Kendrick Lamar - Somebody That I Used To Know -... -

Kendrick Lamar has spent a decade singing that exact ache over jazz beats and funk basslines. To hear him sing it over those four iconic xylophone notes? That wouldn't just be a cover.

That would be a funeral for a former self. What do you think? Could Kendrick pull off the melancholy of Gotye, or is this a bridge too far? Drop your dream mashup in the comments. Kendrick Lamar - Somebody That I Used To Know -...

He wouldn't sing about a romantic partner. He would sing about Whitney (his fiancée), or Top Dawg (his former label head), or even the old Kendrick —the “Compton Humble” persona he killed on To Pimp a Butterfly . “I saw you walkin' down the street at the Grammy party / You looked right through me like I was still writin' in the dark / You said ‘K. Dot, you sold your soul for the industry arc.’ / Nah, baby. I just grew up. You stayed in the park.” The chorus would hit differently. Instead of a whimper, it would be a growl . Kendrick doesn't do passive resentment. He does biblical fury. “Now you're just somebody that I used to know... / But you forget the blood we bled to build that road / You took the picture frame, but left the crucifix / Now I'm standin' at the altar with a loaded paradox.” The Kimbra Verse: A Necessary Counterpoint In the original, Kimbra’s bridge is the killer: “You say that we are nothing but you still hold my hand.” Kendrick Lamar has spent a decade singing that

At first glance, the pairing seems absurd. Gotye’s track is a minimalist, xylophone-plucked anthem of post-breakup ambiguity, drenched in Australian art-pop melancholy. Kendrick Lamar is the Pulitzer-winning bard of Compton’s concrete jungles, a rapper whose vocabulary slices through ego and trauma. That would be a funeral for a former self

SZA’s character would flip the script: “You tell the world I abandoned you for the hills / But you forgot the night you chose the tour bus over the hospital bill / You call me a stranger? / King, you made yourself a stranger.”

In the Kendrick version, this verse wouldn't be a female singer. It would be —perhaps sampled from a voicemail left by a real person in his past, or voiced by SZA in her most wounded, accusatory register.