Kendrick Lamar - Somebody That I Used To Know -... < COMPLETE » >
But look closer. Beneath the surface, this is a match made in purgatory. Here is why Kendrick Lamar is the only artist alive who could truly own that song—and what it would sound like. Gotye’s original (featuring Kimbra) is a conversation between two people who can no longer see each other clearly. The narrator feels erased; the response feels gaslit. It’s about the civil war of a breakup where nobody wins.
SZA’s character would flip the script: “You tell the world I abandoned you for the hills / But you forgot the night you chose the tour bus over the hospital bill / You call me a stranger? / King, you made yourself a stranger.” Kendrick Lamar - Somebody That I Used To Know -...
This is the genius of Kendrick. He is the only rapper who would lose the argument in the middle of his own song. He would leave the “somebody” with the final word, forcing us to realize: Maybe Kendrick was the toxic one. Of course, this cover will never happen. Gotye is famously protective of the song, and Kendrick is allergic to nostalgia-bait covers. He doesn't look back; he excavates. But look closer
At first glance, the pairing seems absurd. Gotye’s track is a minimalist, xylophone-plucked anthem of post-breakup ambiguity, drenched in Australian art-pop melancholy. Kendrick Lamar is the Pulitzer-winning bard of Compton’s concrete jungles, a rapper whose vocabulary slices through ego and trauma. SZA’s character would flip the script: “You tell
In the Kendrick version, this verse wouldn't be a female singer. It would be —perhaps sampled from a voicemail left by a real person in his past, or voiced by SZA in her most wounded, accusatory register.
Kendrick Lamar has spent a decade singing that exact ache over jazz beats and funk basslines. To hear him sing it over those four iconic xylophone notes? That wouldn't just be a cover.