ショッピングカート
Soul/Club/Rap
CD
To Pimp A Butterfly
★★★★★
★★★★★
4.0

在庫状況 について

・各種前払い決済は、お支払い確認後の発送となります(Q&A)

開催期間:2024年5月22日(水)0:00~5月25日(土)23:59まで![※期間中のご予約・お取り寄せ・ご注文が対象 ※店舗取置・店舗予約サービスは除く]
商品の情報

フォーマット

CD

構成数

1

国内/輸入

輸入

パッケージ仕様

-

発売日

2015年03月24日

規格品番

4730068

レーベル

SKU

602547300683

作品の情報
メイン
アーティスト
オリジナル発売日
2015年
商品の紹介
これが未来に残るヒップホップ・クラシック!ケンドリック・ラマー超待望の3作目!すでに"i"がグラミーを受賞し、期待が最高潮のなか緊急リリースされた本作。先行公開された"The Blacker TheBerry"や"King Kunta"ほか、ジャズやファンクやポストGファンクな次世代の西海岸サウンドと鬼気迫るラップ満載。フライロー、サンダーキャット、テラス・マーティン他プロデュース。
タワーレコード (2015/04/03)
Spin - "[L]et's give it up to the astounding thicket of music here, the best-produced rap since the dawn of Drake: shades of Miles Davis' ON THE CORNER and free jazz all over, as well as Sly Stone's THERE'S A RIOT GOIN' ON and Funkadelic." NME - "[I]n laying his demons and his contradictions bare, he has stayed true to his formidable talent." Entertainment Weekly - "With its heated social commentary and shape-shifting song structures, BUTTERFLY has the freedom of a mixtape -- samples range from Michael Jackson to cult folkie Sufjan Stevens-but the production values of an Oscar-worthy cinematic event." -- Grade: A Spin - "TO PIMP A BUTTERFLY is THE WALL of 21st-century hip-hop."
Rovi
Becoming an adult ultimately means accepting one's imperfections, unimportance, and mortality, but that doesn't mean we stop striving for the ideal, a search that's so at the center of our very being that our greatest works of art celebrate it, and often amplify it. Anguish and despair rightfully earn more Grammys, Emmys, Tonys, and Pulitzer Prizes than sweetness and light ever do, but West Coast rapper Kendrick Lamar is already on elevated masterwork number two, so expect his version of the sobering truth to sound like a party at points. He's aware, as Bilal sings here, that "Shit don't change 'til you get up and wash your ass," and don't it feel good? The sentiment is universal, but the viewpoint on his second LP is inner-city and African-American, as radio regulars like the Isley Brothers (sampled to perfection during the key track "I"), George Clinton (who helps make "Wesley's Theory" a cross between "Atomic Dog" and Dante's Inferno), and Dr. Dre (who literally phones his appearance in) put the listener in Lamar's era of Compton, just as well as Lou Reed took us to New York and Brecht took us to Weimar Republic Berlin. These G-funky moments are incredibly seductive, which helps usher the listener through the album's 80-minute runtime, plus its constant mutating (Pharrell productions, spoken word, soul power anthems, and sound collages all fly by, with few tracks ending as they began), much of it influenced, and sometimes assisted by, producer Flying Lotus and his frequent collaborator Thundercat. "u" sounds like an MP3 collection deteriorating, while the broken beat of the brilliant "Momma" will challenge the listener's balance, and yet, Lamar is such a prodigiously talented and seductive artist, his wit, wisdom, and wordplay knock all these stray molecules into place. Survivor's guilt, realizing one's destiny, and a Snoop Dogg performance of Doggystyle caliber are woven among it all; plus, highlights offer that Parliament-Funkadelic-styled subversion, as "The Blacker the Berry" ("The sweeter the juice") offers revolutionary slogans and dips for the hip. Free your mind, and your ass will follow, and at the end of this beautiful black berry, there's a miraculous "talk" between Kendrick and the legendary 2Pac, as the brutalist trailblazer mentors this profound populist. To Pimp a Butterfly is as dark, intense, complicated, and violent as Picasso's Guernica, and should hold the same importance for its genre and the same beauty for its intended audience. ~ David Jeffries|
Rovi
Becoming an adult ultimately means accepting one's imperfections, unimportance, and mortality, but that doesn't mean we stop striving for the ideal, a search that's so at the center of our very being that our greatest works of art celebrate it, and often amplify it. Anguish and despair rightfully earn more Grammys, Emmys, Tonys, and Pulitzer Prizes than sweetness and light ever do, but West Coast rapper Kendrick Lamar is already on elevated masterwork number two, so expect his version of the sobering truth to sound like a party at points. He's aware, as Bilal sings here, that "Shit don't change 'til you get up and wash your ass," and don't it feel good? The sentiment is universal, but the viewpoint on his second LP is inner-city and African-American, as radio regulars like the Isley Brothers (sampled to perfection during the key track "I"), George Clinton (who helps make "Wesley's Theory" a cross between "Atomic Dog" and Dante's Inferno), and Dr. Dre (who literally phones his appearance in) put the listener in Lamar's era of Compton, just as well as Lou Reed took us to New York and Brecht took us to Weimar Republic Berlin. These G-funky moments are incredibly seductive, which helps usher the listener through the album's 80-minute runtime, plus its constant mutating (Pharrell productions, spoken word, soul power anthems, and sound collages all fly by, with few tracks ending as they began), much of it influenced, and sometimes assisted by, producer Flying Lotus and his frequent collaborator Thundercat. "u" sounds like an MP3 collection deteriorating, while the broken beat of the brilliant "Momma" will challenge the listener's balance, and yet, Lamar is such a prodigiously talented and seductive artist, his wit, wisdom, and wordplay knock all these stray molecules into place. Survivor's guilt, realizing one's destiny, and a Snoop Dogg performance of Doggystyle caliber are woven among it all; plus, highlights offer that Parliament-Funkadelic-styled subversion, as "The Blacker the Berry" ("The sweeter the juice") offers revolutionary slogans and dips for the hip. Free your mind, and your ass will follow, and at the end of this beautiful black berry, there's a miraculous "talk" between Kendrick and the legendary 2Pac, as the brutalist trailblazer mentors this profound populist. To Pimp a Butterfly is as dark, intense, complicated, and violent as Picasso's Guernica, and should hold the same importance for its genre and the same beauty for its intended audience. ~ David Jeffries
Rovi
収録内容

