the N.F.L., an establishment that has taken on extra political valence following the Black Lives Matter motion and Colin Kaepernick’s kneeling protests?
After “Squabble Up,” Jackson popped as much as excoriate Lamar: “Too loud, too reckless, too ghetto — Mr. Lamar, do you actually know the best way to play the sport?” It was each jeer and caricature. And so Lamar adopted with “Humble.,” throughout which his dancers — outfitted in purple, white and blue tracksuits — took on the formation of the American flag.
On the prime of the set, Lamar warned, “The revolution ’bout to be televised — you picked the suitable time however the unsuitable man.” However broadly talking, although Lamar nodded to those bigger struggles, he largely restricted his passions to his most private one. This was considered one of music’s greatest phases, freed up for vendetta.
At the very least one one who was a part of the halftime present had a distinct concept of the best way to use the efficiency to advance an agenda. Towards the top of the set, he pulled out a banner combining the flags of Palestine and Sudan that featured a coronary heart and a fist. Was this a part of the efficiency, one other degree of commentary woven right into a present already filled with it?
In footage captured from contained in the stadium however not broadcast, that particular person was chased off the primary stage just some seconds after whipping out the flag. He ran across the discipline for a spell earlier than he was tackled by a coterie of safety guards in fits, and carried off the sphere. That revolution, at the least, wouldn’t be televised.