A federal choose is pondering the character of rap battles and the slicing wordplay in Kendrick Lamar’s “Not Like Us,” the megahit diss monitor that spurred a defamation lawsuit from his fellow celebrity Drake.
Drake sued Common Music Group — each his and Lamar’s report label — over “Not Like Us,” saying the corporate printed and promoted a track he deems slanderous. Common says the lyrics are simply hyperbole within the custom of rap beefing, and the label is making an attempt to get the case dismissed.
U.S. District Choose Jeannette Vargas did not instantly resolve after a full of life listening to in New York on Monday, when the uncooked creativity of hip-hop brushed up towards the staid confines of federal court docket.
“Who’s the extraordinary listener? Is it somebody who’s going to catch all these references?” Vargas questioned aloud, addressing a authorized customary that issues how a median, affordable individual would perceive a press release. “There’s a lot specialised and nuanced to those lyrics.”
Neither artist attended the listening to.
The case stems from an epic feud between two of hip-hop’s greatest stars over certainly one of 2024 greatest songs — the one which received the report of the yr and track of the yr Grammys, bought probably the most Apple Music streams worldwide and helped make this winter’s Tremendous Bowl halftime present probably the most watched ever.
Launched as the 2 artists had been buying and selling a flurry of insult tracks, Lamar’s track calls out the Canadian-born Drake by identify and impugns his authenticity, branding him “a colonizer” of rap tradition who’s “not like us” in Lamar’s dwelling turf of Compton, California, and, extra broadly, West Coast rap.
“Not Like Us” additionally makes insinuations about Drake’s intercourse life, together with “I hear you want ’em younger” — implications that he rejects.
Drake’s swimsuit says that the track quantities to “falsely accusing him of being a intercourse offender, participating in pedophilic acts” and extra. Contending that the monitor endangered him by fanning notions of vigilante justice, the swimsuit blames “Not Like Us” not just for harming Drake’s picture however for tried break-ins and the taking pictures of a safety guard at his Toronto dwelling. The mansion was depicted in an aerial picture within the track’s cowl artwork.
“This track achieved a cultural ubiquity not like another rap track in historical past,” Drake lawyer Michael Gottlieb stated. He argued that Common had campaigned and contrived to make it “a de facto nationwide anthem” that did not simply handle hip-hop followers who knew the backstory and had been accustomed to over-the-top lyrical battling.
The typical listener may very well be “a 13-year-old who’s dancing to the track at a bar mitzvah,” Gottlieb steered.
“That might be a really fascinating bar mitzvah,” the choose opined. (The track has certainly been performed at some such celebrations.)
Common, in the meantime, has emphasised that “Not Like Us” was a part of an change of barbs between Drake and Lamar.
“Context is essential,” label lawyer Rollin Ransom argued Monday, at one level apologizing for having to make use of profanity whereas reciting a number of the lyrics Drake geared toward Lamar in a monitor referred to as “Taylor Made Freestyle.”
“What you hear in these rap battles is trash-talking within the excessive, and it isn’t, and shouldn’t be handled as, statements of truth,” the legal professional stated.
The lawsuit seeks unspecified damages.
Drake additionally went after iHeartMedia, claiming in a Texas authorized petition that the radio big bought unlawful funds from Common to spice up airplay for “Not Like Us.” IHeartMedia has denied any wrongdoing. That dispute was resolved in March.
Drake hasn’t sued Lamar himself.