Hey Now

Album: GNX (2024)
Charted: 5
Play Video

Songfacts®:

  • "Hey Now," the fifth track on the GNX album, surprise-dropped on November 22, 2024, is as much a rallying cry as it is a meditation. It's Kendrick Lamar's call to rise above the muck and mire of distraction while keeping our purpose as polished as a freshly detailed lowrider.
  • In "Hey Now," Lamar tackles the eternal tug-of-war between material success and inner peace. Yes, he acknowledges, the spoils of his labor are nice (who wouldn't enjoy a high-end lifestyle?), but true fulfillment? That, dear listener, comes not from the gold-plated Rolex but from the serenity of knowing you've protected your vision from life's ceaseless onslaught of noise.
  • The Black know I just strangled me a goat

    The term "GOAT" - short for "Greatest Of All Time" - has leapt from the sports field to everyday language with the grace of a well-executed slam dunk. In the world of hip-hop, few debates are as fiery as who deserves the crown, and for years, Kendrick Lamar and Drake have been the prime contenders. Their rivalry, simmering since the early 2010s, is the sort of long-running saga that keeps fans glued to their headphones, eagerly dissecting every subtle jab.

    By early 2024, this Cold War of subliminal disses had escalated into something resembling a lyrical street fight, culminating in a volley of diss tracks that lit up the internet faster than you can say "Twitter beef." For those keeping score, Kendrick emerged as the unofficial victor, delivering blows with surgical precision and reminding everyone why he's widely considered untouchable when it comes to lyrical dexterity.
  • Adding a serrated edge to this introspection is underground LA artist Dody6, whose menacing guest verse provides the track with an undercurrent of raw, lived experience. Dody6, who was released from prison in August 2024 after a seven-year stint, makes it clear he's back in the game.

    Lamar has long been dinged for not shining a light on younger LA artists, but GNX changes the narrative with a bevy of underground voices that infuse the album with a gritty realism. Dody6 is just one of several talents showcased here, proving Lamar hasn't forgotten the soil he sprang from.
  • On the production side, Mustard layers a nostalgic club beat with a fresh modern twist. Mustard also produced the GNX track "TV Off" and "Not Like Us," Lamar's Drake diss single released earlier in 2024.

    And this isn't the first time the two have linked up; their collaborations date back to 2012 with the remix of Young Jeezy's "R.I.P." where Lamar joined forces with YG and Chris Brown.
  • Speaking with People, Mustard explained that his goal for "Hey Now" was to create a "West Coast version" of Clipse's 1999 debut single "Grindin'."

    "That's why it's so empty like that. That's why it's just weird sounds," he said.
  • Several artists, including Mustard's friends Ty Dolla $ign, YG, and Quavo, passed on the "Hey Now" beat.

    "I played it for Quavo, and I was like, 'Quavo, man, if you can connect to this song, I'm telling you,'" Mustard said. "And he was like, 'What the hell you want me to do to it? You want me to whisper on the beat?' And I was like, 'Alright.' So I didn't force it on him."

Comments

Be the first to comment...

Editor's Picks

Waiting For The Break of Day: Three Classic Songs About All-Nighters

Waiting For The Break of Day: Three Classic Songs About All-NightersSong Writing

These Three famous songs actually describe how they were written - late into the evening.

Tommy James

Tommy JamesSongwriter Interviews

"Mony Mony," "Crimson and Clover," "Draggin' The Line"... the hits kept coming for Tommy James, and in a plot line fit for a movie, his record company was controlled by the mafia.

AC/DC

AC/DCFact or Fiction

Does Angus really drink himself silly? Did their name come from a sewing machine? See if you can spot the real stories about AC/DC.

Ian Anderson: "The delight in making music is that you don't have a formula"

Ian Anderson: "The delight in making music is that you don't have a formula"Songwriter Interviews

Ian talks about his 3 or 4 blatant attempts to write a pop song, and also the ones he most connected with, including "Locomotive Breath."

16 Songs With a Heartbeat

16 Songs With a HeartbeatSong Writing

We've heard of artists putting their hearts into their music, but some take it literally.

Jon Anderson of Yes

Jon Anderson of YesSongwriter Interviews

From the lake in "Roundabout" to Sister Bluebird in "Starship Trooper," Jon Anderson talks about how nature and spirituality play into his lyrics for Yes.