Transcript
Cole Kushner (0:01)
From the Ringer Podcast Network. This is Dissect Long form musical Analysis broken into short digestible episodes this is episode four of our season long analysis of Kendrick Lamar's Mr. Morale and the Big Steppers. I'm your host Cole Kushner. Last time on dissect we examined Mr. Morale's third track, Worldwide Steppers. It was there we heard Kendrick unify human beings by our capacity to kill each other in big or small ways. He began by confessing a few of his own murders, describing the way he weaponized sex against women as an act of ancestral revenge. He then admitted that these transgressions contributed to the objectifying denigration of women. After confessing his own sins, the song's third verse and chorus turned the spotlight on society, challenging us to reflect on our own transgressions, to be real about our own imperfect motivations. The potent cynicism of both N95 and Worldwide Steppers is an incredibly bleak two track sequence as we can't help but wonder if Kendrick feels humanity is doomed to its own self centered egoic destruction. However, as the album continues, Kendrick makes clear that despite our imperfections, he does see hope in us and himself.
Kendrick Lamar (1:19)
I bop the pain away I slide the pain away I bop the pain away I slide the pain away.
Cole Kushner (1:40)
Die Hard was produced by Dahi Fnz, Baby Keem, J Pounds, and Soundwave. It begins with a drum loop credited to Baby Keem, over which Kendrick repeats the line I pop the pain away I slide the pain away. Thematically, this continues Kendrick's unambiguous focus on the things we do to avoid or suppress our underlying pain, if only for brief periods of time. He plays on the traditional method of relieving physical pain like a headache by popping a pill, likely alluding to those who indulge in stronger substances to medicate their emotional pain. However, pop and slide contain a number of possible meanings. Both are slang for sex, both are slang for violence, and both are slang for dance moves. And so, with two words, Kendrick covers three common vices that can be attributed to the worldwide drugs, sex and violence. Meanwhile, evoking dance moves is consistent with Kendrick depicting the Big Steppers as dancers, which is present in the recurring sounds of tap dancing steps as well as the N95 line dancing in a Drought. Hello to the Big Steppers, never losing count by subtly linking escape through vice to dancing. Here, Kendrick is foreshadowing a central meaning behind the symbolism of the Big Stepper, one who tap dances around their problems with distractions and addictions. This meaning will be more explicitly revealed by Whitney. Four tracks from now on. Purple Hearts Die Hard then continues with an extended sample passage where we hear a portion of Kadia Bonet's cover of the song Remember the rain why pick you up when you feel good to me? Told you not to cry, now get close to me. Bonet's high pitched voice is ethereal, angelic, even as she sings, I picked you up when you fell and cut your knee Told you not to cry and held you close to me. It's a classic image of a child being comforted after getting hurt. This sample and this image become Diehard's musical foundation. It's heard throughout the song beneath the main vocals, and the song's chord progression is taken from the passage as well. Now it will soon become clear that Die Hard is a song written to Whitney Alford, who is of course Kendrick's partner, mother of his children, and the one who bore the painful emotional burden of Kendrick's habitual infidelity. Later in the song, Whitney is depicted as an angel, and in my view, the angelic voice of Kadia Bonet represents Whitney's presence as if she were singing these words to Kendrick. The lyrics evocation of adolescence would seem to fit the long history of their relationship. The two met in high school, long before Kendrick became successful. And while Kendrick has always kept his romantic life private, the the few things he has said about Whitney on record almost always comment on her being there before the fame. In 2015, the year the two got engaged, Kendrick told the Breakfast Club that she's been around since day one. And that quote, people that have been on your side, you're supposed to honor that. That same year, he told Billboard magazine, I wouldn't even call her my girl. That's my best friend. I don't even like the term that society has put into the world. As far as being a companion, she's someone I can tell my fears to. This deep history feels embedded in Kendrick's use of the Kadia Bonet sample, with the theme of a pure, meaningful relationship established during the purity of adolescence, providing the perfect parallel to Kendrick and Whitney's journey together. And if we dig a little deeper into the original song, Remember the Rain, we can actually find even more connective tissue. The song tells the story of two childhood sweethearts who used to play in the Rain together. However, the girl in the story leaves the boy for someone else and the rain is used as a symbol of the bond they shared together. Bonet sings, can you remember the rain? You left me for someone else Now I must face life by myself again. If we imagine this from Whitney's perspective, it does seem to apply to what we know about their relationship, evoking as it does Kendrick's infidelity and Whitney bearing the emotional consequences of his actions. With the Remember the Rain sample forming the musical backdrop of Die Hard, we can imagine what is placed on top of this backdrop to be in conversation with the sample, in conversation with Whitney.
