USA TODAY US Edition

Lamar doubles down on the intensity for ‘Mr. Morale’

- Melissa Ruggieri

Say this for Kendrick Lamar – he’ll make you wait, but when he returns, it’s a massive presentati­on.

Five years after his Grammy-winning and Pulitzer Prize-earning “Damn,” one of the most profound rappers in the game returned Friday with the double album, “Mr. Morale & The Big Steppers.”

On 18 tracks evenly divided between “Big Steppers” and “Mr. Morale,” Lamar spends an hour and 13 minutes steering listeners through a musical odyssey heavy on piano riffs, incongruou­s bites of sound and, as expected, much baring of his soul.

The guest list includes familiar names – Kodak Black, Baby Keem, Ghostface Killah – and some interestin­g inclusions, such as actress Taylour Paige (“We Cry Together”) and Portishead’s Beth Gibbons (“Mother I Sober”).

But Lamar, 34, never cedes the spotlight – as he shouldn’t – on what will be considered his musical opus.

On Friday, Lamar announced the worldwide The Big Steppers Tour, which kicks off July 19 in Oklahoma City and wraps in Australia in December. Baby Keem will join him for all shows and Tanna Leone on select dates.

Lamar’s lyrical intensity is built for repeated listening, but here are some first impression­s from standout tracks on the album.

“Worldwide Steppers”: Following an introducti­on from Black – who refers to Lamar by one of his many alternativ­e names, Oklama – the song swings between a mesmerizin­g pulse and oldschool soul. It’s also Lamar’s autobiogra­phical catch-up for fans wondering whether he and fiancée Whitney Alford had a second child based on the album cover photo; references to “playin’ ‘Baby Shark’ with my daughter” and “I’d kill for my son Enoch” would indicate yes.

“Father Time”: With a dense piano backdrop, Lamar rhymes about how his “daddy issues kept me competitiv­e.” But fans will surely buzz about his high-profile name dropping: “When Kanye got back with Drake, I was slightly confused/Guess I’m not as mature as I think, I got some healing to do.”

“We Cry Together”: Not so much a song as a raw, expletive-filled tirade over random piano notes with Lamar and actress Paige hurling insults at each other for almost six minutes. You’ll wince listening to their unvarnishe­d attacks on each other. “This the kind of (expletive) that couples do?” Lamar wonders.

“Count Me Out”: The first song on the “Mr. Morale” section of the album finds Lamar grappling with the contradict­ions in his head (“I care too much, wanna share too much/In my head too much, I shut down too”) and nodding to the pandemic while remaining reflective (“Masks on the babies, mask on an opp/Wear masks in the neighborho­od stores when you shop/ But a mask won’t hide who you are inside”).

“Silent Hill”: Lamar handles the first two verses, which ride on a clip-clopping beat before Kodak Black jumps in for an epic run through the final third with lyrics including “Every Sunday someone’s gotta teach my boy to be a man/I had no father.”

“Savior”: The song following the interlude of the same name squeezes in references to COVID-19, Vladimir Putin, protests and vaccines (“Seen a Christian say the vaccine mark of the beast/Then he caught COVID and prayed the Pfizer for relief”) with an assist from Baby Keem and Sam Dew.

“Mother I Sober”: For almost seven minutes, Lamar rolls through a list of heartbreak­ing grievances and vivid descriptio­ns of the generation­s of women who have affected him in some way. With piano and a throbbing beat the only backdrop aside from some vocalizing, Lamar’s voice rises from a murmur to throes of anger by the final section of the song as he unspools references to physical abuse, sex addiction and cheating on Alford.

“Mirror”: The album concludes with the most groove-infested offering as well as the most melodicall­y cohesive. As Lamar intones “I choose me, I’m sorry,” with a shrug in his voice, it’s apparent that he’s not apologizin­g, but, rather, continuing his journey to look at his reflection without remorse.

 ?? PROVIDED BY RENELL MEDRANO ?? “Mr. Morale & the Big Steppers,” is Kendrck Lamar’s final project for Top Dawg.
PROVIDED BY RENELL MEDRANO “Mr. Morale & the Big Steppers,” is Kendrck Lamar’s final project for Top Dawg.

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