構成数 | 1枚

合計収録時間 | 00:00:00

Becoming an adult ultimately means accepting one's imperfections, unimportance, and mortality, but that doesn't mean we stop striving for the ideal, a search that's so at the center of our very being that our greatest works of art celebrate it, and often amplify it. Anguish and despair rightfully earn more Grammys, Emmys, Tonys, and Pulitzer Prizes than sweetness and light ever do, but West Coast rapper Kendrick Lamar is already on elevated masterwork number two, so expect his version of the sobering truth to sound like a party at points. He's aware, as Bilal sings here, that "Shit don't change 'til you get up and wash your ass," and don't it feel good? The sentiment is universal, but the viewpoint on his second LP is inner-city and African-American, as radio regulars like the Isley Brothers (sampled to perfection during the key track "I"), George Clinton (who helps make "Wesley's Theory" a cross between "Atomic Dog" and Dante's Inferno), and Dr. Dre (who literally phones his appearance in) put the listener in Lamar's era of Compton, just as well as Lou Reed took us to New York and Brecht took us to Weimar Republic Berlin. These G-funky moments are incredibly seductive, which helps usher the listener through the album's 80-minute runtime, plus its constant mutating (Pharrell productions, spoken word, soul power anthems, and sound collages all fly by, with few tracks ending as they began), much of it influenced, and sometimes assisted by, producer Flying Lotus and his frequent collaborator Thundercat. "u" sounds like an MP3 collection deteriorating, while the broken beat of the brilliant "Momma" will challenge the listener's balance, and yet, Lamar is such a prodigiously talented and seductive artist, his wit, wisdom, and wordplay knock all these stray molecules into place. Survivor's guilt, realizing one's destiny, and a Snoop Dogg performance of Doggystyle caliber are woven among it all; plus, highlights offer that Parliament-Funkadelic-styled subversion, as "The Blacker the Berry" ("The sweeter the juice") offers revolutionary slogans and dips for the hip. Free your mind, and your ass will follow, and at the end of this beautiful black berry, there's a miraculous "talk" between Kendrick and the legendary 2Pac, as the brutalist trailblazer mentors this profound populist. To Pimp a Butterfly is as dark, intense, complicated, and violent as Picasso's Guernica, and should hold the same importance for its genre and the same beauty for its intended audience. ~ David Jeffries

    • 1.
      [CD]
      • 1.
        Wesley's Theory (Feat. George Clinton & Thundercat)
      • 4.
        Institutionalized (Feat. Bilal, Anna Wise & Snoop Dogg)
      • 5.
        These Walls (Feat. Bilal, Anna Wise & Thundercat)
      • 11.
        How Much a Dollar Cost (Feat. James Fauntleroy & Ronald Isley)
      • 12.
        Complexion (a Zulu Love) (Feat. Rapsody)
レビュー
  • 西海岸の鬼才MCによる新作。複雑怪奇な感情が入り乱れるとされるリリックも考察意欲を掻き立てるのだろうが、フライング・ロータスやサンダーキャットを含む制作陣の助力を得て、PとGなファンクや70年代前衛ジャズ的な要素を織り込みながら淀みないフロウでリズミカルに展開していく楽曲は、ラストを飾る故2パックとの擬似対話まで極めて音楽的で、予備知識不要の親しみやすさがある。ビラルやスヌープの怪演にラプソディ嬢の気高いラップ、ジョージ・クリントンやロナルド・アイズレーの降臨も説得力を持つアーバンで壮大な音楽絵巻は、黒人の尊厳回復を謳ったとして同一視されるディアンジェロの『Black Messiah』以上に多彩でイマっぽい。これぞ〈アルバム〉と言いたくなる会心の一枚。
    bounce (C)林剛

    タワーレコード (vol.378(2015年4月25日発行号)掲載)

カスタマーズボイス
総合評価
4.0
★★★★★
★★★★★
(1)
    評価する:
★★★★★
★★★★★
投稿日:2020/04/30

フライローやサンダーキャット、あるいはファレルやスヌープといった客演もあって、ケンドリックの作品では一番聴きやすい一枚かと。なかでも旧知のサウンウェーヴが手がけたトラックにキレッキレのライミングが刺さる“King Kunta”がかっこ良すぎて神。

関連商品
ニュース & 記事
ポイント15倍
366pt
販売価格(税込)
¥ 2,690
販売中
在庫あり
発送までの目安:当日~翌日
cartIcon カートに入れる

欲しい物リストに追加

コレクションに追加

サマリー/統計情報

欲しい物リスト登録者
4
(公開: 0 人)
コレクション登録者
6
(公開: 2 人)
フラゲ対象の詳細を表示するポップアップ
北海道・鳥取県・島根県・岡山県・広島県・
山口県・四国・九州・沖縄県

フラゲ注文受付期間は地域によって異なります。
お住まいの地域をご確認ください。

北海道・山口県・九州・沖縄県

フラゲ注文受付期間は地域によって異なります。
お住まいの地域をご確認ください。