Heart Pt. 6

Album: GNX (2024)
Charted: 14
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Songfacts®:

  • Since 2010, Kendrick Lamar has been curating an evolving musical diary through a series called The Heart. These tracks, always deeply personal, serve as time capsules of Lamar's state of mind, often arriving just before a new album to set the stage. Each installment dives into themes ranging from self-reflection to societal critique, making them a cornerstone of his career. "The Heart Part 5," which snagged Grammy wins for Best Rap Song and Best Rap Performance in 2023, tackles the glamorization of gang culture with an unflinching lens, drawing widespread acclaim.

    Fast-forward to early 2024, and Lamar's rap war with Drake. The Toronto MC released a track titled "THE HEART PART SIX" as a parody of Lamar's series, following Lamar's earlier jab at Drake's own timestamp tracks with "6:16 in LA." While the diss sparked brief chatter, Drake's hasty deletion of the promotional Instagram post for his song was interpreted by many as an unspoken concession. Kendrick's response? The 10th track on his GNX album, "Heart Pt. 6," is a continuation - and reclamation - of the series.
  • "Heart Pt. 6" is a reflection on Lamar's early days with Top Dawg Entertainment (TDE). He paints vivid scenes of the camaraderie, struggles, and formative years spent alongside label mates like Ab-Soul and Jay Rock, shining a spotlight on his bond with ScHoolboy and comparing Anthony "Top Dawg" Tiffith to Hall of Fame NBA coach Phil Jackson.
  • Lamar doesn't shy away from accountability. The third verse candidly addresses the fizzled potential of Black Hippy, the TDE supergroup he was in with Ab-Soul, Jay Rock and ScHoolboy Q.

    I jog my memory, knowin' Black Hippy didn't work 'cause of me
    Creatively, I moved on with new concepts in reach


    Lamar's ambitious solo trajectory ultimately made the group's unified vision unsustainable. While Black Hippy's collaborations became cult favorites, fans never got the full-length project they'd dreamed of.
  • The chorus, sampling SWV's 1996 track "Use Your Heart," adds an emotive layer to Lamar's themes of youthful promise and future glory. Producers Sounwave and Jack Antonoff then weave the SWV sample into a lush, atmospheric backdrop. For fans of music trivia, this is a delightful nod: "Use Your Heart" was the first charting track produced by Pharrell Williams and Chad Hugo, the then-rising Neptunes, just before they reshaped the soundscape of early-2000s pop.

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