Los Angeles Times

Lamar leads a victory parade

The hip-hop Pulitzer laureate and his Top Dawg team celebrate with hometown fans.

- MIKAEL WOOD POP MUSIC CRITIC

The idea of a victory lap had already been firmly establishe­d by the time Kendrick Lamar rolled onstage Thursday night at the Forum in a race car surrounded by flapping checkered flags.

A hometown stop on what’s proudly billed as the Championsh­ip Tour, the gig brought together Compton-born Lamar and members of his Top Dawg Entertainm­ent crew — including SZA, Schoolboy Q and Jay Rock — for back-to-back performanc­es meant to celebrate their achievemen­ts in the year or so since Lamar released his chart-topping “Damn” album in April 2017.

Banners framed the stage listing the various awards and nomination­s they’ve received. An advertisem­ent appeared between acts to hype Lamar’s new Nike sneaker.

Then there was the phrase that flashed on a giant video screen behind the rapper, who sometimes calls himself Kung Fu Kenny, as he opened his set with the blistering “DNA.” ist. “Pulitzer Kenny,” the screen read, a reference to the Pulitzer Prize for music he won last month — the first time that award has been given to a hip-hop art--

Needless to say, this show was a safe space for selfpromot­ion. And given the label’s accomplish­ments, why shouldn’t it have been?

One of the more remarkable aspects of Top Dawg’s success is that it hasn’t come at the expense of creative ambition or individual­ity.

For all the hard-knocking beats and radio-friendly hooks he deploys, Lamar on “Damn” has deep and complicate­d things to say about race, family and spirituali­ty; its strangenes­s has worn off through our constant exposure to hits like “Humble” and “Love,” but it’s still there, waiting to be re-admired, in a moment like Lamar’s rendition Thursday of “DNA,” with its rush of “power, poison, pain and joy.”

The same goes for SZA’s “Ctrl,” which earned several nomination­s at this year’s Grammy Awards. The R&B singer’s high visibility in recent months — including at Coachella and in “All the Stars,” a splashy pop single from the “Black Panther” soundtrack that Lamar oversaw — can lead you to forget how idiosyncra­tic her melodies and vocal phrasing are. That SZA has become a star thanks to songs as personal and off-kilter as “Drew Barrymore” — and as frank as “Doves in the Wind,” which she introduced at the Forum by asking, “Who wants to talk about vagina?” — justifies the congratula­tions the Top Dawg folks were showering on themselves here.

Yet the concert, which is set to play the Forum again on Friday, also felt like an opportunit­y to share that triumph with Top Dawg ’s audience. “L.A., this is your home team,” Lamar told the crowd near the end of his set after he took a kind of roll call, asking how many in the house were from Inglewood, Compton, Watts or South Los Angeles.

The response to Lamar’s comment demonstrat­ed how much pride his fans have taken in his ascent, which in turn seemed to push Lamar to new levels of emotional intensity as he ran through “Damn” cuts such as “Element” and “Love” (for the latter he brought out the song’s featured vocalist, Zacari) as well as oldies like “Money Trees” and “Alright.”

It was a fiery display that came in stark contrast to a dull and lifeless performanc­e Lamar gave in February amid the corporate logos that decorate the central plaza at downtown’s L.A. Live complex. That gig, sponsored by the NBA and open only to American Express cardholder­s, showed one downside to success — the temptation to spread oneself too thin, and in areas where one’s talent is valued less than one’s renown.

For all the trophy-polishing done on Thursday, the Championsh­ip Tour felt like an important corrective for Lamar and his friends.

It reminded everyone why they matter.

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