
Kendrick Lamar's Defining Moment: Rakim's Cosign, Drake Feud Reignited & Electrifying Tour
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Kendrick Lamar is having another defining moment in his career this July. The past few days have been a whirlwind of performances, headlines, and high-profile acknowledgements, culminating in what many are calling a new golden age for the Compton lyricist. The most talked-about news is Lamar’s electrifying co-headline shows with SZA on their Grand National Tour. Their recent stop at Birmingham’s Villa Park drew raves, with Kendrick commanding the stage in his signature GNX – the same muscle car that adorns his latest album cover – and unleashing a set packed with classics from To Pimp a Butterfly, DAMN., and the latest GNX release. UK outlets like Eastern Eye described a nearly three-hour spectacle, highlighting the “raw energy and lyrical precision” Kendrick brought to crowd-favorites including King Kunta, DNA, and, inevitably, the now-iconic Drake diss Not Like Us, which sent the audience into a frenzy. Social media buzzed with footage of European crowds, particularly in the Netherlands and the UK, going wild for Kendrick’s performances—Instagram clips from RapUp and XXL show fans losing it when Not Like Us drops, underscoring the international reach and resonance Kendrick now enjoys.
What may have even longer-term significance for hip-hop history, though, arrived with the release of the new Clipse album and the song Chains & Whips. Kendrick’s verse included a line pledging “half of my profits may go to Rakim.” This lyrical nod received a public salute from Rakim himself. On Instagram, Rakim thanked Kendrick for what he declared the “illest shout” he’d heard in a long time and called Lamar “KING," an endorsement the rap world quickly noticed. HotNewHipHop and Complex both covered the exchange, reading it as a generational passing of the torch and one of the most significant cosigns in modern rap.
The Drake feud, which defined much of last year’s hip-hop conversation, was reignited in London as Drake responded to crowd chants of “F--- Kendrick” during his Wireless Festival set by raising a toast “to that,” as reported by The Express. The moment, with Drake leaning into audience sentiment, brought the rivalry back to center stage and trended widely.
Looking ahead, Kendrick and SZA are set for major stadium dates in Amsterdam on July 13 and Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in late July, with tickets in high demand according to official event FAQs.
Adding to the heat, Kendrick’s name trends frequently on Instagram, with fans and hip-hop insiders tagging him in reaction videos and memes related to his performances and new music. There are no credible reports of new solo releases in the immediate pipeline, but chatter about future collaborations—potentially even with Rakim—has started to bubble.
Altogether, this week cements Kendrick Lamar’s status not only as an arena-packing superstar but a central architect and influencer in global hip-hop—endorsed by legends, cheered by stadiums, and locked in the headlines.
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